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No 'Kill Step' for Sprouts at Tiny Greens Farm

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has released the form 483 inspection report for Urbana, IL-based Tiny Greens Organic Farms.

It sheds more light on how Tiny Greens sprouts may have become contaminated with Salmonella, causing at least 125 people in 22 states to become infected.

Tiny Greens recalled specific lots of its sprouts last Dec. 29 after FDA found the product was  the likely source of a Salmonella outbreak associated with Jimmy John’s Gourmet Sandwiches, a national fast-food chain.

The form 483 provides details of what FDA inspectors found at Tiny Greens during the course of their investigation. A principal finding was that sprouts were found growing in “soil from the organic material decomposed outside” without any “kill step” to prevent the sort of contamination that led to the outbreak.

Other findings included:

FDA had earlier found water run-off contaminated with the outbreak strain of Salmonella. At that time, Tiny Greens owner Bill Bagby said neither FDA nor the Illinois Department of Public health was using comprehensive tests.

The last report from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta—issued in mid January–tallied 125 individuals in 22 states sharing the outbreak strain of infection, Salmonella serotype I 4,[5],12:i.

CDC said FDA’s water run-off samples were “indistinguishable from the outbreak strain,” but the product samples had been negative.

In the last 15 years, sprouts have been responsible for at least 30 outbreaks, usually for Salmonella and E. coli.  This outbreak prompted Champaign, IL-based Jimmy John’s to drop alfalfa sprouts in favor of clover sprouts for all its franchised units.

Dan Flynn

Dan Flynn

Veteran journalist with 15+ years covering food safety. Dan has reported for newspapers across the West and earned Associated Press recognition for deadline reporting. At FSN, he leads editorial direction and covers foodborne illness policy.

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