HANFORD, Calif. (AP)
— Federal inspectors shut down a central California slaughterhouse that
supplies beef to the National School Lunch Program because of
unsanitary conditions.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food
Safety and Inspection Service said in a statement Tuesday that the
conditions prompted it to withdraw inspectors and suspend operations at
Central Valley Meat Co. in Hanford, about 30 miles south of Fresno.
"The plant's suspension will be lifted once we receive adequate assurances of corrective action," the agency said.
Company representatives didn't immediately return a phone message left by The Associated Press on Tuesday evening.
In
2012, Central Valley Meat Co. shut down for a week after Compassion
Over Killing, an animal rights group, sent videos to federal officials
showing workers torturing cows with electric prods and spraying hot
water on the animals, the Los Angeles Times reported
(http://lat.ms/1m8qZU8).
The abuse led to the end of the company's
relationship with In-N-Out restaurants. The national lunch program and
McDonald's also suspended purchases.
Federal inspectors didn't find that the animals' treatment affected food safety.
The
facility reopened after submitting a plan of action that included
training its workers to use electric prods correctly and banning taking
in cows not able to walk or stand.
Last September, Central Valley
recalled 58,000 pounds of beef for the school lunch program after
federal officials said the meat possibly contained pieces of plastic.
There was no recall in Tuesday's announcement.
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