97-14682. Substances Prohibited From Use in Animal Food or Feed; Animal Proteins Prohibited in Ruminant Feed  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 108 (Thursday, June 5, 1997)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 30936-30978]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-14682]
    
    
    
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    Part II
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Health and Human Services
    
    
    
    
    
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    Food and Drug Administration
    
    
    
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    21 CFR Part 589
    
    
    
    Substances Prohibited From Use in Animal Food or Feed; Animal Proteins 
    Prohibited in Ruminant Feed; Final Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 62, No. 108 / Thursday, June 5, 1997 / Rules 
    and Regulations
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
    
    Food and Drug Administration
    
    21 CFR Part 589
    
    [Docket No. 96N-0135]
    RIN 0910-AA91
    
    
    Substances Prohibited From Use in Animal Food or Feed; Animal 
    Proteins Prohibited in Ruminant Feed
    
    AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is amending its 
    regulations to provide that animal protein derived from mammalian 
    tissues for use in ruminant feed is a food additive subject to certain 
    provisions in the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the act). The 
    final rule establishes a flexible system of controls designed to ensure 
    that ruminant feed does not contain animal protein derived from 
    mammalian tissues and to encourage innovation in such controls. FDA is 
    taking this action because ruminants have been fed protein derived from 
    animals in which transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE's) have 
    been found. Such proteins may cause TSE's in ruminants. TSE's are 
    progressively degenerative central nervous system diseases of man and 
    other animals that are fatal. Epidemiologic evidence gathered in the 
    United Kingdom suggests an association between an outbreak of a 
    ruminant TSE, specifically bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), and 
    the feeding to cattle of protein derived from sheep infected with 
    scrapie, another TSE. Also, there may be an epidemiologic association 
    between BSE and a form of human TSE known as new variant Creutzfeldt-
    Jakob disease (nv-CJD) reported in England. BSE has not been diagnosed 
    in the United States, and the final rule is intended to prevent the 
    establishment and amplification of BSE in the United States through 
    feed and thereby minimize any risk to animals and humans.
    
    DATES: This final rule becomes effective on August 4, 1997, except 
    Sec. 589.2000(e)(1)(iv), which contains collection of information 
    provisions subject to review and clearance by the Office of Management 
    and Budget (OMB). FDA is announcing that the proposed collection of 
    information has been submitted to OMB for review and clearance under 
    the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995. The provision of this section will 
    be effective upon approval. FDA will announce the effective date of 
    Sec. 589.2000(e)(1)(iv) in the Federal Register. Submit written 
    comments on the collection of information provisions by July 7, 1997.
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: George A. (Bert) Mitchell, Center for 
    Veterinary Medicine (HFV-6), Food and Drug Administration, 7500 
    Standish Pl., Rockville, MD 20855, 301-827-5587.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Introduction
    
        In the Federal Register of January 3, 1997 (62 FR 552), FDA 
    published a proposed rule that would regulate persons that manufacture, 
    blend, process, and distribute certain animal protein products and 
    ruminant feeds containing such products. The proposed rule would create 
    a new Sec. 589.2000 entitled, ``Animal proteins prohibited in ruminant 
    feed.'' In general, the proposed rule would state that protein derived 
    from ruminant and mink tissues is not generally recognized as safe 
    (GRAS) for use in ruminant feed, but rather a food additive subject to 
    certain requirements under the act. The proposed rule also would 
    require certain cautionary statements on products that contain or may 
    contain such proteins, and establish recordkeeping requirements. These 
    proposed recordkeeping requirements were intended to facilitate 
    compliance with the rule. For example, an invoice obtained from a feed 
    manufacturer for a protein product not labeled with the cautionary 
    statement could be used to trace the product back to the supplier to 
    ensure that the supplier manufactures and distributes animal protein 
    products from nonruminant sources. The proposed rule also would reduce 
    or eliminate certain regulatory requirements upon the development of 
    methods for detecting or deactivating TSE agents, or for verifying 
    product identity.
        The preamble to the proposed rule contained information regarding 
    available scientific information about TSE's, industry practices, and 
    regulatory efforts concerning TSE's. The agency refers interested 
    persons to that document for such information. A list of recently 
    published, relevant scientific information also appears later in this 
    document.
        The preamble to the proposed rule also contained five alternatives 
    to the proposed restriction on the use of ruminant protein in ruminant 
    feed. These alternatives, which are discussed in greater detail later 
    in this document, included a restriction on the use of all ruminant and 
    mink materials (except those that have not been found to present a risk 
    of transmitting TSE's) in ruminant feed, a restriction on the use of 
    all mammalian protein in ruminant feed, a restriction on the use of 
    materials from domestic species (such as sheep, goats, mink, deer, and 
    elk) diagnosed as having a TSE, a restriction on the use of specified 
    sheep and goat offal in ruminant feed, and a ``no action'' alternative. 
    The final rule restricts the use of protein derived from mammalian 
    tissues, with certain exceptions, in ruminant feed. Thus, the final 
    rule represents a regulatory approach that covers more material and is 
    easier to implement than the proposed restriction on the use of 
    ruminant protein in ruminant feed, but is more flexible and better 
    suited to current industry practices than the alternative restriction 
    on the use of all mammalian protein in ruminant feed.
        FDA continues to believe, as it stated in the preamble to the 
    proposed rule, that it is prudent to take action prohibiting the use of 
    certain animal protein products in ruminant feed even though BSE has 
    not been diagnosed in the United States and there is scientific 
    uncertainty as to its origin, transmissibility, etc. This final rule 
    will prevent the establishment and amplification of BSE in the United 
    States through feed, an action the agency believes is necessary to 
    protect animal and public health.
        FDA received numerous comments, as discussed below, on its proposed 
    rule. Based on those comments, the agency, in the Federal Register of 
    April 17, 1997 (62 FR 18728), published the codified provisions of the 
    draft final rule and provided an opportunity for comment. The codified 
    provisions of the draft final rule were similar to those in the 
    proposed rule, but the draft final rule would prohibit the use of 
    protein derived from mammalian tissue with certain specific exceptions 
    (such as blood, gelatin, inspected and processed meat products that 
    have been cooked and offered for human consumption, and products whose 
    mammalian protein consists entirely of porcine protein). Additionally, 
    the codified provisions of the draft final rule would eliminate the 
    cautionary statements on pet food sold at retail, define the term 
    ``ruminant,'' eliminate certain regulatory requirements if a renderer 
    used exclusively a validated, publicly-available method for controlling 
    the manufacturing process that minimizes the risk of the TSE agent 
    entering the product, and simplify the recordkeeping requirements.
    
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        The agency received over 60 comments on the codified provisions of 
    the draft final rule. Most comments supported the draft final rule, 
    although several comments suggested technical changes, additional 
    exemptions, or clarifications. Other comments reiterated their 
    objections to any rulemaking that would declare tissues to be nonGRAS 
    for use in ruminant feed or advocated other alternatives (particularly 
    the use of hazard analysis critical control point programs).
        Based on those comments, the agency has made some changes in this 
    final rule. The final rule provides that protein derived from mammalian 
    tissues (with certain exclusions) is a food additive under the act. The 
    act defines a ``food additive'' as ``any substance the intended use of 
    which results or may reasonably be expected to result, directly or 
    indirectly, in its becoming a component or otherwise affecting the 
    characteristics of any food * * * if such substance is not generally 
    recognized, among experts qualified by scientific training and 
    experience to evaluate its safety, as having been adequately shown 
    through scientific procedures (or, in the case of a substance used in 
    food prior to January 1, 1958, through either scientific procedures or 
    experience based on common use in food) to be safe under the conditions 
    of its intended use * * *'' (see section 201(s) of the act (21 U.S.C. 
    321(s))). Expert opinion that the tissues are GRAS would need to be 
    supported by scientific literature, and other sources of data and 
    information, establishing that there is a reasonable certainty that the 
    material is not harmful under the intended conditions of use. Expert 
    opinion would need to address topics such as whether it is reasonably 
    certain that BSE does not, or will not, occur in the United States; 
    whether it is reasonably certain that the BSE agent will not be 
    transmitted through animal feed, i.e., that the processed tissues are 
    not infected by the agent, are deactivated by the rendering process or 
    are not transmitted orally; and whether it is reasonably certain that 
    the agent will not be transmitted to humans through consumption of 
    ruminant products. ``General recognition'' cannot be based on an 
    absence of studies that demonstrate that a substance is unsafe; there 
    must be studies to establish that the substance is safe. Also, the 
    burden of establishing that a substance is GRAS is on the proponent of 
    the substance (see U.S. v. An Article of Food * * * Coco Rico, 752 F.2d 
    11 (1st Cir. 1985).
        The preamble to the proposed rule included an extensive discussion 
    of the basis of FDA's preliminary conclusion that protein derived from 
    ruminant and mink tissue for use in ruminant feed is not GRAS, but 
    rather is a food additive under the act. As discussed in detail in the 
    agency's responses to the comments received on the proposed rule, FDA 
    did not receive any information that would refute its conclusion that 
    protein derived from ruminant and mink tissue for use in animal feed is 
    not GRAS.
        With regard to the scope of the final rule, protein derived from 
    mammalian tissues includes both ruminant and nonruminant tissues. FDA's 
    basis for its nonGRAS determination for ruminant and mink tissue is 
    discussed extensively in the preamble to the proposed rule and no 
    information was submitted to refute that determination. With regard to 
    nonruminant tissue besides mink, such tissues may include animals such 
    as cats, dogs, horses, swine, etc. As the preamble to the proposed rule 
    discussed concerning a mammalian-to-ruminant prohibition (62 FR 552 at 
    568), industry comments indicated that the usual practice at feed mills 
    and rendering facilities is to commingle ruminant and nonruminant 
    protein products. FDA indicated that regular commingling could provide 
    a basis to determine that protein from mammalian tissues is not GRAS 
    for use in ruminant feed. The description of industry practice received 
    in comments on the proposed rule again indicated that the practice is 
    to commingle ruminant and nonruminant protein. Because of the potential 
    TSE infectivity caused by mixing tissues from ruminant and mink and 
    other mammalian tissues, FDA has determined that protein derived from 
    mammalian tissues (with certain exclusions discussed later in this 
    preamble) is not GRAS for use in ruminant feed. FDA notes that the 
    ruminant-to-ruminant prohibition in the proposed rule also would have 
    prohibited the use in ruminant feed of this commingled tissue because 
    the definition of protein derived from ruminant and mink tissue would 
    apply to pure ruminant or mink tissue as well as other mammalian tissue 
    that could contain ruminant or mink protein due to commingling. This 
    final rule also reduces the risk of cattle and other ruminants being 
    exposed to an agent that causes feline spongiform encephalopathy and 
    acknowledges that feline protein could be a commingled component of 
    mammalian protein products.
        The definition of food additive in section 201(s) of the act does 
    not apply to substances used in accordance with a sanction or approval 
    granted prior to enactment of section 201(s) of the act and granted 
    under the act, the Poultry Products Inspection Act (21 U.S.C. 451 et 
    seq.), or the Federal Meat Inspection Act (21 U.S.C. 601 et seq.). The 
    Commissioner of Food and Drugs (the Commissioner) is unaware of any 
    prior sanction applicable to the use of protein derived from mammalian 
    tissue in ruminant feed. No one asserted a prior sanction for the use 
    of protein derived from ruminant and mink tissues in ruminant feed 
    based on the agency's discussion of a possible mammalian-to-ruminant 
    ban in the preamble to the proposed rule (62 FR 552 at 566). In 
    addition, no one asserted a prior sanction for use of protein derived 
    from mammalian tissues in ruminant feed in response to the agency's 
    discussion of a possible mammalian-to-ruminant prohibition in the 
    preamble to the proposed rule. The failure of any person to come 
    forward with proof of an applicable prior sanction is a waiver of the 
    right to assert or rely on a prior sanction at any later time.
        The agency notes, that for substances not included in the scope of 
    the definition of protein derived from mammalian tissues, persons may 
    continue to self determine whether such substances are GRAS for use in 
    ruminant feed. FDA's authority to determine substances to be food 
    additives under the act is discussed in further detail below in 
    responses to the comments on the proposed rule.
        The final rule also simplifies the cautionary statement for animal 
    feeds containing mammalian-derived proteins, eliminates the labeling 
    requirements for pet food products sold at the retail level and feeds 
    for nonruminant laboratory animals, and elaborates on the information 
    that must be kept and made available for inspection. These changes are 
    further discussed below in the responses to comments received on the 
    proposed rule.
    
    II. Comments on the Proposed Rule and Draft Codified Text
    
        FDA received more than 700 comments on the proposed rule. The 
    comments came from a wide variety of organizations, such as cattlemen, 
    renderers, feed manufacturers, and pharmaceutical firms, Federal 
    agencies, foreign governments, State agriculture departments, trade 
    associations, professional organizations, universities and research 
    institutions, consumer organizations, and individual consumers. 
    Additionally, FDA held two public meetings on the proposed rule. The 
    first meeting was held in St. Louis, MO, on February 4, 1997, and 
    focused on the rule's economic impact and issues of interest to the 
    affected industries. The second meeting was
    
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    held in Washington, DC, on February 13, 1997, and focused on the rule's 
    environmental analysis and issues of interest to consumer groups and 
    organizations.
        Additionally, in the Federal Register of April 17, 1997 (62 FR 
    18728), FDA published the codified provisions of the draft final rule 
    and provided an opportunity for public comment. FDA received over 60 
    comments on the draft codified text.
        Most comments (including remarks made at the public meetings) 
    agreed that the Federal Government should take action to prevent the 
    establishment and amplification of BSE in the United States through 
    feed. However, many comments disagreed as to whether more or less 
    stringent regulatory efforts were needed. FDA also received comments 
    supporting and opposing each alternative that was described in the 
    preamble to the proposed rule, as well as numerous comments that 
    recommended new alternatives. To simplify the nature of the ideas 
    expressed in the comments, the comments can be divided into two groups. 
    One group would maximize the scope of the regulations, and the other 
    would minimize the scope of regulations.
        A large number of comments encouraged FDA to increase the scope of 
    the regulations to include a partial or complete mammalian-to-ruminant 
    prohibition or a mammalian-to-farm animal prohibition, or to apply a 
    feed prohibition on all food-producing animals, either to achieve a 
    greater reduction in the potential risk of human exposure or easier 
    compliance with less need for enforcement actions. For example, a few 
    comments asked that the proposed regulations be expanded to prohibit 
    the feeding of ruminant proteins to felines and zoo animals, and the 
    feeding of proteins from these animals to ruminants. Some comments 
    noted the presence of scrapie and other TSE diseases in the United 
    States and the epidemiological association between scrapie or a 
    modified scrapie agent and BSE in the United Kingdom in support of 
    enlarging the scope of the rule. One comment requested a ban on the 
    feeding of all animal remains to other animals, regardless of species 
    or processing method. Another comment noted that the specifications for 
    tallow allowed for the presence of a small amount of protein and the 
    possibility of a protein-associated infectivity.
        Other comments supported a ``minimalist'' approach. For example, a 
    significant number of comments pointed out that BSE has not been 
    diagnosed in the United States despite a most exhaustive surveillance 
    effort by Federal and State veterinary laboratory diagnosticians, 
    veterinarians accredited by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), 
    and veterinary practitioners who have been specifically trained to 
    diagnose the early clinical signs of BSE in cattle. The USDA through 
    statutes administered by the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service 
    (APHIS) and the Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) has taken 
    actions to ensure that the border defenses against importing the BSE 
    agent are as secure as possible. FDA has advised manufacturers of human 
    and animal drugs and devices, human biologics, dietary supplements, and 
    cosmetics to obtain bovine derived ingredients from countries which are 
    free of BSE. Some comments stated that the adoption by industry of 
    voluntary measures to avoid the rendering of fallen sheep or sale of 
    sheep proteins for use in ruminant rations, or to stop the feeding of 
    ruminant proteins to ruminants are sufficient, and no regulation is 
    warranted. Other comments reminded the agency of its public statements 
    that the risk of BSE occurring in the United States is low and getting 
    lower. A comment from a foreign regulatory official observed that zero 
    risk cannot be achieved and that the calculation of risk through a 
    mathematical model is essential; this comment also expressed the view 
    that the agency's proposed regulatory approach exceeded the risk of BSE 
    in the United States.
        A description of the comments and FDA's responses follows.
    
    A. General Comments
    
    1. Exclusions for Certain Products
        (Comment 1). Several comments, in addressing either the proposed 
    rule or the agency's alternatives to a ruminant-to-ruminant 
    prohibition, suggested exclusions for specific products. The suggested 
    exclusions included proteinaceous tissues (such as meat), 
    nonproteinaceous materials (such as grease, fat, tallow, amino acids, 
    and dicalcium phosphate as a byproduct of the gelatin manufacturing 
    process), and materials that are not considered to be tissues (such as 
    paunch meal, feces, and urine). A few sought exclusions for specific 
    organs, such as hearts and kidneys, or even exclusions for tissues 
    (such as distal ileum) that have been shown to be infective for TSE's 
    in experimental studies.
        The agency has carefully considered the various exclusions 
    suggested by the comments and has revised Sec. 589.2000(a)(1) to define 
    ``protein derived from mammalian tissue'' as any protein-containing 
    portion of mammalian animals, excluding blood and blood products, 
    gelatin, inspected and processed meat products which have been cooked 
    and offered for human consumption and further heat processed for feed 
    (such as plate waste and used cellulosic food casings), milk products, 
    and products whose only mammalian protein consists entirely of porcine 
    or equine protein.
        FDA excluded these items from the definition because the agency 
    believes that they represent a minimal risk of transmitting TSE's to 
    ruminants through feed. The excluded proteins and other items are 
    materials that the available data suggests do not transmit the TSE 
    agent, or have been inspected by the FSIS or an equivalent State agency 
    at one time and cooked and offered for human food and further heat 
    processed for feed and thus are of lower risk than those products that 
    the agency has determined to be nonGRAS, or current industry practices 
    can provide assurances that certain mammalian products can be produced 
    without becoming commingled with potentially infective materials. 
    Additional information on specific exemptions appears later in this 
    document.
        The agency did not revise the definition to exclude nonproteins or 
    items that are not considered tissues. Such products, for example, 
    tallow, fats, oils, grease, amino acids, and dicalcium phosphate as a 
    byproduct of the gelatin manufacturing process, are not covered under 
    this rule and thus do not require a specific exclusion. Moreover, 
    infectivity studies conducted on some of these products (e.g., tallow) 
    have demonstrated that they are at low risk of transmitting the TSE 
    agent. As for those comments suggesting exclusions for specific organs 
    or tissues, FDA declines to exempt such organs or tissues either 
    because of their demonstrated infectivity or because they have not been 
    sufficiently studied to confirm that they cannot transmit TSE disease 
    to ruminants or may present a higher risk of transmitting a TSE to 
    ruminants or because current industry practice does not support 
    separation of these organs or tissues from other higher-risk organs or 
    tissues. For example, under current industry practices, separation of 
    muscle meat from potentially infective nervous tissue from spinal cords 
    or nerve tissue connected to spinal cords cannot be assured. In 
    addition, FDA notes that the origin of these materials is not easily 
    determined when they arrive at a rendering facility.
        The agency may revise the rule further to add or delete items from 
    the
    
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    list of exclusions and make necessary corresponding changes to the rule 
    when sufficient scientific information becomes available about the 
    ability of those items to transmit TSE disease.
    2. Scientific Issues
        Numerous comments raised scientific issues regarding BSE, nv-CJD, 
    and the need for additional scientific research.
        a. Causes of BSE.
        (Comment 2). Several comments stated that BSE is unlikely to occur 
    spontaneously in an individual animal.
        Although the theory that TSE's occur spontaneously as well as the 
    other theories as to BSE's origins (see 62 FR 552 at 558 and 559) are 
    not proven, FDA has not discounted any theory. The final rule would 
    prevent the establishment and amplification of BSE in ruminants through 
    feed by prohibiting the use of proteins derived from mammalian tissue 
    in ruminant feed regardless of whether BSE may occur spontaneously or 
    enter the United States through imported animals or animal products or 
    may result from a cross-species or intra-species transmission of a TSE 
    agent.
        (Comment 3). Many comments claimed that scrapie in sheep was the 
    cause of BSE in the United Kingdom.
        FDA agrees that the use of sheep with scrapie which were rendered 
    and fed to cattle as meat and bone meal is a possible cause of BSE in 
    the United Kingdom. This final rule prevents sheep materials from being 
    processed and fed back to cattle and other ruminants. Additionally, 
    some comments stated that the adoption by industry of voluntary 
    measures to avoid rendering of fallen sheep and the sale of sheep 
    proteins to ruminants should provide sufficient safeguards to allow 
    sheep to be excluded from the final rule. FDA disagrees with this 
    statement because sheep are known to have a TSE (scrapie) that has a 
    long incubation period and because of information from an FDA survey 
    conducted in 1992 that clearly showed that a voluntary ban was not 
    fully implemented and that sheep that had died of causes other than 
    slaughter were being rendered and that rendered sheep protein was being 
    sold for use in the manufacture of cattle feed. This survey is 
    discussed in the preamble to the proposed rule (62 FR 552 to 582).
        (Comment 4). Several comments argued that, in the United Kingdom, 
    BSE was spread by ruminant-to-ruminant recycling.
        FDA agrees that, in the United Kingdom, BSE was spread by the 
    practice of feeding ingredients from processed BSE-infected cattle to 
    other cattle, including young calves. The processes that were used did 
    not completely inactivate the BSE agent. This final rule prevents 
    ruminant-to-ruminant recycling.
        (Comment 5). Several comments pointed out that the cause of BSE is 
    unknown.
        Even though the exact nature of the cause of BSE and many aspects 
    of its etiology and pathogenesis are unknown, studies indicate that the 
    feeding of BSE-infected material to cattle spread the disease to 
    uninfected animals. The final rule is intended to prevent the 
    establishment and amplification of BSE in the United States through 
    feed even though many details regarding the BSE agent are unknown.
        b. Epidemiology of BSE.
        (Comment 6). Numerous comments expressed concern that transmissible 
    mink encephalopathy (TME) resulted from mink being fed materials 
    derived primarily from downer cattle. These comments suggested that 
    this possible link between cattle and TME may indirectly indicate that 
    BSE is already present in the United States cattle population.
        The exact cause of these TME outbreaks, the most recent occurring 
    in 1985, has not been proven, but FDA agrees that there is a 
    possibility that the theory is correct. The final rule, however, would 
    prevent cattle-to-cattle transmission of any undetected BSE in the 
    United States as well as the transmission of TSE's from mink to cattle.
        (Comment 7). Several comments claimed that BSE is present in pigs 
    in the United States.
        Based on the available evidence, FDA does not believe that BSE is 
    present in pigs in the United States. A naturally-occurring TSE has not 
    been identified in pigs in the United States or elsewhere in the world. 
    FDA is aware that, in a study conducted in the United Kingdom, 1 out of 
    10 pigs appeared to develop TSE lesions after exposure to BSE (Ref. 1), 
    but this infection occurred through intracerebral, intraperitoneal, and 
    intravenous inoculation rather than under natural conditions (such as 
    feeding). Despite these new inoculations, the other nine pigs did not 
    develop a TSE. In another experiment, newborn pigs fed the BSE agent 
    have remained healthy at 72 months of age (Ref. 2).
        (Comment 7a). One comment claimed that a TSE was observed in U.S. 
    pigs in 1979.
        The cause of the clinical signs and lesions cannot be affirmed or 
    completely refuted. FDA notes that it has been over 17 years since the 
    incident was reported and that there have been no reports of a 
    recurrence. From FDA's evaluation of this comment, the agency notes 
    that the condition caused by salt toxicity/water deprivation, produces 
    similar clinical signs and lesions as those reported in the 1979 
    incident.
        (Comment 8). Many comments pointed out that TSE's already exist in 
    animals in the United States. These comments usually referred to TSE's 
    in sheep, goats, elk, mink, and deer.
        FDA agrees that TSE's already exist in some animals in the United 
    States and identified several such TSE's in the preamble to the 
    proposed rule (see 62 FR 552 at 556 and 557 (describing scrapie, TME, 
    and chronic wasting disease (CWD))). By prohibiting the use of proteins 
    derived from mammalian tissues in ruminant feed, the final rule should 
    prevent the transmission of these diseases to ruminants through feed.
        (Comment 9). Several comments cited feline spongiform 
    encephalopathy (FSE) as an example of the BSE agent's ability to cross 
    species barriers.
        The epidemiology of FSE supports this theory, but the risk of BSE 
    crossing species barriers is present only in a country where BSE 
    exists. The United States has no BSE, and the final rule provides the 
    necessary feed controls to limit the risk of BSE crossing species 
    barriers and infecting U.S. cattle and other ruminants through feed 
    uses of protein products from infected animals should BSE occur here 
    (i.e., a preventive barrier to the establishment and amplification of 
    BSE through feed).
        (Comment 10). Some comments argued that TSE diseases may occur in 
    all animals, and prions have been identified in species as diverse as 
    salmon and fruit flies.
        Prions are proteins and are normal constituents of many living 
    organisms ranging from yeast to mammals. The function of prions are 
    unknown. Under one theory, the TSE or BSE agent is an abnormal, 
    infectious protein that changes a normal ``host'' protein or prion in 
    an animal or organism into the causative agent (see 62 FR 552 at 558). 
    At this time, a naturally occurring TSE has not been identified in all 
    animals. For example, although horses, pigs, poultry, salmon, and fruit 
    flies have prions, they are not known to have naturally-occurring 
    TSE's.
        (Comment 11). Several comments discussed the possibility of BSE 
    being present in the feces of poultry that consumed cattle meat and 
    bone meal in their diets. These comments expressed concern that the BSE 
    agent would spread to cattle which might consume poultry litter in 
    their feed or to plants to which poultry litter was applied as a 
    fertilizer.
    
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        FDA is unaware of any research on this issue that would indicate 
    that the agency should take regulatory action on poultry litter at this 
    time.
        c. Transmission of BSE.
        (Comment 12). Many comments addressed the safety of various tissues 
    (such as blood, bone, and muscle) relative to TSE diseases. For 
    example, some comments asserted that ruminant blood will not transmit 
    TSE whereas others claimed that blood presents some risk of 
    infectivity. Other comments asserted that bone and muscle are safe, but 
    that brain, spinal cord, and eyes are high-risk tissues for TSE. Some 
    comments claimed that oral transmission of TSE is very inefficient.
        The research to date on TSE diseases and the infectivity of various 
    tissues from infected animals consists of 2 types. The first consists 
    of extensive research carried out over a long period of time in sheep, 
    using sheep as the model for evaluating scrapie and other TSE diseases. 
    This research has provided valuable information about the nature of the 
    diseases in animals and comparatively little on the infectivity of 
    tissues. The second consists of recent studies that have been carried 
    out in other animals using agents such as BSE in cattle and TSE's in 
    mice. Many of the tissue infectivity studies for scrapie and BSE have 
    been carried out using several different strains of laboratory mice 
    which have various degrees of natural susceptibility to TSE's. Samples 
    of tissues taken from TSE infected animals are inoculated into the 
    brain of these laboratory animals. The assessment of the infectivity of 
    tissues has been based on the outcome of these studies. The results of 
    this research indicate that blood, bone, certain other tissues, and 
    tallow do not transmit TSE to the experimentally exposed mice whereas 
    samples of brain, spinal cord, eyes, and some areas of the intestinal 
    tract from cattle that died of BSE transmit a TSE to the mice.
        FDA agrees with the comments regarding the comparative infectivity 
    of oral versus intracerebral routes of exposure and the estimate that 
    the oral route might be as much as 100,000 times less infective than by 
    injection (Ref. 3). However, at this time, research has not provided 
    adequate data on the level of infectivity from oral transmission.
        (Comment 13). Other comments pointed to the unproven nature of the 
    rodent bioassay for safety evaluation of various animal tissues. The 
    comments stated that the TSE agent may be in other tissues at amounts 
    below the detection limit of the rodent bioassay. The comments asserted 
    that, if the lowest infectious dose of BSE is very small, undetected 
    small amounts of agent in tissues could theoretically transmit TSE to a 
    new host.
        FDA agrees that the infective dose of TSE agents is small and that 
    bioassays have limitations. The results of these assays cannot 
    presently be confirmed by more traditional chemical or microbiological 
    methods. Therefore, while small undetected amounts of the TSE agent 
    could be present in the tissue, at this time, the agency believes these 
    amounts present a minimal risk.
        (Comment 14). Several comments discussed recent information 
    describing maternal transmission of BSE. These comments stated that 
    maternal transmission is at a very low rate and would not maintain the 
    epidemic in the United Kingdom. Other comments claimed that lateral 
    transmission (from one animal to another in the same herd) is not 
    detected in BSE, whereas some comments stated that BSE crosses species 
    barriers.
        FDA acknowledges these characteristics of BSE, and the preamble to 
    the proposed rule identified possible maternal transmission and BSE's 
    ability to cross species barriers as being among the various factors 
    justifying FDA's regulation of proteins intended for use in ruminant 
    feed in order to prevent the establishment and amplification of BSE in 
    the United States through feed (see 62 FR 552 at 559 and 560). While it 
    may be true that the risk of maternal transmission is very low and will 
    not sustain a significant epidemic as discussed in the preamble to the 
    proposed rule, the possible use of infected protein from mammalian 
    tissues in cattle feed may lead to establishment and amplification of 
    BSE in the United States through feed. Thus, the final rule ensures 
    that, whatever the mode of transmission, the TSE agent will stop with 
    the infected animal.
        (Comment 15). One comment suggested that FSE-infected cats 
    transported to the United States from the United Kingdom could 
    introduce BSE into the United States if the carcasses of those cats 
    were permitted to be rendered into meat and bone meal.
        The probability that such a scenario would occur appears to be 
    remote since fewer than 100 cats in the United Kingdom have been 
    diagnosed with FSE, and, therefore, the probability that an infected 
    cat would be transported to the United States is small. Furthermore, 
    relatively few domestic cats (those that are considered family pets) 
    are rendered upon their deaths. Rendering of cat carcasses is much more 
    common for feral or stray animals, but in the event that FSE-infected 
    tissues were rendered into meat and bone meal, the final rule prohibits 
    the use of proteins derived from mammalian tissues, including feline 
    tissues, in ruminant feed. Therefore, FSE-infected cats will not cause 
    BSE in the United States through feed.
        (Comment 16). Two comments expressed the view that protein derived 
    from cats and zoo animals should be prohibited from use in feeds 
    intended for ruminants, cats, and zoo animals. This recommendation was 
    based on the fact that domestic cats and other members of the family, 
    Felidae, including zoologic specimens are susceptible to TSE.
        The agency agrees that the concerns raised in the comments are 
    valid, and the final rule prohibits the use of feline and ruminant 
    protein in ruminant rations including the rations of ruminants 
    maintained in zoological exhibits. The final rule does not prohibit the 
    use of mammalian-derived protein in feeds intended for felids or 
    nonruminant zoo animals because the intent of the rule is to prevent 
    the establishment and amplification of BSE in the United States through 
    feed and thereby minimize risk to animals and humans. The feed use of 
    protein from felids and zoo animals in feed for cats and nonruminant 
    zoo animals should not present a risk of establishing and amplifying 
    BSE in the United States through feeds for ruminants.
        d. New Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (nv-CJD).
        (Comment 17). Many comments expressed concern about the emergence 
    of nv-CJD in the United Kingdom and France and that it may have been 
    transmitted to humans through meat consumption. Some comments raised 
    concerns that nv-CJD might occur in the United States.
        FDA shares this concern about nv-CJD and, in conjunction with the 
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, is monitoring it closely. 
    As stated in the preamble to the proposed rule, the epidemiological 
    studies conducted in the United Kingdom do not directly link nv-CJD to 
    meat consumption, but suggest that the nv-CJD cases are linked to 
    exposure to BSE before the introduction of specified tissue bans in the 
    United Kingdom in 1989 (62 FR 552 at 561). In October 1996, a study 
    using strain typing techniques for TSE's compared nv-CJD's strain 
    characteristics against BSE transmitted to mice and macaques. The 
    results showed nv-CJD's strain characteristics to be consistent with 
    BSE as the source of nv-CJD. This study, which appeared in the October 
    24, 1996, issue of Nature (Ref. 4), provided a suggested link between 
    BSE
    
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    and nv-CJD, but was not direct proof of such a link.
        The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention completed a survey 
    in 1996 of cases of CJD in the United States and found no cases that 
    fit the characteristics of nv-CJD. Additionally, most meat products 
    consumed by humans are subject to USDA's jurisdiction, and USDA is 
    examining this issue to identify any risk and ways to minimize the 
    risks, if any, to consumers.
        e. Research needs for BSE.
        (Comment 18). Numerous comments expressed concern about the lack of 
    adequate published research on TSE diseases, inactivation of the 
    agents, and public health implications. For example, some comments 
    noted the lack of information about the minimum infective dose for BSE 
    while others expressed a need to develop a process to inactivate or 
    eliminate the BSE agent during rendering or to develop specific and 
    sensitive analytical methods for animal feeds that would detect 
    rendered proteins from various species.
        FDA agrees, as discussed in the preamble to the proposed rule, that 
    many scientific issues related to TSE's remain unresolved. The agency 
    encourages research that addresses these needs, specifically (but not 
    limited to): Determination of minimum infective oral dose for 
    establishment of BSE in cattle; development and validation of a process 
    to inactivate or eliminate the BSE agent during rendering; development 
    of specific and sensitive analytical methods for the detection of 
    rendered proteins from various species in animal feeds; development of 
    a highly sensitive bioassay for determination of the TSE agent presence 
    in animal tissues; and development of specific antemortem tests to 
    detect the presence of TSE agents and diseases in animals.
        f. New scientific information.
        Several recently published articles on TSE's, BSE, and nv-CJD are 
    not referenced in the proposed rule. In brief, the most relevant of 
    these scientific publications are listed in the references in section 
    IX of this document.
        In one article, the physicochemical properties of the BSE and nv-
    CJD molecules were characterized to identify strain variations with nv-
    CJD (Ref. 4). It was found that nv-CJD is distinct from other types of 
    CJD and resembles BSE transmitted to mice, cats, and macaque, which is 
    consistent with BSE being the source of nv-CJD.
        In another article, the authors used mathematical models to make 
    assumptions about the incubation period for nv-CJD and the number of 
    exposed people (Ref. 5). Based on these assumptions, they outlined a 
    range of scenarios to estimate the future incidence of nv-CJD in the 
    United Kingdom. A large measure of uncertainty surrounds any modeling 
    that is based on 14 cases of nv-CJD and a lack of reliable information 
    about the incubation period for nv-CJD.
        The results of USDA's examination of 5,427 cattle brains were 
    discussed in a recent article (Ref. 6).
        Another article discussed the detection of scrapie in peripheral 
    nerves of scrapie-diseased sheep and concluded that mutton of scrapie-
    diseased animals should not be regarded as being free of the scrapie 
    agent (Ref. 7).
        Prion protein was not detected by Western blot analysis in 55 
    percent of mice inoculated intra-cerebrally with BSE, although it was 
    detected in 100 percent in subsequent passages (Ref. 8).
        The hypothesis that BSE is a zoonosis was described and the risk 
    characterized as low (Ref. 9).
        TSE's, including clinical signs, gross and microscopic lesions, and 
    ancillary test findings, in wild deer and elk in north-central Colorado 
    from 1981 to 1995 were described (Ref. 10). The disease in wild cervids 
    is indistinguishable from that reported in captive deer and elk.
        The articles do not provide entirely new information, but rather 
    add to the basic knowledge about TSE's and the need for this final 
    rule. FDA has placed these articles in the administrative record for 
    the final rule.
    3. Enforcement-Related Issues
        A number of comments addressed issues related to enforcement of the 
    rule.
        (Comment 19). Several comments stated that the proposed rule would 
    be enforceable. However, several others argued that the rule would not 
    be enforceable. The latter comments gave several reasons for their 
    position, including the following: (1) There is no practical analytical 
    test to distinguish ruminant protein from nonruminant protein. 
    Enforcement, therefore, would depend on compliance with the rule's 
    labeling and recordkeeping requirements which could be vulnerable to 
    falsification or other abuse; (2) the rule's reliance on invoices may 
    be inadequate because invoices may not contain sufficient information 
    and may not be kept routinely; and (3) the clean-out procedures for 
    firms that intend to separate ruminant from nonruminant protein (as 
    provided by the proposed rule) would not be readily enforceable. 
    Several comments recommended that the agency adopt a mammalian-to-
    ruminant prohibition because a practical analytical test (feed 
    microscopy) for distinguishing mammalian from nonmammalian proteins is 
    available.
        When the agency issued the proposed rule, it acknowledged that the 
    mammalian-to-ruminant alternative might be more easily enforced than 
    the ruminant-to-ruminant prohibition in the proposed rule. However, the 
    agency intended to commit the resources necessary to enforce the 
    ruminant-to-ruminant option if adopted. The agency believed that the 
    rule which it proposed could be enforced. For example, the 
    establishments that would not separate ruminant from nonruminant 
    protein would be subject to the simple, enforceable requirement that 
    labeling for all outgoing products bear the statement cautioning 
    against use of the product in ruminant feed. The agency estimated that 
    the great majority of affected establishments--independent renderers, 
    blenders, and feedmills--would elect not to separate products. Those 
    that did separate products would be subject to additional scrutiny, 
    such as on-site inspection that would include inspection of incoming 
    product as well as observation of facilities and processes for 
    separation. In addition, the agency has had experience in enforcing the 
    act in other settings in which it was unable to test for violative 
    products.
        Limiting the mammalian species exclusion to pure porcine or equine 
    products narrows the number of acceptable mammalian protein sources for 
    ruminant feeds, thus simplifying the agency's records review and trace 
    back efforts. The fact that some comments from regulated industries 
    suggested support for a mammalian-to-ruminant prohibition should foster 
    voluntary compliance.
        (Comment 20). Several comments stated that the role of the States 
    in enforcing the rule is unclear, but that State agencies lack the 
    authority to enforce some aspects of the rule. Some comments also asked 
    whether the rule imposed an unfunded mandate upon States.
        Because this regulation is a Federal rule, only those State 
    employees that are commissioned by FDA under section 702(a) of the act 
    (21 U.S.C. 372(a)) would have a role in enforcing this rule. For 
    commissioned State employees that have the same enforcement authority 
    as FDA employees, such employees would be able to fully enforce the 
    rule. State employees who are not commissioned do not have authority to 
    enforce this rule. Comments about unfunded mandates imposed on States 
    are discussed elsewhere in this document.
    
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        (Comment 21). Several comments suggested additional approaches to 
    enhance the rule's enforceability. One comment suggested that the 
    agency allow firms to substitute commercial contract guarantees (that 
    the product does not contain ruminant material) instead of maintaining 
    and providing sales invoices. The guarantees would be available for FDA 
    inspection and copying. The comment asserted that use of such a 
    guarantee would provide assurance that meat and bone meal containing 
    ruminant or mink protein would not be inadvertently accepted for 
    delivery at commercial feedmills.
        FDA agrees that such a provision could enhance enforcement, through 
    both self-regulation within the industry and enforcement of the act 
    which makes the giving of a false guarantee a violation of section 
    301(h) of the act (21 U.S.C. 331(h)). However, it is unclear from the 
    comments whether the commercial contract guarantees would provide 
    adequate information for FDA to trace back purchases of protein 
    products and feeds. Therefore, it is unclear whether the guarantees 
    would enhance enforcement. In any event, the final rule, as written, 
    provides the necessary tools for enforcement. Therefore, the agency 
    declines to accept the comment's suggestion.
        (Comment 22). One comment suggested that the agency revise the rule 
    to require renderers to register with FDA.
        Through the use of publicly available sources (such as trade 
    publications), the agency has access to a comprehensive list of 
    renderers, so a registration requirement is, at this time, unnecessary.
        (Comment 23). One comment asked FDA to clarify the penalties that 
    would be associated with a violation of the rule. Other comments asked 
    the agency to discuss the consequences of a violation of the regulation 
    and whether a person must knowingly have committed a violation.
        The agency notes that it intends to implement a vigorous 
    enforcement program. Although FDA cannot specify the penalty that would 
    be imposed in any given scenario or case, the agency does note that the 
    act provides several possible sanctions, including, but not limited to, 
    injunctions (see section 302 of the act (21 U.S.C. 332)), criminal 
    penalties (see section 303 of the act (21 U.S.C. 333)) and seizure of 
    the adulterated or misbranded product (see section 304 of the act (21 
    U.S.C. 334)). Seizure and injunction actions generally do not require 
    knowledge on the part of responsible persons, and criminal violations 
    may or may not require such knowledge.
        (Comment 24). Some comments asked about the disposition of 
    adulterated feed, animals that have been fed adulterated feed, and 
    products, such as milk, from animals that were fed adulterated feed.
        The agency has guidance documents for the disposition of products 
    found to be violative under the act (see for example CPG 675.200). This 
    guidance can be used to facilitate the disposition of products 
    determined to be violative as a result of this final rule. 
    Alternatively, the agency can consider the disposition based upon the 
    unique factors of the situation.
        (Comment 25). One comment expressed concern about the adequacy of 
    FDA's enforcement resources, stating a need for more frequent 
    inspections of regulated firms such as feedmills. Another comment 
    stated that an ``unlevel playing field'' would exist in the animal feed 
    industry such that FDA would devote more regulatory attention to a 
    relatively small number of registered (as opposed to unregistered) 
    feedmills.
        FDA reiterates its intention to commit adequate resources to 
    enforcing this rule and to implement a vigorous enforcement program. 
    FDA will allocate those resources in such a way that all segments of 
    the industry receive attention commensurate with the risk presented by 
    a violation in each segment.
        (Comment 26). Several comments expressed the expectation that a 
    mammalian-to-ruminant prohibition, if adopted by the agency, would also 
    simplify the requirements placed on the affected industries. For 
    example, the comments stated that, under a mammalian-to-ruminant 
    prohibition, no special labeling would be required and that 
    recordkeeping could be simplified.
        Because the mammalian-to-ruminant prohibition in this final rule 
    includes certain exceptions, the labeling and recordkeeping 
    requirements are necessary, and the agency has retained them (with some 
    revisions) in the final rule.
        (Comment 27). Several comments implied that certain options, other 
    than a ruminant-to-ruminant or mammalian-to-ruminant prohibition, would 
    be enforceable. These options included a partial ruminant-to-ruminant 
    prohibition, a prohibition only of proteins from TSE species, and a 
    plan for ``certified ruminant derived protein'' based on a hazard 
    analysis critical control point (HACCP) program approach. Some comments 
    also stated that the ruminant-to-ruminant prohibition would be 
    unenforceable.
        As stated earlier, the final rule adopts a mammalian-to-ruminant 
    prohibition with certain exceptions. The agency agrees that there are 
    alternatives to a ruminant-to-ruminant or a mammalian-to-ruminant 
    prohibition. Each alternative, including a ruminant-to-ruminant or a 
    mammalian-to-ruminant prohibition, presents various enforcement 
    challenges. FDA believes, however, that the final rule is a reasonable 
    approach in terms of enforcement.
        (Comment 28). One comment, from a cattle producers' organization, 
    referred to that organization's commitment (along with many others) to 
    ensure enforcement of the final rule. The organization pledged that it 
    would work diligently to inform producers of their role in enforcement. 
    Several other comments advocated use of educational programs, including 
    education to consumers, and guidelines.
        The agency appreciates the comment's commitment and intends to work 
    closely with industry associations in educational efforts. The agency 
    also expects to implement an educational program for consumers and the 
    affected industries and will provide guidance documents to the affected 
    industries.
    4. Comments on the Alternatives
        a. Background.
        The preamble to the proposed rule listed 6 regulatory alternatives 
    to prevent the establishment and amplification of BSE in the United 
    States through feed (62 FR 552 at 567). The alternatives ranged from a 
    prohibition on the use of mammalian tissue in ruminant feed to a ``no 
    action'' alternative. FDA received comments supporting and opposing 
    each alternative, as well as numerous comments that suggested new 
    alternatives.
        The principal alternative was a prohibition on the use of ruminant 
    proteins in ruminant feed; this was the alternative initially selected 
    by the agency and used in the proposed rule. Comments on the 
    ``ruminant-to-ruminant'' prohibition are addressed later in this 
    document. The other alternatives and the comments submitted on those 
    alternatives are described below.
        b. The partial ruminant-to-ruminant prohibition.
        The second alternative was to exclude all ruminant and mink 
    materials, except those that have not been found to present a risk of 
    transmitting TSE's, from ruminant feed. This was commonly known as the 
    ``partial
    
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    ruminant-to-ruminant'' ban. The exclusions, in addition to milk 
    products, gelatin, and bovine blood, might have covered products such 
    as bovine byproducts that have been inspected and passed in inspected 
    slaughter facilities (except for the brain, eyes, spinal cord, and 
    distal ileum because these tissues have been shown to transmit TSE's). 
    This alternative had the advantage of having its prohibitions based 
    primarily on scientific information related to the infectivity of 
    specific tissues, yet it also had several important disadvantages. For 
    example it may be impractical in the slaughter and rendering processes 
    to segregate and to exclude the protein tissues that have not been 
    found to present a risk of transmitting TSE disease. USDA expressed 
    reservations that separating the distal ileum from other intestinal 
    offal could jeopardize a slaughter plant's ability to meet pathogen 
    reduction goals required by USDA's HACCP regulations. (The ``ileum'' is 
    the terminal part of the small intestine, from the free edge of the 
    ileocecal fold to the ileocecal orifice, and enters the junction of the 
    cecum and colon obliquely on the medial surface. ``Offal'' refers 
    generally to material left as a byproduct from the preparation of some 
    specific product, less valuable portions and the byproducts of 
    milling.) Enforcement would also be impractical because there is no 
    specific diagnostic method for identifying protein derived from such 
    tissues. Additionally, the alternative would not address the risk that 
    other tissues may present a risk of infectivity (62 FR 552 at 567 and 
    568).
        (Comment 29). Several comments supported this alternative, although 
    most would modify it to cover only some tissues (such as tissues that 
    are known to be infective in sheep, cattle, or other species), 
    conditioned their support on the addition of other requirements (such 
    as a HACCP program and good manufacturing practices (GMP's)), or 
    conditioned their support on the feasibility of enforcing this 
    alternative. A smaller number of comments opposed this alternative; 
    most reiterated the arguments set forth in the preamble to the proposed 
    rule by stating that there is inadequate scientific information to 
    determine whether a particular tissue is or is not safe for use in 
    ruminant feed, that separating certain tissues may be unsafe or 
    impractical, and that the absence of a test to detect the TSE agent 
    warrants rejection of this alternative.
        The agency agrees with those comments that oppose a partial 
    ruminant-to-ruminant prohibition. The agency is persuaded that under 
    current industry practice, separating acceptable ruminant tissues from 
    unacceptable ruminant tissue may be impractical, and the current lack 
    of scientific knowledge about the TSE agent and BSE, coupled with the 
    lack of a detection method, makes this alternative less acceptable 
    compared to a mammalian-to-ruminant prohibition which is more 
    enforceable and also endorsed by the most affected industries.
        (Comment 30). Two comments raised the concern that the stunning of 
    cattle at slaughter by captive bolt results in the formation of brain 
    emboli which lodge in tissues that are normally considered to be 
    incapable of transmitting TSE diseases. If protein derived from those 
    tissues was permitted for use in ruminant rations, it potentially could 
    transmit TSE diseases to ruminant animals. For this reason, it was 
    argued that a partial ruminant-to-ruminant prohibition may fail to 
    prevent the introduction and amplification of BSE in the United States.
        The probability of introducing BSE into the United States from the 
    small amount of nervous tissue that would be expected to result from 
    brain emboli is minimal under a partial ruminant-to-ruminant 
    prohibition; however, the final rule eliminates even this minimal 
    probability because it provides that all mammalian tissues (with 
    certain exceptions) are prohibited from use in ruminant rations.
        c. The mammalian-to-ruminant prohibition.
        The third alternative was to prohibit the use of all mammalian 
    protein in ruminant feed (``mammalian-to-ruminant'' prohibition). The 
    preamble to the proposed rule noted that some rendering and feed 
    associations supported this alternative because separating ruminant 
    from nonruminant materials or proteins might not be feasible due to the 
    routine industry practice of commingling protein products (62 FR 552 at 
    568). The preamble to the proposed rule also noted that this 
    alternative would provide greater assurance of industry compliance than 
    a partial or total ruminant-to-ruminant prohibition because practical 
    analytical methods exist for distinguishing mammalian from nonmammalian 
    proteins and that this alternative would not require additional or new 
    labeling. Furthermore, the preamble to the proposed rule stated that 
    this alternative would avoid concerns about permitting some products 
    containing meat and bone meal to be used in ruminant feeds while 
    prohibiting others and the effect on financially sensitive commodities 
    markets for animal protein.
        The disadvantages to a mammalian-to-ruminant prohibition included 
    the absence of scientific data establishing or suggesting TSE 
    infectivity in nonruminant animals (other than in cats or mink) and 
    claims from some industries that they would prefer or had the ability 
    to separate ruminant from nonruminant tissues.
        (Comment 31). The mammalian-to-ruminant alternative received the 
    most support among the alternatives to a ruminant-to-ruminant 
    prohibition discussed in the preamble to the proposed rule. These 
    comments came from the affected industries (although most would prefer 
    alternatives to this rulemaking), consumer groups, other government 
    agencies (including a foreign government), and academia. Most comments 
    supporting this alternative explained that it would provide the same or 
    more protection than the proposed rule, would be both practical and 
    enforceable, would give greater assurance of industry compliance, and 
    would be consistent with international initiatives. However, some 
    comments acknowledged that the current scientific evidence provides 
    more support for a specified tissue prohibition or ruminant-to-ruminant 
    prohibition rather than a mammalian-to-ruminant prohibition.
        FDA has revised the rule to prohibit the use of protein derived 
    from mammalian (rather than ruminant) tissues, with certain exclusions. 
    Numerous comments from the rendering and feed industries advocated a 
    mammalian-to-ruminant prohibition. These industries indicated that a 
    mammalian-to-ruminant prohibition would result in easier and greater 
    compliance (because the usual industry practice is to commingle 
    ruminant and nonruminant material rather than separate ruminant from 
    nonruminant material) and provide a higher degree of confidence in the 
    feed or feed ingredients produced and sold. Given this practice of 
    commingling tissues, the possibility of cross-contamination of 
    nonruminant mammalian tissues through contact with ruminant tissues, 
    and reasons explained elsewhere in this document, FDA has determined 
    that protein derived from mammalian tissues (as defined in the rule) is 
    not GRAS for use in ruminant feed and has revised the final rule 
    accordingly. The agency recognizes that, under current industry 
    practices, pigs and horses may be slaughtered at dedicated slaughtering 
    facilities which produce either pure porcine or pure equine material. 
    The exclusion of equine material in addition to porcine material in the 
    final rule is a change from the proposed codified
    
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    material. This change was made in response to comments (see comment 44 
    response) that for mammals which are considered to be major food 
    animals, neither porcine nor equine species have ever been diagnosed 
    with a naturally occurring TSE. For porcine and equine materials, 
    persons may continue to self determine whether their use in ruminant 
    feed is GRAS.
        FDA also considered various exclusions to the rule. These 
    exclusions are discussed elsewhere in this document.
        (Comment 32). Several comments offered alternatives to a mammalian-
    to-ruminant prohibition, such as the exclusion of sheep under 12 months 
    of age and cattle under 30 months of age. The comments claimed that 
    animals in these age groups seldom exhibit clinical signs of TSE.
        FDA declines to revise the rule as suggested by the comments. 
    Because of the long incubation period for TSE's, an infected animal may 
    not exhibit any clinical signs. Scrapie has been detected in 7-month-
    old sheep (discussed fully in the preamble to the proposed rule) and 
    results of a BSE maternal transmission study conducted in the United 
    Kingdom suggest that the risk of maternal transmission is approximately 
    10 percent for BSE infected cows. Additionally, there is little 
    specific knowledge about the infectivity of tissues and organs during 
    this period.
        d. The prohibition of materials from U.S. species diagnosed with 
    TSE's.
        The fourth alternative was to prohibit the use of materials from 
    species in which TSE's have been diagnosed in the United States (sheep, 
    goats, mink, deer, and elk) in ruminant feed. The preamble to the 
    proposed rule noted that this alternative would eliminate the scrapie 
    agent, TME, and CWD from ruminant feed, and thereby reduce the risk of 
    BSE in cattle by TSE transmission from other animal species (62 FR 552 
    at 568). However, it also noted that this alternative would not prevent 
    the spread of BSE in the United States if BSE occurred for another 
    reason, such as spontaneous mutation in cattle or the importation of 
    animals infected with BSE (when such imported animals are subsequently 
    processed and used in ruminant feed).
        (Comment 33). FDA received several comments supporting this 
    alternative and a smaller number opposing it. The comments supporting 
    this alternative stated that it was the most prudent and pragmatic 
    alternative and is supported by current scientific evidence. Comments 
    opposed to this alternative stated that it would not prevent 
    amplification of BSE, would not exclude cattle (because no U.S. cattle 
    have been diagnosed as having BSE or a TSE), and would make it more 
    difficult to exclude potentially infective tissues from ruminant feed. 
    One comment questioned whether this alternative would extend to 
    prohibiting any feed materials to any animal, including nonruminants.
        After considering the comments, FDA declines to adopt this 
    alternative. As stated in the preamble to the proposed rule and 
    elsewhere throughout this document, the rule is intended to prevent the 
    establishment and amplification of BSE in the United States through 
    feed. This alternative would restrict some, but not all, routes for the 
    BSE agent to enter ruminant feed. Consequently, FDA is not adopting 
    this alternative.
        e. The sheep-specified offal prohibition.
        The fifth alternative was to prohibit the feeding of specified 
    sheep and goat offal to ruminants. This alternative would eliminate 
    scrapie from ruminant feed, but would not prevent the spread of BSE 
    among cattle if BSE occurred spontaneously or entered the United States 
    (62 FR 552 at 568 and 569).
        (Comment 34). Very few comments addressed this alternative. Two 
    comments supported this alternative, stating that no TSE's have been 
    found in the United States or that this alternative would remove much 
    unsafe protein from ruminant feed.
        Three comments opposed this alternative. One comment stated that, 
    if BSE is already present in the United States, this alternative would 
    not prevent it from spreading to other cattle. Another comment 
    expressed similar views, but added that the long incubation period for 
    TSE's and the infectivity of tissues from preclinical or asymptomatic 
    animals increased the risk of BSE amplification. Another comment stated 
    that this alternative had limited effectiveness because it did not 
    protect against other known TSE's in other species.
        The agency agrees with those comments opposing this alternative. 
    Although it would remove scrapie from ruminant feed, this alternative 
    would be ineffective against BSE and other TSE's. As a result, FDA is 
    not adopting this alternative.
        f. The ``no action'' alternative.
        The sixth alternative was to take no action. The preamble to the 
    proposed rule explained that this alternative is arguably supported by 
    the fact that data and information do not document a recognized 
    immediate threat to the public health in the United States and that any 
    threat may be minimal. Other arguments supporting this alternative 
    included: (1) BSE has not been detected in the United States; (2) 
    surveillance efforts are in place and have not detected BSE; and (3) 
    there is no empirical evidence available to establish that BSE will be 
    transmitted to cattle from another species, will occur spontaneously in 
    cattle, or will be transmitted from imported animals or animal feed (62 
    FR 552 at 553). The preamble to the proposed rule further noted that: 
    There is no conclusive scientific evidence that BSE would be spread 
    through animal feed (although there is strong epidemiological evidence 
    suggesting that widespread BSE infections in the United Kingdom 
    occurred through contaminated animal feed and that enforced feed 
    control regulations appear to be the reason for BSE's decline in the 
    United Kingdom); the industrial practices in the United Kingdom 
    believed to be associated with the BSE epidemic in the United Kingdom 
    differ from those in the United States; transfer of TSE's from sheep to 
    cattle is suggested by epidemiological evidence, but has not been 
    confirmed by direct scientific data; and while there is an 
    epidemiological association between BSE and the nv-CJD cases in the 
    United Kingdom, the available evidence has not established that BSE 
    causes nv-CJD.
        Arguments against a ``no action'' alternative focused on the 
    potentially high cost, in animal and human lives and economics, if BSE 
    appeared in the United States and was transmitted and amplified through 
    the feeding of ruminant protein to cattle. The preamble to the proposed 
    rule noted that TSE transmission from other species, spontaneous 
    occurrence, and transmission from imported animals or animal products 
    was possible. Experimental evidence also indicated that the BSE agent 
    may be more susceptible to oral transmission (such as through animal 
    feed) than other TSE's, thereby increasing the chances that BSE could 
    spread through the United States whether or not the BSE agent developed 
    spontaneously, was transmitted by another species, or was introduced by 
    some other means. Yet the greatest risk factor identified in the 
    preamble to the proposed rule was the potential for unrecognized 
    amplification of the BSE agent given the long incubation period for BSE 
    and the absence of methods for detecting the agent (62 FR 552 at 555).
        (Comment 35). Very few comments expressly addressed the ``no 
    action'' alternative. One comment, without any explanation, supported 
    the no action alternative, while another comment claimed that the 
    proposed rule was essentially a ``no action'' alternative
    
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    because it would permit the use of tallow and fat in ruminant feed, and 
    the comment opposed the use of tallow. Six comments opposed this 
    alternative, declaring that the Federal Government must act to protect 
    animal and human health and food safety now, that TSE's are known to 
    exist in the United States, and that if TSE's exist in cattle, steps 
    need to be taken to prevent amplification. Other comments opposing a 
    ``no action'' alternative claimed that an undiagnosed TSE may already 
    exist in the United States cattle population (arguing that TME may have 
    originated as an undiagnosed TSE in cattle that was transferred to mink 
    through contaminated feed), that this alternative would not protect 
    against asymptomatic animals infected with a TSE, and that this 
    alternative is not acceptable for purposes of international trade 
    (because other countries will reject U.S. products if they cannot be 
    assured that the products are not infected with BSE or a TSE).
        FDA agrees with the comments that oppose a ``no action'' 
    alternative. The most appropriate course of action is to take steps to 
    prevent the establishment and amplification of BSE in the United States 
    through feed before BSE is manifested in the United States. FDA will, 
    as it does for all regulations, amend or modify its regulations to 
    reflect any advances in scientific or industry technology, but the 
    potential consequences to human and animal health are simply too great 
    to justify a ``no action'' alternative at this time.
    5. Miscellaneous Alternatives Suggested by the Comments
        Many comments suggested other regulatory approaches, ranging from 
    more comprehensive prohibitions on the use of animal proteins in feed 
    to less restrictive alternatives that would focus solely on sheep or 
    cattle or certain types of cattle. Other comments suggested 
    alternatives to the nonGRAS status (e.g., issuing a compliance policy 
    guide (CPG), an interim food additive regulation, a GRAS listing with 
    restrictions, temporary ban to suspend the use of ruminant protein in 
    ruminant feed, and HACCP programs). The discussion of these 
    alternatives and the agency's response appears in section I.B.1.b of 
    this document, comments 56 through 60. Few comments offered any 
    detailed rationale or explanation supporting their alternatives.
        a. Alternatives involving ``downer'' animals.
        (Comment 36). FDA received hundreds of comments (in response to 
    write-in campaigns) requesting that ``downer'' (nonambulatory) animals 
    not be used for human food and not processed as ingredients in animal 
    feed. Few comments offered any detailed rationale (scientific or 
    otherwise) for their request, although some comments suggested that 
    downed animals may be unable to walk because they have a TSE agent or 
    suffer from some central nervous system (CNS) disease.
        FDA declines to revise the rule as suggested by the comments. The 
    final rule is limited to the use of proteins derived from mammalian 
    tissues in ruminant feed. The rule is intended to prevent the 
    establishment and amplification of BSE in the United States through 
    feed. Because BSE has never been detected in the United States, the 
    agency believes that the actions it has taken in this final rule will 
    accomplish this regulatory objective.
        FDA notes that issues involving downer animals actually have two 
    components: (1) Animals that are ``down'' and are condemned on 
    antemortem examination, such as those with clinical signs of CNS 
    disorders; and (2) animals that are ``down'' but which are passed as 
    ``suspects'' pending post-mortem examination, such as those with broken 
    legs, mastitis, paralysis, etc. This final rule will prevent any downed 
    (including CNS-condemned) ruminants from being used in ruminant feed. 
    This final rule does not address issues related to nonruminant feed 
    uses. The agency does not have any information that such uses for 
    nonruminants at this time, present a risk of TSE infection to 
    ruminants. The use of carcasses of downer animals and the offal of 
    animals that are slaughtered as suspect for a CNS disorder in the 
    manufacture of meat and bone meal for use in swine, poultry, and pet 
    rations presents no known risk to humans. The risk to nonruminants 
    other than ruminants appears to be limited to felids and mink and is 
    considered to be extremely small.
        Additionally, revising the rule to prohibit the use of all downers 
    in nonruminant feeds would create significant environmental and 
    economic problems. Issues further related to use of meat and poultry 
    for human consumption are outside the scope of this rulemaking since 
    they are regulated by USDA.
        b. Alternatives covering other animals.
        (Comment 37). Several comments advocated more inclusive 
    alternatives, such as prohibiting the use of animals or mammals in 
    mammalian feed, prohibiting the use of animal byproducts in feed for 
    all animals or all farm animals, or prohibiting the use, in any 
    livestock feed, of any potentially infectious tissue from any species 
    known to have a TSE. Few explained their reasons for such alternatives 
    other than to declare that a broader alternative would be more 
    protective, to argue that noncarnivorous animals should eat only 
    plants, or to argue that the practice of feeding animal protein to 
    animals was ``cannibalism'' or ``unnatural.''
        In developing this rule, the agency sought to create regulatory 
    requirements that would prevent the establishment and amplification of 
    BSE in the United States through feed while simultaneously considering 
    the impact on the affected industries. The comments did not provide 
    sufficient information to determine that the alternatives suggested by 
    the comments would be equally or more effective in preventing the 
    establishment and amplification of BSE in the United States through 
    feed, and so FDA declines to revise the rule as suggested by the 
    comments.
        (Comment 38). Several comments advocated less restrictive 
    alternatives to the rule, such as prohibiting cattle-derived protein 
    from being fed to other cattle, or to sheep and cattle, or to other 
    animals, prohibiting the use of sick and dying animals in human and 
    animal food, or prohibiting the use of spinal cords and heads in animal 
    feed.
        FDA declines to revise the rule as suggested by the comments. These 
    less restrictive alternatives would not meet the agency's goals. The 
    comments did not offer any explanation as to how these alternatives 
    would prevent the establishment and amplification of BSE in the United 
    States through feed.
        c. Alternatives covering other subjects.
        (Comment 39). One comment requested that FDA revise the rule to 
    address all food hazards (rather than focus on BSE in ruminants), 
    prohibit the use of all meat protein supplements in all animal feed, 
    prohibit the use of antibiotics in food-producing animals, and 
    concentrate on possible causes of disease.
        The agency declines to revise the rule as requested by the comment. 
    The comment does not explain how the suggested change would prevent BSE 
    from being established and amplified in the United States through feed. 
    The comment's requests appear to address issues which are outside the 
    scope of this rulemaking.
    
    B. Comments on Specific Sections in the Proposed Rule
    
    1. Section 589.2000(a)--Definitions
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(a) would define various terms, such as 
    ``protein derived from ruminant and mink tissues,'' ``renderer,'' 
    ``blender,'' ``feed
    
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    manufacturer and distributor,'' and ``nonruminant protein.''
        All comments addressing proposed Sec. 589.2000(a) focused on the 
    terms ``protein derived from ruminant and mink tissues.'' Proposed 
    Sec. 589.2000(a)(1) would define such proteins as ``any protein-
    containing portion of ruminant animals or mink, excluding blood from 
    bovines, milk proteins and gelatin.''
        As noted earlier in this document, the agency has revised 
    Sec. 589.2000(a)(1) to refer to protein derived from mammalian tissues 
    and has excluded specific items from that definition. In general, the 
    exclusions represent tissues that the available data suggests do not 
    transmit the TSE agent or were, at one time, inspected by FSIS and 
    found fit for human consumption and further heat processed for feed use 
    or tissues from species without TSE's that, under current industry 
    practice, are slaughtered in single species slaughter facilities. 
    Comments on specific tissues are as follows:
        (Comment 40). Several comments would exclude plate waste (food that 
    has been inspected, prepared, and/or served to humans) from the rule. 
    Some comments explained that all food products which compose plate 
    waste have already been cooked and inspected several times before being 
    offered for human consumption and later thrown away and that commercial 
    processors of plate waste dehydrate the product at temperatures 
    reaching 290 to 400  deg.F when converting it to an animal feed 
    ingredient. The comments also asserted that the plate waste comes from 
    institutions (universities, retirement homes, hospitals, prisons, 
    etc.), fast-food establishments, and large restaurants/cafeterias, and 
    does not consist of tissues that have demonstrated infectivity in 
    cattle, e.g., brain, spinal column, eye and distal ileum of cattle. 
    Furthermore, some comments stated that plate waste consists mostly 
    (approximately 98 percent) of nonmeat products and is high in moisture. 
    The high moisture content requires the addition of 50 to 60 percent 
    corn, soybeans, or similar products to aid in the dehydration and the 
    extrusion process. The comments also noted that the feeding of plate 
    waste remains a common practice in many parts of the United States and 
    around the world and that plate waste comprises approximately 8.9 
    percent of the Municipal Solid Waste stream in the United States.
        The draft codified provisions that appeared in the Federal Register 
    of April 17, 1997, included as an exclusion from the definition protein 
    derived from mammalian tissue, ``inspected and processed meat products 
    which have been cooked and offered for human consumption (plate waste 
    and used cellulosic food casings).'' The initial decision to exclude 
    plate waste was based on the fact that a small proportion of meat is 
    included in plate waste and that plate waste represents a small 
    proportion of ruminant feed. Additionally, the heat and pressure used 
    to process plate waste should further reduce the risk of transmitting 
    the TSE agent through feed in a product that is of minimal risk prior 
    to the processing as plate waste.
        Several comments addressed the reference to ``plate waste,'' and 
    the majority of the comments supported the exclusion of plate waste 
    from the definition of ``protein derived from mammalian tissues.'' 
    However, many of these comments also sought a broader exemption by 
    expanding the rule to include ruminant meat which had passed Federal or 
    state inspection for human consumption. In contrast, one comment, from 
    the USDA/APHIS, opposed an exclusion for plate waste, stating that the 
    exclusion was too broad and could be interpreted to be similar to the 
    USDA definition for garbage at 9 CFR 166.9 and that trimmings (bone and 
    nervous tissue) from TSE-susceptible species might be included under 
    the exclusion.
        FDA agrees with the USDA/APHIS that the inclusion of trimmings or 
    high-risk tissue, such as brain and eyes, is inappropriate for use in 
    ruminant feed. FDA declines to expand the exclusion to include all 
    ruminant meat that has passed Federal or state inspection for human 
    consumption. FDA's approach to eliminating trimmings was to describe an 
    acceptable product as one which was ``cooked and offered for human 
    consumption.'' After further consideration FDA has revised the 
    definition of protein derived from mammalian tissues to exclude 
    ``inspected meat products which have been cooked and offered for human 
    food and further heat processed for feed (plate waste and used 
    cellulosic food casings).'' This is to clarify that the high risk 
    tissues USDA/APHIS described in their comment are not covered by this 
    exclusion.
        FDA declines to expand the exclusion to include all ruminant meat 
    that has passed Federal or state inspection for human consumption 
    because this would require FDA to remove the safeguard against 
    trimmings and also would allow brains and eyes which have passed 
    inspection to be fed to ruminants.
        The agency acknowledges that accurately describing products which 
    are acceptable under this exclusion is difficult. In general, FDA 
    interprets this exclusion as being restricted to food prepared in 
    restaurants or restaurant-like establishments, offered to consumers for 
    consumption on the premises, and then discarded by the consumer. 
    Precooked food items, such as hot dogs, casings from cooked hot dogs, 
    and cooked deli items, would be excluded from regulation under this 
    rule by this exclusion. FDA has revised the definition to better 
    reflect its position that the product must be cooked, offered to the 
    consumer for human food, and then further heat processed before it can 
    be fed to animals.
        The Association of American Feed Control Officials, Inc. (AAFCO) is 
    in the process of developing definitions for products described in this 
    section. In general, the ``plate waste'' exclusion is similar to the 
    AAFCO definition of ``restaurant waste.''
        (Comment 41). A few comments questioned why meat and meat products 
    inspected by the USDA and found acceptable for human consumption are 
    not acceptable for ruminant consumption.
        The risks posed to humans and those posed to animals are different. 
    The significant steps advanced by this rule are supported by public 
    health experts as an effective means to decrease the risk of TSE's in 
    ruminants through feed and the potential risk to humans. To date, the 
    occurrence of nv-CJD in Europe has not been definitively linked to 
    human consumption of meat, and no cases of nv-CJD have been detected in 
    the United States.
        (Comment 42). One comment objected to the exclusion of gelatin and 
    blood from the definition of ``protein derived from ruminant and mink 
    tissues.'' The comment argued that gelatin and blood meal may be 
    infectious and that blood meal may not be used as a feed ingredient or 
    a fertilizer in the United Kingdom. The comment further noted that the 
    USDA prohibits the importation of ruminant protein and blood meal from 
    countries with documented BSE cases; the comment stated that if the 
    USDA prohibits such imports because they may be infective, then FDA 
    should not permit the use of domestic gelatin and blood meal.
        The agency disagrees with the comment. As the agency discussed in 
    the preamble to the proposed rule (62 FR 552 at 572) available data 
    suggests that gelatin and blood do not transmit the TSE agent and USDA 
    surveillance has not detected BSE in the United States. However, to 
    minimize the risk of infected material being imported into
    
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    the United States, USDA has prohibited the importation of such 
    products.
        (Comment 43). Several comments addressed the reduction in TSE titer 
    that results from the process that is used to make gelatin. Two 
    comments added that dicalcium phosphate, which is derived from the 
    gelatin manufacturing process, should be excluded from the rule; one 
    described the processes for obtaining dicalcium phosphate. Another 
    comment sought clarification whether amino acids derived from gelatin 
    would be exempt from the rule.
        Amino acids and dicalcium phosphate are excluded from the final 
    rule because both products are by-products or the result of further 
    processing of gelatin and do not contain proteins. Dicalcium phosphate 
    is an inorganic mineral source that does not contain protein, and 
    individual amino acids are not proteins. (Instead, proteins consist of 
    amino acids.) Although the codified provision to the draft rule that 
    was published in the Federal Register of April 17, 1997, expressly 
    exempted amino acids and dicalcium phosphate derived from gelatin, and 
    one comment sought to revise that language regarding dicalcium 
    phosphate, the agency has reconsidered the need for this express 
    language and decided that, because amino acids and dicalcium phosphate 
    are not proteins, the express language is unnecessary.
        (Comment 44). Several comments requested that FDA revise the rule 
    to exclude pure porcine (swine) products. These comments argued that 
    swine are not known to have TSE's and are often slaughtered in 
    dedicated swine slaughter facilities so that pure porcine products can 
    be easily separated from other mammalian products.
        Other comments, submitted after the publication of the draft 
    codified provisions in the Federal Register of April 17, 1997, 
    suggested that FDA revise the rule to exclude pure equine products. 
    FSIS commented that the rationale for the change from a ruminant-to-
    mink prohibition in the proposed rule to a mammalian prohibition, with 
    porcine exclusion, is insufficiently supported by scientific fact and 
    suggested that FDA consider an alternative to the draft final.
        The agency agrees with the comments and has excluded products whose 
    only mammalian protein consists entirely of porcine or equine protein 
    from the definition of ``protein derived from mammalian tissues.'' This 
    exclusion is scientifically defensible because swine and horses have 
    not been shown or reported to have a condition that can be linked to a 
    TSE and can be accomplished within the current industry structure and 
    practice. Because most swine and horses are slaughtered in dedicated 
    facilities, and the ease of verifying compliance at the source, FDA has 
    excluded products containing pure porcine or pure equine protein from 
    the rule and, where appropriate, revised other provisions in the final 
    rule to reflect an exclusion for pure porcine or equine protein. FSIS 
    is in agreement with these changes.
        (Comment 45). A few comments asked the agency to provide a 
    mechanism for exempting animals from flocks or herds that are 
    designated by a Federal agency to be absent from TSE's, such as the 
    USDA's Voluntary Scrapie Flock Certification Program.
        The agency supports any initiative such as this which is designed 
    to reduce or eliminate a naturally occurring TSE. However, there 
    appears to be little assurance that the proteins derived from these 
    flocks or herds could be kept separate as pure single-species proteins, 
    and therefore, FDA declines to revise the rule as suggested by the 
    comments.
        (Comment 46). Proposed Sec. 589.2000(a)(2) would define 
    ``renderer,'' in part, as ``any firm or individual that processes 
    slaughter byproducts, animals unfit for human consumption, meat scraps 
    or food waste.''
        The agency has removed ``food waste'' from the definition. This 
    change is necessary because, as explained above, the agency has 
    excluded plate waste from the definition of ``protein derived from 
    mammalian tissues.'' The agency does note, however, that it interprets 
    the term ``animals unfit for human consumption'' as including parts of 
    animals that are unfit for human consumption.
        (Comment 47). Proposed Sec. 589.2000(a)(3) would define the term 
    ``blender.''
        The agency received no comments on this definition and has 
    finalized it without change.
        (Comment 48). Proposed Sec. 589.2000(a)(4) would define ``feed 
    manufacturer and distributor'' as including manufacturers and 
    distributors of complete and intermediate feeds intended for animals, 
    including on-farm and off-farm feed manufacturing and mixing 
    operations.
        FDA has revised the definition to separate ``feed manufacturer'' 
    from ``distributor.'' The agency made this change to clarify that both 
    feed manufacturers and distributors are subject to the rule rather than 
    persons who perform both functions (manufacturing and distributing). 
    Thus, Sec. 589.2000(a)(4) defines ``feed manufacturer'' as including 
    manufacturers of complete and intermediate feeds intended for animals 
    and including on-farm in addition to off-farm feed manufacturing and 
    mixing operations. Section 589.2000(a)(6) defines ``distributor'' as 
    including persons who distribute or transport feeds or feed ingredients 
    intended for animals. The substance of these definitions are similar to 
    the definition in the draft codified provisions that appeared in the 
    Federal Register of April 17, 1997. The agency has also made 
    corresponding changes throughout the rule to clarify that feed 
    manufacturers are distinct from distributors and deleted the reference 
    to ``haulers'' from proposed Sec. 589.2000(e) because the definition of 
    ``distributor'' includes persons who transport feed and feed 
    ingredients.
        (Comment 49). Proposed Sec. 589.2000(a)(5) would define 
    ``nonruminant protein'' as including protein from nonruminant animals 
    and vegetable sources.
        The agency has revised Sec. 589.2000(a)(5) to define ``nonmammalian 
    protein'' as including protein from nonmammalian animals and vegetable 
    sources. This corresponds to the final rule's change to a mammalian-to-
    ruminant prohibition.
        (Comment 50). As stated earlier, FDA has revised the rule to create 
    a new Sec. 589.2000(a)(6) to define ``distributor.'' While the codified 
    provisions of the draft rule that appeared in the Federal Register of 
    April 17, 1997, initially defined ``distributor'' as including 
    distributors of complete and intermediate feeds intended for animals, 
    FDA, on its own initiative, has revised the definition further to 
    clarify that persons who transport feed or feed ingredients intended 
    for animals are distributors.
        (Comment 51). The agency has also revised the rule to create a new 
    Sec. 589.2000(a)(7) to define ``ruminant'' as including ``any member of 
    the order of animals which has a stomach with four chambers (rumen, 
    reticulum, omasum, and abomasum) through which feed passes in 
    digestion. The order includes, but is not limited to, cattle, buffalo, 
    sheep, goats, deer, elk, and antelopes.'' FDA elected to define the 
    word ``ruminant'' because several comments noted that some people might 
    not know what animals are ``ruminants.''
    2. Section 589.2000(b)--Food Additive Status
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(b) would state that protein derived from 
    ruminant and mink tissues is not generally recognized as safe for use 
    in ruminant feed because it may contain TSE's and is a food
    
    [[Page 30948]]
    
    additive subject to section 409 of the act (21 U.S.C. 348). Thus, under 
    the proposed rule, the use or intended use of any ruminant or mink-
    derived protein in ruminant feed would cause the feed to be adulterated 
    and in violation of the act (unless it was the subject of an effective 
    notice of claimed investigational exemption for a food additive or was 
    the subject of a food additive regulation). Proposed Sec. 589.2000(b) 
    would also state that FDA has determined that ruminant and mink-derived 
    protein is not prior sanctioned for use in ruminant feeds.
        a. NonGRAS status.
        At the outset, FDA notes that no comments provided FDA with any 
    published studies, data, or other information or expert opinions upon 
    which FDA could conclude that the material is safe or that there is a 
    reasonable certainty that the material is not harmful under the 
    intended conditions of use. FDA received no scientifically valid 
    information, or expert opinion based on that information, that 
    addressed: (1) Whether it is reasonably certain that BSE does not, or 
    will not, occur in the United States; (2) whether the BSE agent can be 
    detected; (3) whether it is reasonably certain that the BSE agent will 
    not be transmitted to ruminants through animal feed, i.e., that the 
    processed tissues are not infected by the agent, are deactivated by the 
    rendering process or are not transmitted orally; or (4) whether it is 
    reasonably certain that the agent will not be transmitted to humans 
    through consumption of ruminant products. As discussed extensively in 
    the preamble to the proposed rule (see 62 FR 552 at 553 and 564) and 
    herein, these significant safety questions have been raised by credible 
    currently available information about the transmission of BSE and TSE's 
    to ruminants through feed. As a result of these questions, as provided 
    in this final rule, FDA has determined that protein derived from 
    mammalian tissues in ruminant feed is not GRAS.
        (Comment 52). Many comments stated that ruminant protein had been 
    safely used as components of animal feed for 100 years as well as 
    before the enactment of the Food Additive Amendments of 1958. These 
    comments seemed to assert that ruminant protein for use in ruminant 
    feed is GRAS based on common use in food prior to 1958, and based on 
    this history of safe use, FDA cannot now declare it to be a food 
    additive.
        FDA disagrees. As noted in the preamble to the proposed rule, if a 
    substance was used in food before 1958, general recognition that the 
    use of a feed ingredient is safe can be based on scientific procedures 
    or experience based on common use in food (see 62 FR 552 at 566; 
    section 201(s) of the act (21 U.S.C. 321(s)); and 21 CFR 570.30(a)). 
    General recognition of safety through experience based on common use in 
    food prior to January 1, 1958, may be determined without the quantity 
    or quality of scientific procedures required for approval of a food 
    additive regulation, but it nonetheless requires a demonstration of: 
    (1) Safe use based on common use, and (2) an expert consensus of 
    safety, based on that common use (see 21 CFR 570.30). The simple 
    assertion of this safe use thus does not satisfy the burden the 
    proponents of the use bear to establish general recognition. Although 
    FDA agrees that, until recently, this material appears to have had a 
    long history of use without known adverse effects (see 62 FR 552 at 
    566), FDA has never affirmatively declared the material to be GRAS 
    based on common use in food.
        Moreover, even if a substance is GRAS based on common use in food 
    or GRAS based on scientific procedures, FDA may reassess the GRAS 
    status of a food ingredient based on new information (see 21 CFR 
    530.30(g); see also, e.g., 51 FR 25021, July 9, 1986 (Sulfiting Agents; 
    Revocation of GRAS Status for Use on Fruits and Vegetables to be Served 
    or Sold Raw to Consumers)). Thus, even if ruminant protein for use in 
    ruminant feed were GRAS based on common use in feed prior to 1958, that 
    does not preclude FDA from reassessing it now that there exist new 
    studies, data, or other information that show that the substance is, or 
    may be, no longer safe (this is true whether the studies or data are 
    published or unpublished (see 50 FR 27294 at 27296 (July 2, 1985))) or 
    that there is no longer the basis for an expert consensus that it is 
    safe.
        Expert opinion that the substance for use in ruminant feed is GRAS 
    would need to be supported by scientific literature, and other sources 
    of data and information. ``General recognition'' cannot be based on an 
    absence of studies that demonstrate that a substance is unsafe; there 
    must be studies or other information to establish that the substance is 
    safe (see U.S. v. An Article of Food * * * Coco Rico, 752 F.2d 11 (1st 
    Cir. 1985)). Furthermore, if there are studies and other data or 
    information that raise questions about the safety of the use of the 
    material, this conflict--just like a conflict in expert opinion--may 
    prevent general recognition of the substance.
        As the agency explained in the preamble to the proposed rule, 
    research and other information have raised questions regarding the safe 
    use of protein derived from certain animal tissue in ruminant feeds. 
    The agency stated that ``the evidence as discussed in sections I and 
    II.A through II.D of this document, for the development of a new 
    pattern of disease transmission, now indicates that these ingredients 
    can no longer be categorically regarded as safe'' (see 62 FR 552 at 
    566).
        Because the expert opinion must be ``general,'' a substance is not 
    GRAS if there is no recognition among experts, or there is a genuine 
    dispute among the experts, as to whether it is safe. Although there 
    need not be unanimity among qualified experts that a substance is safe 
    for ``general recognition'' of its safety to exist, an ``expert 
    consensus'' is required (see Weinberger v. Hynson, Wescott & Dunning, 
    Inc., 412 U.S. 606, 632 (1073)).
        Accordingly, there must be no genuine difference of opinion among 
    qualified experts as to the substance's safety (see Coco Rico, 752 F.2d 
    at 15 n.6; United States v. Articles of Drug * * * 5,906 Boxes, 745 
    F.2d 105, 119 n.22 (1st Cir. 1984)). As the Court of Appeals for the 
    Second Circuit explained in Premo Pharmaceutical Laboratories, Inc. v. 
    United States, 629 F.2d 795, 803 (2d Cir. 1980), when there is a 
    dispute among experts as to ``general recognition,''
    
        The * * * issue (of actual safety) is to be determined by the 
    FDA which, as distinguished from a court, possesses superior 
    expertise, usually of a complex scientific nature, for resolving 
    that issue.
    
    See also 5,906 Boxes, 745 F.2d at 119 n.22; United States v. 50 Boxes * 
    * * Cafergot P-B Suppositories, 721 F.Supp. 1462, 1465 (D. Mass. 1989), 
    aff'd, 909 F.2d 24 (1st Cir. 1990); An Article of Drug * * * Furestrol 
    Vaginal Suppositories, 251 F.Supp. 1307 (N.D. Ga. 1968), aff'd, 415 
    F.2d 390 (5th Cir. 1969).
        The World Health Organization (WHO), in an April 1996 consultation 
    on public health issues related to TSE, recommended that all countries 
    ban the use of ruminant tissues in ruminant feed. This recommendation 
    was intended to minimize the risk associated with exposure to BSE from 
    beef and beef products. The background for WHO recommendation pointed 
    out that the BSE epidemic in the United Kingdom appeared to have been 
    due mainly to the recycling of infected bovine material back to cattle.
        In response to the agency's request in the preamble to the proposed 
    rule for comments on a ruminant-to-ruminant prohibition as well as 
    other alternatives including a full mammalian to ruminant
    
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    ban, no one submitted or cited published studies to support the 
    contention that the use of protein derived from ruminant tissue or from 
    mammalian tissue in ruminant feed is GRAS. Furthermore, no comments 
    refuted the agency's basis for determining protein derived from 
    ruminant tissue for use in ruminant feed to be nonGRAS as set out in 
    the preamble to the proposed rule. In addition, no one submitted or 
    cited published studies to support a finding that the use of mammalian 
    tissue in ruminant feed is GRAS either in response to the request for 
    comments on the alternative set out in the preamble to the proposed 
    rule or the request for comments on the draft rule, which included the 
    mammalian (with certain exclusions) to ruminant ban. FDA believes that 
    the same research and information set out in the proposed rule and the 
    industry practice of commingling mammalian, including ruminant and 
    mink, tissues, demonstrate that the use of protein derived from 
    mammalian tissues can no longer be categorically regarded as safe. 
    Therefore, this final rule provides that such protein for use in 
    ruminant feed is a food additive subject to section 409 of the act.
        (Comment 53). Numerous comments appeared to argue that the agency 
    could not promulgate a rule declaring ruminant protein to be a food 
    additive when intended for ruminant feed because there is no BSE in the 
    United States.
        Because these comments did not provide any legal or scientific 
    explanation to support this argument, it is unclear to FDA whether they 
    are arguing: (1) That FDA cannot rely on new information from foreign 
    sources to reassess the GRAS status of a food ingredient, or (2) that 
    FDA cannot take action until BSE actually occurs on United States soil. 
    Whichever argument is meant, FDA disagrees. First, the act does not 
    require evidence of actual harm to exist before a substance can be 
    declared to be not GRAS by FDA; all that is required is information--
    which exists here--that the use of certain protein in ruminant feed may 
    not be safe or that there is no expert consensus that the use of the 
    substance is safe.
        In addition, in response to comments that point out that there is 
    no evidence of BSE in the United States, FDA notes that nothing in the 
    act would support a blanket conclusion that FDA should only rely on 
    data generated or conditions present in the United States when making 
    this reassessment. Indeed, since, under the act, FDA must take into 
    account relevant evidence of foreign use when assessing a claim that a 
    food ingredient is GRAS based on common use in food prior to 1958 (see 
    Fmali Herb, Inc. v. Heckler, 715 F.2d 1385 (9th Cir. 1985)), FDA 
    believes it should likewise take relevant foreign data and expertise 
    into account when reassessing safety and general recognition. Here, 
    while there have been no reported cases of BSE in the United States, 
    other conditions exist that make the foreign experience relevant, such 
    as the fact that, in the United Kingdom, BSE was spread by the practice 
    of feeding ingredients from processed BSE-infected cattle to other 
    cattle, and the processes that were used failed to inactivate the BSE 
    agent.
        Moreover, the act as a whole and the 1958 Food Additives Amendment 
    in particular were intended to give FDA the tools to prevent harm to 
    the public health before it occurs (see, e.g., United States v. Ewig 
    Bros Co., 502 F.2d 715, 721 & n.24 (7th Cir. 1974), cert. denied, 420 
    U.S. 945 (1975); see also S. Rep. No. 2422, 85th Cong., 2d Sess. 1-3 
    (1958); H.R. Rep. No. 2284, 85th Cong., 2d Sess. 1 (1958)). As a result 
    of the 1958 amendment, the burden of proof shifted to manufacturers, 
    and the 1958 amendment ``permit(s) FDA to regulate the use of 
    substances affecting foods without first determining that they are in 
    fact dangerous; the method is to require that such substances be 
    established as safe before being used'' (see Natick Paperboard Corp. v. 
    Weinberger, 525 F.2d 1103, 1106 (1st Cir. 1975), cert. denied, 429 U.S. 
    819 (1976); see also Ewig Bros., 502 F.2d at 721).
        Thus, to claim that FDA cannot declare a substance to be a food 
    additive until it has actually done damage in the United States and FDA 
    can prove that actual harm has occurred would eviscerate the act. It 
    would be contrary to the public health if FDA could not use this 
    authority--based data and other relevant information from other 
    countries--to prevent harm from occurring through the use of certain 
    ingredients in feed.
        FDA notes that section 801 of the act (21 U.S.C. 381), which gives 
    the agency the authority to prevent the import into the United States 
    of food that violate the act unless such items are intended for export 
    rather than domestic distribution, underscores the weakness of the 
    comments' arguments. If the act did not allow FDA to consider 
    conditions that exist in, or evidence from, other countries when 
    determining whether an article violates the provisions of the act, FDA 
    would not be able to implement section 801 of the act and keep 
    violative food from entering the country. Furthermore, if the comments' 
    interpretation of the act is correct--that FDA can only look at 
    conditions in this country--then FDA would not be able to declare 
    animal protein from other countries to be an unsafe food additive, even 
    if there had been cases of BSE reported in the country in which the 
    animal protein originated.
        (Comment 54). Several comments argued that more research is needed 
    before FDA can take action and that the agency must establish that all 
    feed components affected by this rulemaking may transmit TSE's.
        These comments misunderstand the structure of the food safety 
    provisions of the act. As noted above and in the preamble to the 
    proposed rule (62 FR 552 at 566), the act places the burden to 
    establish safety of a feed component on the proponent of the substance, 
    not on the government to prove actual harm. Research of the type 
    suggested by the comments could take years to complete. The agency 
    believes that it is neither required nor appropriate to delay 
    regulatory action to prevent transmission of BSE pending the completion 
    of research.
        The information presented in the preamble to the proposed rule set 
    out the basis for the agency's nonGRAS determination for the use of 
    protein derived from ruminant and mink tissue in ruminant feed. As 
    discussed earlier in this preamble to the final rule, after evaluating 
    the issues and information presented in the comments on the proposal 
    and all other evidence, the agency has determined that a consensus does 
    not exist that the use of protein derived from mammalian tissues is 
    safe for use in ruminant feed. The agency finds that the potential 
    remains for ruminants to be exposed to TSE agents in ruminant feed. 
    When a ruminant is fed protein derived from mammalian tissues, TSE's 
    may be transmitted. Therefore, FDA concludes that the use of protein 
    derived from mammalian tissues in ruminant feed can no longer be 
    considered GRAS.
        (Comment 55). The draft rule that appeared in the Federal Register 
    of April 17, 1997, revised Sec. 589.2000(b) to eliminate unnecessary 
    phrases that were included in proposed Sec. 589.2000(b). These phrases 
    were statements referring to FDA's determination that these proteins 
    are nonGRAS, the absence of a regulation providing for safe use, and 
    FDA's determination that these proteins are not prior sanctioned for 
    use in ruminant feeds. A small number of comments questioned why the 
    language was removed (because it did not alter the fact that proteins 
    derived from
    
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    mammalian tissues for use in ruminant feed are food additives subject 
    to section 409 of the act), and one comment asked FDA to restore the 
    nonGRAS language.
        FDA eliminated the text described above from Sec. 589.2000(b) 
    because the language was unnecessary. These revisions are solely 
    editorial in nature and do not affect the substance of the agency's 
    rulemaking or its determination that protein derived from mammalian 
    tissues is not GRAS for use in ruminant feed and is not prior 
    sanctioned for use in ruminant feeds.
        b. Alternatives to nonGRAS status and other legal comments.
        Several comments advocated alternatives to declaring proteins 
    derived from ruminant tissues to be nonGRAS.
        (Comment 56). Several comments suggested that FDA refrain from 
    issuing the rule and instead issue a CPG. Some comments stated that a 
    CPG could be used to determine that certain proteins are adulterants 
    when added to ruminant feed and that use of a CPG would meet FDA's goal 
    of increasing prevention of BSE. Some comments stated that a CPG would 
    prevent the loss of GRAS status for the protein products and claimed 
    that this loss will have serious ramifications, such as stigmatizing 
    the protein products, as well as affecting the companies' ability to 
    compete in the global market. One comment advocated the use of a CPG 
    because it would allow the agency additional time to do a reasoned 
    analysis of the scientific information before taking a final action. 
    Some comments stated that use of a CPG would allow the agency to 
    respond more quickly to scientific and technical changes than the use 
    of notice and comment rulemaking.
        FDA disagrees with these comments. Contrary to the arguments 
    presented in the comments, FDA cannot use CPG's to impose any 
    requirement. CPG's are guidance documents issued by the agency. These 
    documents are not binding on the agency or any person. As the agency 
    explained in its ``Good Guidance Practice'' document published in the 
    Federal Register of February 27, 1997 (62 FR 8961), guidance documents 
    ``represent the agency's current thinking on (a) subject'' and ``do not 
    themselves establish legally enforceable rights or responsibilities and 
    are not legally binding on the public or the agency.'' To issue a 
    binding prohibition, the agency must follow an appropriate rulemaking 
    procedure (see Community Nutrition Institute v. Young, 818 F.2d 943 
    (D.C. Cir. 1987)). Therefore, if the agency issues a CPG, it would not 
    be binding and, as such, would be an ineffective means of banning the 
    use of protein derived from certain tissues in ruminant feed. 
    Furthermore, a CPG that states that certain proteins used in ruminant 
    feed are adulterants under the act would require the agency, on a case-
    by-case basis, to bring enforcement actions for violations of section 
    402(a)(1) or section 402(a)(2)(C) of the act. Again, the agency does 
    not believe this is an effective approach to preventing the 
    establishment and amplification of BSE through feed. The agency 
    believes it has made a reasoned analysis of the scientific information 
    available and based on this analysis, the agency is taking the approach 
    set out in this final rule.
        (Comment 57). Several comments urged FDA to use an interim food 
    additive regulation rather than declare certain proteins for use in 
    ruminant feed are not GRAS. These comments explained that an interim 
    food additive regulation would prevent their products from being 
    stigmatized by a not GRAS determination. These comments also explained 
    that the interim food additive regulation would keep the administrative 
    record open to new evidence, permit FDA and the industry to react to 
    new research findings, and permit FDA to require the industry to 
    conduct planned research. Some comments cited the regulations in part 
    180 (21 CFR part 180) and the interim selenium rule as precedent for 
    FDA issuing an interim food additive regulation.
        FDA disagrees with these comments. The regulations in part 180, 
    issued under section 409 of the act, apply to ``substances having a 
    history of use in food for human consumption or in food contact 
    surfaces'' (see Sec. 180.1(a)). The definition of ``food'' for the 
    subchapter (which includes part 180) includes ``human food, substances 
    migrating to food from food-contact articles, pet food, and animal 
    feed'' (see 21 CFR 170.3(m)). The language of Sec. 180.1, however, only 
    refers to human food and substances migrating to food from food contact 
    surfaces. The limiting language in Sec. 180.1 makes it clear that it 
    does not apply to pet food or animal feed. The agency recognizes that 
    Sec. 570.38(c)(2) (21 CFR 570.38(e)(2)), applicable to animal feeds, 
    provides that an interim food additive regulation may be issued. This 
    provision was carried over when the rules at part 121 (21 CFR part 121 
    (1976)), which addressed both human food and animal feed additives, 
    were reorganized to separate the human food and animal feed provisions. 
    Section 121.41 of FDA's regulations, which included the reference to 
    interim food additive regulations, was republished as Sec. 570.38. The 
    provisions governing promulgation of interim food additive regulations 
    at Sec. 121.4000 (now Sec. 180.1) were not republished in part 570 (21 
    CFR part 570) governing animal feed (41 FR 38618, September 10, 1976). 
    A decision to extend the use of interim food additive regulations to 
    animal feeds and the creation of a procedure for doing so would likely 
    require rulemaking under the Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 501 
    et seq.)
        Furthermore, even if this procedure were available to the agency 
    here, it would not prevent the stigma that the comments state is 
    created by the agency's determination that protein derived from certain 
    tissues for use in ruminant feed is not GRAS since the same 
    determination must be made to issue an interim food additive regulation 
    (see, e.g., 61 FR 7990 March 1, 1996) (interim food additive for 
    mannitol). Any determination by the agency that a substance is a food 
    additive is also a determination that the substance is not GRAS. This 
    is true regardless of whether the agency takes an action as in this 
    final rule or the agency issues an interim food additive regulation.
        With regard to the interim rule on selenium cited by some comments 
    as an interim food additive regulation, the agency disagrees that the 
    interim rule on selenium is an interim food additive regulation like 
    those for human food issued under part 180. The selenium regulation at 
    21 CFR 573.920 was initially based on an approved food additive 
    petition submitted under section 409 of the act. The interim final rule 
    on selenium that appeared in the Federal Register of October 17, 1995 
    (60 FR 53702) was issued as an interim rule under the Administrative 
    Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 501 et seq.), not as an interim food additive 
    regulation under section 409 of the act. The interim selenium rule 
    implements Pub. L. 103-354 regarding the allowable levels of selenium 
    in certain animal feeds. The rule is designated as an interim rule 
    because it was issued under an exception in the Administrative 
    Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B)). This exception allows a final rule 
    to be issued without prior notice and public comment if use of the 
    procedures is impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public 
    interest. As stated in the preamble to the selenium rule, the agency 
    determined that prior notice and public comment was unnecessary because 
    the rule merely repeated the terms of Pub. L. 103-354 (see 60 FR 53702 
    and 53703). As stated above, an interim food additive regulation would 
    be issued under section 409 of the act. Therefore, the interim selenium 
    rule is
    
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    not precedent for the agency to issue an interim food additive 
    regulation in this case.
        (Comment 58). One comment stated that, instead of publishing a 
    regulation under part 589 (21 CFR part 589) which lists substances 
    prohibited in animal feed, the agency should do a GRAS listing with 
    restrictions similar to the action taken in the propylene glycol rule 
    that was published in the Federal Register of May 10, 1995 (60 FR 
    24808). The comment asserted that the GRAS listing (which is referred 
    to as a ``GRAS affirmation'') would reduce the possible taint from 
    listing the protein in part 589 as a prohibited substance. The comment 
    explained that the GRAS listing could limit the animal feed that could 
    contain the protein as it is listed in the proposed rule and include an 
    exemption for use of approved deactivation and detection methods. The 
    comment stated that the preamble to the rule should state the agency's 
    view that all uses excepted from GRAS status must be subject to a food 
    additive provision.
        FDA does not agree with this comment. The action on propylene 
    glycol that the comment cites was a proposed rule that would exclude 
    from GRAS status propylene glycol used in or on cat food. The final 
    rule was published in the Federal Register of May 2, 1996 (61 FR 
    19542). The proposed rule cited by the comment, as well as the final 
    rule, included two provisions. One provision amended Sec. 582.1666 (21 
    CFR 582.1666), which sets out the GRAS status of propylene glycol, to 
    except its use in cat food. The second provision was a new 
    Sec. 589.1001 which lists propylene glycol in or on cat food as a 
    substance prohibited from use in animal food or feed. In this case, no 
    regulation exists that sets out a FDA determination of GRAS for protein 
    derived from certain tissues for use in animal feed. Therefore, there 
    is no GRAS regulation to amend as in the case with propylene glycol. 
    Furthermore, this final rule, like the propylene glycol regulation, 
    will list the substances as prohibited from use in animal feed in part 
    589.
        The current regulations at Secs. 570.30 and 570.35 (21 CFR 570.30 
    and 570.35) describe the information necessary to determine a substance 
    as GRAS or to affirm GRAS status. The comment did not include or cite 
    any information that would provide a basis for the agency to determine 
    that the other feed uses of protein derived from certain tissues is 
    GRAS or to affirm it as GRAS. FDA notes, however, that the act does not 
    preclude manufacturers from making their own decisions on the GRAS 
    status of uses not covered by this final rule. If FDA disagrees with 
    this self-determination, FDA may take action, as it has done in this 
    final rule or by enforcement action, to end that self-determined GRAS 
    status (see FDA's proposed rule, Substances Generally Recognized as 
    Safe, published on April 17, 1997 (62 FR 18938), for proposed revisions 
    to the GRAS affirmation process.
        (Comment 59). Several comments suggested that FDA adopt a 
    ``temporary ban'' or a ``temporary moratorium'' to suspend the use of 
    the ruminant protein in ruminant feed. The comments claimed that such 
    temporary measures, unlike a formal rule, would be quickly modified or 
    rescinded based on new information. The comments also stated that FDA 
    should consider other alternative, yet effective, approaches and that 
    FDA has the ability to use other available regulatory options.
        The agency declines to adopt the comments' suggestions. The 
    comments did not indicate what legal authority FDA should use or how 
    ``temporary'' a ban or moratorium should be. While the agency has 
    several authorities related to the regulation of animal feed, they are 
    not applicable or would not be the most effective means of 
    accomplishing the rule's goals. The agency believes that the approach 
    used in this final rule is the most effective approach to accomplish 
    the agency's objective of preventing the establishment and 
    amplification of BSE in the United States through feed.
        As stated in a response to an earlier comment, the agency could 
    bring adulteration charges under section 402(a)(1) of the act (21 
    U.S.C. 342(a)(1)) or section 402(a)(2)(C) on a case-by-case basis. The 
    agency does not believe this is a viable, efficient solution to 
    preventing BSE because it would require FDA to prove, on a case-by-case 
    basis, that mammalian protein is not GRAS when intended for use in 
    ruminant feed. In addition, the burden of proof would be on the agency 
    in such enforcement actions.
        Under section 404 of the act (21 U.S.C. 344), the agency may issue 
    regulations providing for the issuance of permits governing the 
    manufacture, processing, or packaging of any class of food which the 
    agency has found may be injurious to health due to contamination with 
    micro-organism during such manufacture, processing, or packing. 
    However, in this case, the agency may be unable to determine adequately 
    whether a food may be injurious after the food has entered interstate 
    commerce. The lack of information required to establish necessary 
    conditions, coupled with the fact that the incubation period for BSE 
    may range from 2 to 8 years, effectively precludes use of section 404 
    of the act.
        Section 406 of the act (21 U.S.C. 346) authorizes the agency to set 
    tolerances for food additives that are required for the production of a 
    food or cannot be avoided by good manufacturing practice. However, in 
    this case, section 406 of the act is inapplicable because protein 
    derived from certain tissues is not required to produce ruminant feed 
    nor is the protein an unavoidable contaminant. Even if section 406 of 
    the act were applicable, FDA does not have sufficient information to 
    set a tolerance because the quantity of the BSE agent necessary to 
    product infection is currently unknown.
        Finally, the agency has the authority to make and enforce 
    regulations to prevent the spread of communicable diseases under 
    section 361 of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 264). This 
    authority is available to the agency to address issues related to 
    TSE's. FDA, however, has determined that, at this time, use of its 
    authority under the food additive provisions of the act is appropriate.
        (Comment 60). Comments from several individuals and organizations 
    strongly opposed the agency's proposal to declare certain animal-
    derived feedstuffs as nonGRAS. As an alternative, the comments 
    suggested that adequate methods could be instituted which would reduce 
    to an acceptable level the risk that these feeds could transmit TSE's 
    to ruminants. Such methods included, inter alia, eliminating high risk 
    sources of raw materials (e.g., downer animals, specified ovine 
    tissues) from processing into feedstuffs intended for ruminant rations, 
    processing (rendering) conditions specifically designed to reduce the 
    infectivity of the raw materials if TSE agents were present in such 
    materials, and adequate clean-out, transport, and storage practices 
    which would minimize the risk from carryover or contamination of feeds 
    or feedstuffs with potentially infective materials.
        Many comments, including some from the industries directly affected 
    by this rule, suggested that the agency issue regulations to require 
    risk reduction processes. These comments suggested that regulatory 
    oversight would be facilitated through GMP's, HACCP programs, or 
    similar instruments, and commercial firms determined by the agency to 
    be in compliance with such regulations would be permitted to label 
    feedstuffs produced under those conditions as ``Certified Ruminant 
    Derived Protein.'' Feed bearing such labeling would be permitted for 
    use in
    
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    all animal feed, including ruminant feed. One comment even provided a 
    detailed example of an HACCP program applicable to rendering 
    facilities, including a quantitative risk analysis specifying the 
    reduction in BSE infectivity at each critical control point. A comment 
    from the rendering trade association provided a detailed generic HACCP 
    plan which could be adapted by individual rendering establishments to 
    their specific operation. This comment also contained proposed codified 
    language for implementing HACCP. Several other comments provided 
    examples of practices intended to prevent high risk animals from 
    entering rendering channels.
        In the preamble to the proposed rule, the agency agreed that the 
    need for mandatory HACCP, supported by GMP's for animal-derived 
    proteins, could be considered in future rulemaking (62 FR 552 at 567). 
    The agency continues to encourage the voluntary adoption of HACCP on a 
    plant-by-plant basis in both the rendering and feed industries. To the 
    extent that HACCP is adopted, FDA will be able to examine whether safe 
    conditions of use for some or all of the prohibited protein in ruminant 
    feed, using an HACCP plan, can be established under a food additive 
    regulation or whether such uses using an HACCP plan are GRAS. However, 
    a regulatory action to make HACCP mandatory for all manufacturers in 
    these industries is outside the scope of this final rule.
        The agency agrees, in concept, that procedures which inactivate TSE 
    agents in feedstuffs or methods that detect the presence of TSE agents 
    in feedstuffs could form the basis for determining whether HACCP, GMP, 
    or similar process validation programs were sufficient to ensure that 
    TSE's could not be transmitted to ruminants through consumption of 
    feedstuffs produced under those programs. Additionally, under the final 
    rule, renderers are exempt from labeling and certain recordkeeping 
    requirements under this rule if they use routinely a test method that 
    FDA has validated to detect the presence of the agent that causes TSE's 
    and whose design has been made available to the public; or use 
    exclusively a method for controlling the manufacturing process that 
    minimizes the risk of the TSE entering the product and whose design has 
    been made available to the public and validated by FDA.
        Presently, the agency has not validated any methods to detect the 
    TSE agent or any methods for controlling the manufacturing process that 
    would minimize the risk of the TSE agent entering the product. Although 
    some comments argued that rendering systems used widely in the United 
    States have been shown by European researchers to inactivate BSE under 
    specific parameters, such that products produced using these rendering 
    systems should be exempted from the rule, it should be noted that 
    mammalian meat and bone meal produced under the European system is not 
    permitted to be fed to ruminants in the European Union (Ref. 11).
        The agency believes that the information provided is insufficient 
    to validate specific rendering processes. Although these rendering 
    processes appear to reduce the infectivity of materials in the mouse 
    model, the infective dose of a TSE agent remains unknown. The assay 
    method used to measure reduction of infectivity has been questioned as 
    to whether it is the appropriate assay for determining the infectivity 
    of tissues under natural conditions. When the mouse bioassay has been 
    used, there remain questions whether the test materials (tissues from 
    BSE-infected cattle) contained sufficient titres of the TSE agent to 
    ensure that materials produced under these rendering systems will not 
    transmit TSE's to ruminants (see comment 41 of this document and the 
    agency response). When sufficient data are available for the agency to 
    validate a process for inactivating TSE agents in processed feedstuffs, 
    a method for controlling the manufacturing process, or a test for 
    detecting the TSE agent in feed, FDA will be able to examine whether 
    safe conditions of use for mammalian protein in ruminant feed, using 
    such validated processes or tests, can be established under a food 
    additive regulation or whether such uses using the validated process or 
    test are GRAS.
    3. Section 589.2000(c)--Requirements for Renderers That Are Not 
    Included in Paragraph (e) of This Section
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(c) would set forth the requirements for most 
    renderers. Proposed Sec. 589.2000(c)(1)(i) would require renderers 
    whose products contain or may contain protein derived from ruminant and 
    mink tissues and intended for use in animal feed to label the materials 
    as follows: Contains (or may contain) protein derived from ruminant and 
    mink tissues. Do not feed to ruminant animals, and do not use to 
    manufacture feed intended for ruminant animals. Proposed 
    Sec. 589.2000(c)(1)(ii) would require renderers to maintain copies of 
    sales invoices and to make them available to FDA for inspection and 
    copying. Proposed Sec. 589.2000(c)(2) would exempt renderers from the 
    labeling and recordkeeping requirements if they use exclusively a 
    manufacturing method that FDA has validated to deactivate the TSE agent 
    and make that method available to the public or routinely use a test 
    method, also validated by FDA, for detecting the TSE agent, under 
    proposed Sec. 589.2000(c)(2)(ii), would be labeled ``Not for Use in 
    Animal Feed,'' and records of test results would be made available for 
    FDA inspection. Proposed Sec. 589.2000(c)(3) would exempt renderers 
    from recordkeeping requirements if they use a permanent method, 
    approved by FDA, to mark the presence of protein derived from ruminant 
    and mink tissues. If the marking method could not be seen on visual 
    inspection, the proposed rule would require the method to be validated 
    by FDA and made available to the public.
        a. Cautionary statement.
        Several comments addressed the statement in proposed 
    Sec. 589.2000(c)(1)(i).
        (Comment 61). Several comments requested that FDA revise the rule 
    to make the labeling statement simpler and more concise. Many suggested 
    that the statement simply say, ``Do Not Feed to Ruminants.''
        FDA agrees and has revised the cautionary statement in 
    Sec. 589.2000(c)(1)(i) to read, ``Do not feed to cattle or other 
    ruminants.'' This statement has the advantages of being simple and 
    concise, and it refers to cattle as an example of a ruminant animal.
        (Comment 62). In contrast, some comments asked FDA to revise 
    Sec. 589.2000(c)(1)(i) by placing the word ``warning'' or ``caution'' 
    in the heading; requiring the use of bold type; referring to FDA 
    regulations or some other statement to indicate a legal prohibition; 
    and specifying the type, size, color or location of the label to ensure 
    it is noticeable.
        The agency agrees in part and disagrees in part with the comments. 
    Section 403(f) of the act (21 U.S.C. 343(f)) requires that any word, 
    statement, or other information required to appear on food labels or 
    labeling to be ``prominently placed thereon with such conspicuousness 
    (as compared with other words, statements, designs, or devices, in the 
    labeling) and in such terms as to render it likely to be read and 
    understood by the ordinary individual under customary conditions of 
    purchase and use.'' Here, the essential point of the cautionary 
    statement is that the product should not be fed to cattle and other 
    ruminants; thus, citing FDA regulations to indicate
    
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    a legal prohibition would provide little useful information to the vast 
    majority of consumers and would be contrary to keeping the statement 
    simple and concise.
        The agency does agree that the cautionary statement should be 
    noticeable. The statement should appear on product labels (such as 
    those attached to or are part of a bag or other container) and other 
    labeling for the product. For bulk products, the statement should 
    appear on the placard and invoice that accompany the shipment and on 
    any other labeling for the product. The agency does not have a 
    regulation that provides additional direction, beyond the statutory 
    language quoted above, regarding the prominence of the cautionary 
    statement and does not believe it is necessary to do so in this final 
    rule. However, the agency suggests that the statement be distinguished 
    by different type size or color or other means of highlighting the 
    statement so that it is easily noticed by a purchaser. Additional 
    information on animal food labeling may be found at part 501 (21 CFR 
    part 501).
        (Comment 63). One comment indicated a need for clear end user 
    labeling of any and all human foods containing the specified offal 
    (eye, spinal column, tonsil, thymus, spleen, and intestine) and/or 
    mechanically recovered meat.
        The USDA is responsible for labeling most meat products destined 
    for human consumption as food. Thus, the comment's suggestion is 
    outside the scope of this rule.
        b. Records.
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(c)(1)(ii) would require renderers to 
    maintain copies of sales invoices and to make copies available for 
    inspection and copying by FDA. The preamble to the proposed rule 
    indicated that such records are a usual and customary part of normal 
    business activities (see 62 FR 552 at 570 and 579) and that FDA would 
    use such records to verify compliance with the rule.
        (Comment 64). FDA received several comments concerning records. 
    Several comments supported the use of such records for compliance 
    purposes. However, a few comments suggested that sales invoices may not 
    always accompany products, that persons may not retain sales invoices 
    or records, or that sales invoices may not contain sufficient 
    information for enforcing the regulation.
        In considering these comments, the agency reviewed several 
    Establishment Inspection Reports (EIR's) and supporting material that 
    had been collected as part of routine inspections or surveys of feed 
    ingredient manufacturers and feedmills. The supporting material for the 
    EIR's confirmed that some invoices contained detailed information 
    (regarding the items being sold and the identities of the seller and 
    purchaser) while others contained only a vague description of the 
    product and the name (without any address) of the company or person 
    receiving the product. Given the diversity in the sales invoices, and 
    the concerns expressed in some comments, FDA revised 
    Sec. 589.2000(c)(1)(ii) to require renderers to maintain records 
    sufficient to track the materials throughout their receipt, processing, 
    and distribution (rather than refer to sales invoices only), and to 
    make the copies available for inspection and copying by FDA. The final 
    rule enables renderers (and other parties that must comply with the 
    record requirement in Sec. 589.2000(c)(1)(ii)) to use sales invoices or 
    other records or a combination of such information so long as they 
    provide sufficient information to enable FDA to determine the receipt, 
    processing, and distribution of materials.
        The recordkeeping requirement can be satisfied by an invoice or 
    other similar document reflecting receipt or purchase, and sale or 
    delivery of the product by the renderer. The information normally 
    expected to be included in these documents includes: (1) Date of the 
    receipt or purchase, or sale or delivery; (2) seller's name and 
    address; (3) consignee's name and address; (4) identification of the 
    product; and (5) quantity. Regarding an identification of the product, 
    FDA notes that invoices or similar sales documents may serve as labels 
    for bulk rendered products.
        The act generally requires that the label of a regulated product 
    contain the product's customary or usual name. The common or usual 
    names of rendered products typically are those included in the 
    definitions published by AAFCO, such as ``meat and bone meal.'' Thus, 
    the use of the common or usual name on the invoice or similar sales 
    document will satisfy, in part, the ``records'' requirement in 
    Sec. 589.2000(c)(1)(ii) as well as the ``common or usual name'' 
    requirement in the act. As discussed later in this document, the 
    records must be made available for FDA inspection and copying. They 
    should be kept so they are legible and readily retrievable.
        c. Exemptions for manufacturing and test methods.
        As stated earlier, proposed Sec. 589.2000(c)(2)(i) would exempt 
    renderers from the labeling and recordkeeping requirements if they use 
    exclusively a manufacturing method for deactivating the TSE agent that 
    has been validated by FDA and made available to the public. Proposed 
    Sec. 589.2000(c)(1)(ii) would exempt renderers from the label and 
    recordkeeping requirements if they routinely use a test method, 
    validated by FDA, for detecting the TSE agent and make that method 
    available to the public. Products found to contain a TSE agent would be 
    labeled ``Not for Use in Animal Feed,'' and records of test results 
    would be made available for FDA inspection.
        Several comments strongly supported this provision because it would 
    provide flexibility to the industry or would make methods available to 
    the public where they could be discussed and analyzed. Other comments 
    suggested amendments or clarification.
        (Comment 65). One comment concerning proposed 
    Sec. 589.2000(c)(2)(i) suggested that ruminant protein rendered by an 
    FDA-validated procedure should be labeled as ``Contains inactivated 
    bovine protein.''
        FDA declines to revise the rule as suggested by the comment. The 
    agency will make any necessary changes to the labeling requirements by 
    rulemaking when it validates the first rendering process.
        (Comment 66). One comment claimed that, in proposed 
    Sec. 589.2000(c)(2)(ii), the label statement for products found to 
    contain the TSE agent did not go far enough. The comment stated that 
    such products should be destroyed and positive tests reported to FDA.
        FDA declines to revise the rule as suggested by the comment at this 
    time. However, as explained below, FDA has revised the labeling 
    requirement so that products that are found to have a TSE agent must be 
    labeled ``Do not feed to cattle or other ruminants.'' Products intended 
    for use in ruminant feed that are found to contain a TSE agent are 
    violative under the act, and the agency has guidance documents 
    pertaining to the disposition of violative products.
        (Comment 67). Several comments raised issues related to the concept 
    of acceptable risk. One comment stressed that a definition of 
    ``acceptable risk'' was necessary in order to develop a regulatory 
    program with a targeted end point. Other comments indicated that 
    regulatory programs should be based on some acceptable level of risk 
    reduction rather than defining a finite level of acceptable risk. One 
    comment suggested that FDA establish working groups comprised of 
    members from industry and consumer organizations to establish the 
    necessary level of risk reduction. Several comments cautioned that 
    establishing a zero level of risk could unnecessarily destroy certain 
    industries
    
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    and adversely impact the environment through the disposal of dead 
    animals and animal tissues by means other than rendering.
        The agency determines the safety of substances intended to become a 
    part of food by approval of a food additive petition or by general 
    recognition of safety. In either case, it must be established that 
    there is a reasonable certainty in the minds of competent scientists 
    that the substance is not harmful under the intended conditions of use. 
    Reasonable certainty of no harm does not imply a zero level of risk 
    (see 21 CFR 570.3(i)). Congress, when enacting the Food Additive 
    Amendments of 1958, recognized that it is impossible to establish with 
    complete certainty that any substance is absolutely safe for use.
        For the agency to determine that protein derived from mammalian 
    tissue would be safe for use in ruminant rations, it must be 
    demonstrated by scientific procedures that there is a reasonable 
    certainty that such feedstuffs could not transmit TSE's to ruminants. 
    The agency has determined that there is insufficient research on TSE 
    diseases to determine a minimum infective dose of the TSE agents in 
    ruminant rations, dose and age-related susceptibility factors, methods 
    for inactivation of the TSE agents, or methods for reliably detecting 
    the TSE agent in animal feeds. Such information is fundamental to the 
    establishment of any safe use of protein derived from mammalian tissue 
    in ruminant feed, and, under FDA's current statutory and regulatory 
    requirements, questions regarding the safe use of the tissues are to be 
    answered and presented to the agency in a food additive petition 
    submitted under section 409 of the act. Alternatively, consistent with 
    section 201(s) of the act (21 U.S.C. 321(s)) and Sec. 570.30, the 
    agency may be able to determine that the tissues are generally 
    recognized as safe based on scientific procedure. The provisions of 
    Sec. 589.2000(c)(2)(i), (c)(2)(ii), and (c)(2)(iii) of this final rule 
    provide that products containing protein derived from mammalian tissues 
    are exempt from the labeling and recordkeeping requirements if a method 
    for inactivation of the TSE agents is presented to and validated by the 
    agency, a test method to detect the presence of the agent that causes 
    TSE's is presented to and validated by the agency, or if validated 
    methods for controlling the manufacturing process that minimizes the 
    risk of the TSE entering the product are presented to and validated by 
    the agency. These developments and their validation by FDA should 
    provide relevant information on the establishment of safe conditions of 
    use for protein derived from mammalian tissues.
        (Comment 68). Proposed Sec. 589.2000(c)(2)(ii) would require, in 
    part, products that are found, through the use of validated test method 
    to detect the presence of a TSE agent, to be labeled, ``Not for Use in 
    Animal Feed.''
        Upon further reflection, FDA realized that the proposed labeling in 
    Sec. 589.2000(c)(2)(ii) was not consistent with the agency's objective 
    to prevent the establishment and amplification of BSE in the United 
    States through ruminant feed. Because products found to contain the TSE 
    agent are high risk FDA has revised the regulation to provide that for 
    renders using validated test methods, such renders must continue to 
    comply with the labeling and recordkeeping requirements in 
    Sec. 589.2000(c)(1) for products that test positive for the TSE agents.
        (Comment 69). FDA, on its own initiative, has created a new 
    Sec. 589.2000(c)(2)(iii) to provide an exemption from the rule's 
    labeling and recordkeeping requirements if a renderer uses exclusively 
    a validated method for controlling the manufacturing process that 
    minimizes the risk of the TSE entering the product. Under 
    Sec. 589.2000(c)(2)(iii), the method must be made available to the 
    public and validated by the agency. The agency added this provision to 
    complement Sec. 589.2000 (c)(2)(i) and (c)(2)(ii) and because an 
    exemption from the labeling and recordkeeping requirements would be 
    appropriate if such a method were developed, validated, and used.
        d. Exemptions for marking methods.
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(c)(3) would exempt renderers from the 
    recordkeeping requirement if they use a permanent method, approved by 
    FDA, to mark the presence of protein derived from ruminant and mink 
    tissues.
        (Comment 70). FDA received very few comments on this provision. Two 
    comments supported the provision, although one comment conceded that it 
    was unaware of any permanent marking methods. Another comment suggested 
    that, for used cellulosic food casings, the casings themselves act as a 
    marker for ruminant proteins inside the casing.
        As stated elsewhere in this document, FDA has revised the 
    definition of ``protein derived from mammalian tissues'' to exclude 
    used cellulosic food casings. As a result, it is unnecessary to 
    consider whether used cellulosic food casings are a permanent method of 
    marking.
        FDA has made minor changes to this provision. The final rule omits 
    the reference to renderers ``who are not exempted under paragraph 
    (c)(2)(i) or paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this section.'' FDA deleted this 
    language because it is unnecessary. A second minor change consists of 
    revising the phrase ``to mark the presence of the materials'' to ``to 
    make a mark indicating the presence of the materials.'' This change 
    reflects the fact that the presence of a material cannot be marked, but 
    that the product can be marked to show that it contains or may contain 
    protein derived from mammalian tissues.
    4. Section 589.2000(d)--Requirements for Protein Blenders, Feed 
    Manufacturers, and Distributors That Are Not Included in Paragraph (e) 
    of This Section
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(d)(1) would require protein blenders and 
    feed manufacturers and distributors to comply with labeling and 
    recordkeeping requirements. Proposed Sec. 589.2000(d)(2) would provide 
    exemptions if a protein blender or feed manufacturer and distributor 
    purchased animal protein products from renderers that certified 
    compliance with the requirements for deactivating or detecting the TSE 
    agent or complied with such requirements itself. Proposed 
    Sec. 589.2000(d)(3) would exempt a protein blender or feed manufacturer 
    and distributor from the recordkeeping requirement if it purchased 
    animal protein products that had been marked or complied with the 
    marking requirement itself. Proposed Sec. 589.2000(d)(4) would require 
    copies of the certified compliance statements to be made available to 
    FDA for inspection and copying.
        a. Cautionary statement.
        Under proposed Sec. 589.2000(d)(1)(i), protein blenders and feed 
    manufacturers and distributors that manufacture, blend, process, and 
    distribute products containing protein derived from ruminant and mink 
    tissue would have to label the product to state, ``Contains (or may 
    contain) protein derived from ruminant and mink tissues. Do not feed to 
    ruminant animals, and do not use to manufacture feed intended for 
    ruminant animals.''
        (Comment 71). Several comments would exempt pet food from the 
    rule's labeling requirement. One comment provided results from 
    interviews of 350 pet owners in 5 cities. These interviews examined 
    consumer reaction to the proposed rule's statement ``Contains (or may 
    contain) protein derived from ruminant and mink tissues. Do not feed to 
    ruminant animals, and do not use to manufacture feed intended for 
    ruminant animals.'' Sixty-eight percent of pet owners said they would 
    be concerned
    
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    about the safety of feeding any food to their pets with the proposed 
    statement, and more than 71 percent said that they would buy some other 
    pet food the first time they encountered the proposed statement on the 
    label of the pet food they generally buy. Other comments argued that 
    the statement was unnecessary on pet food because pet food is not used 
    for ruminant feed (due to its smaller quantity and higher price when 
    compared to ruminant feed). These comments did, however, suggest that 
    the cautionary statement would be appropriate for pet food products 
    that are salvaged or distressed and sold for possible use in animal 
    feed.
        Another comment, submitted in response to the draft codified 
    provisions that appeared in the Federal Register of April 17, 1997, 
    suggested that FDA also exempt feeds for nonruminant laboratory animals 
    from the labeling requirement.
        FDA agrees that the cautionary statement serves no useful purpose 
    on pet food and feed for nonruminant laboratory animals and has amended 
    the rule by creating a new Sec. 589.2000(d)(4) to exclude pet food 
    products that are sold or intended for sale at retail to non-food-
    producing animals and feeds for nonruminant laboratory animals. These 
    products typically cost substantially more per ton than most complete 
    feeds intended for food-producing animals. Therefore, there is little, 
    if any, risk that pet foods or feeds for nonruminant laboratory animals 
    will be purchased at full price for use in ruminant rations. However, 
    if the pet food products are sold or are intended for sale as 
    distressed or salvage items, then, under Sec. 589.2000(d)(4), such 
    products must state, ``Do not feed to cattle or other ruminants.''
        In addressing the labeling requirement for salvaged or distressed 
    pet food, the draft codified provisions that were published in the 
    Federal Register of April 17, 1997, initially included the phrase ``for 
    possible use'' in ruminant feed. FDA has deleted the phrase ``for 
    possible use'' because it is unnecessary.
        (Comment 72). One comment, responding to the draft rule that 
    appeared in the Federal Register of April 17, 1997, sought 
    clarification as to what ``pet food'' meant.
        FDA interprets pet food as the food product fed to pet animals. A 
    pet animal is any domesticated animal normally maintained in or near 
    the household(s) of the owner(s) thereof. Examples include dogs, cats, 
    rats, mice, hamsters, gerbils, rabbits, ferrets, nonhuman primates, 
    canaries, psittacine birds, mynahs, finches, tropical fish, goldfish, 
    snakes, and turtles. FDA does not consider horses or other equids to be 
    pets because they are routinely slaughtered for human food. 
    Furthermore, FDA believes that, since feed for horses can be readily 
    utilized in ruminant rations and is often priced comparably to ruminant 
    feed, horse feed must be labeled ``Do not feed to cattle or other 
    ruminants.''
        (Comment 73). Some comments suggested revising the rule to require 
    feeds destined for use in nonruminant livestock to carry the cautionary 
    statement. In contrast, other comments argued that the cautionary 
    statement was unnecessary for nonruminant livestock feed.
        FDA acknowledges the possibility that very little feed labeled for 
    use in nonruminant livestock is diverted to ruminant rations and that 
    which is diverted would likely have to be markedly diluted to be 
    nutritionally balanced for maximum benefit by the ruminant. 
    Nevertheless, FDA agrees that a cautionary statement should be 
    required. Complete feeds for nonruminant livestock typically cost only 
    slightly more per ton and often contain more protein than complete 
    ruminant feeds. Therefore, because nonruminant livestock feed may be 
    diverted to ruminant feed, the final rule requires the cautionary 
    statement on all animal feed, including nonruminant livestock feeds 
    (with the exception for pet food products).
        (Comment 74). Other comments suggested that the agency revise the 
    collective terms in Sec. 501.110 (21 CFR 501.110) because, as a result 
    of the final rule, some feed ingredients would be prohibited in 
    ruminant rations.
        The agency disagrees with the comments. At this time, no revision 
    to Sec. 501.110 is necessary because there will still be a collective 
    name/term known as animal protein products and this collective name/
    term will include animal products, marine products, and milk products. 
    The final rule merely prohibits animal protein products containing 
    protein derived from mammalian tissues from being used in ruminant 
    feeds. Because of the final rule, however, AAFCO may need to amend its 
    definition of the collective term ``animal protein products'' to 
    identify those feed ingredients that are prohibited from use in 
    ruminant rations. FDA intends to work with AAFCO to accomplish this 
    change. Although manufacturers of ruminant feeds that use this 
    collective term may need to reformulate their rations to exclude the 
    protein derived from mammalian tissue, the ingredients list on the 
    label for any ruminant feed can continue to use the ``animal protein 
    products'' collective term.
        (Comment 75). Several comments suggested that a mammalian to 
    ruminant ban would eliminate the need to change the AAFCO definitions.
        Except for some current AAFCO ingredients listed under animal 
    protein products in the collective terms section, FDA agrees with the 
    comments. AAFCO definitions currently allow the species of origin to be 
    listed in the name of the product (e.g., swine meat and bone meal). 
    These AAFCO definitions are flexible enough to allow positive 
    certification on invoices and convey adequate information to consumers 
    who are concerned about the presence of mammalian proteins in their 
    feeds.
        b. Records.
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(d)(1)(ii) would require protein blenders and 
    feed manufacturers and distributors to maintain copies of invoices for 
    purchases of animal protein products or feeds containing such products 
    and to make those records available for inspection and copying by FDA.
        (Comment 76). One comment stated that this proposal was redundant 
    to the GMP recordkeeping requirements although, under the proposal, the 
    retention period would be 1 year longer than those required under the 
    GMP regulations.
        FDA disagrees, in part, with the comment. The GMP recordkeeping 
    requirement at Sec. 225.202 (21 CFR 225.202) requires records to be 
    maintained that identify ``the formulation, date of mixing, and if not 
    for own use, date of shipment'' and that the records be ``adequate to 
    facilitate the recall of specific batches of medicated feed that have 
    been distributed. Yet Sec. 225.202, and the regulations in part 225, 
    (21 CFR part 225) generally, only apply to persons manufacturing, 
    processing, packing, or holding medicated feed, and it is unlikely that 
    all protein blenders, feed manufacturers and distributors subject to 
    Sec. 589.2000 will be manufacturing, processing, packing, or holding 
    medicated feed. However, because most persons subject to 
    Sec. 589.2000(d)(1)(ii) may be subject to the GMP recordkeeping 
    requirement for medicated feed and because Sec. 225.202 only requires 
    records to be kept for 1-year after the date of last distribution, the 
    agency has evaluated the relative benefit of a 2-year recordkeeping 
    requirement and concluded that a 1-year recordkeeping requirement is 
    adequate. Thus, FDA has revised Sec. 589.2000(h) to adopt a 1-year 
    record retention period.
        FDA advises protein blenders, feed manufacturers, and distributors 
    that the recordkeeping requirement can be
    
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    satisfied by an invoice or other similar document reflecting receipt or 
    purchase, and sale or delivery of the product. The information normally 
    expected to be included in these documents includes: (1) Date of the 
    receipt or purchase, or sale or delivery; (2) seller's name and 
    address; (3) consignee's name and address; (4) identification of the 
    product; and (5) quantity. Regarding an identification of the product, 
    FDA notes that invoices or similar sales documents may serve as labels 
    for bulk rendered products, including blended protein products and 
    feeds. The act generally requires that the label of a regulated product 
    contain the product's customary or usual name. The common or usual 
    names of blended protein products and feed ingredients typically are 
    those included in the AAFCO definitions, such as ``meat and bone 
    meal.'' Thus, the use of the common or usual name on the invoice or 
    similar sales document will satisfy, in part, the ``records'' 
    requirement in Sec. 589.2000(d)(1)(ii) as well as the ``common or usual 
    name'' requirement in the act. As discussed later in this document, the 
    records must be made available for FDA inspection and copying. They 
    should be kept so they are legible and readily retrievable.
        (Comment 77). One comment stated that the recordkeeping 
    requirement, as applied to feed containing ruminant tissue, places an 
    unnecessary burden on all manufacturers of nonruminant feeds and pet 
    foods.
        Because the final rule now prohibits the use of protein derived 
    from mammalian tissues in ruminant feed, FDA has revised 
    Sec. 589.2000(d)(1) to state that protein blenders, feed manufacturers, 
    and distributors that manufacture, blend, process, and distribute 
    products that contain or may contain protein derived from mammalian 
    tissues shall comply with the requirements in Sec. 589.2000(c)(1). This 
    means that the provision does not apply to protein blenders, feed 
    manufacturers, and distributors who do not manufacture, blend, process 
    or distribute products that contain or may contain proteins derived 
    from mammalian tissues.
        (Comment 78). A small number of comments would revise this 
    provision of the proposed rule so that commercial contract guarantees 
    could be used as evidence of compliance by feed manufacturers. These 
    comments explained that feed manufacturers should be able to rely on a 
    guarantee because FDA, itself, would rely on commercial records for 
    enforcement purposes.
        The agency declines to revise the rule as suggested by the 
    comments. Section 303 (c)(2) and (c)(3) of the act (21 U.S.C. 333 
    (c)(2) and (c)(3)) and FDA regulations at 21 CFR 7.12 and 7.13 already 
    establish the statutory and regulatory requirements for a guaranty. 
    Thus, the change suggested by the comments is unnecessary (see response 
    to comment 21).
        c. Exemptions for purchases from renderers certifying compliance.
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(d)(2)(i) would exempt protein blenders, feed 
    manufacturers, and distributors from the requirements in Sec. 589.2000 
    (d)(1)(i) and (d)(1)(ii) if they purchased animal protein products from 
    renderers certifying that they used methods to deactivate or detect the 
    presence of the TSE agent. Alternatively, under proposed 
    Sec. 589.2000(d)(2)(ii), a protein blender, feed manufacturer, or 
    distributor could obtain the exemption if it complied with the 
    requirements regarding methods to deactivate or detect the presence of 
    the TSE agent.
        (Comment 79). One comment stated that, insofar as methods for 
    deactivating the BSE agent are concerned, FDA must examine the accuracy 
    of the infectivity assessment and the sensitivity and reliability of 
    the methods used and consider the relationship between the quantity of 
    material tested and the total quantity in a particular batch. The 
    comment stated that FDA must use or develop this expertise.
        The agency agrees with the comment and intends to carefully 
    examine, when a claimed method for inactivating a TSE agent is 
    presented to FDA for validation, whether the method is effective. At 
    this time, the agency is unaware of any such methods.
        (Comment 80). One comment, submitted in response to the draft 
    provision that appeared in the Federal Register of April 17, 1997, 
    requested clarification of the type of certification required under 
    Sec. 589.2000 (d)(2) and (d)(3) if the qualifications for exemption 
    identified in Sec. 589.2000(c)(2) were met.
        FDA has not validated any methods that would meet the requirements 
    for any of the exemptions in this rule. If and when the agency does so, 
    it will provide guidance as needed for the implementation of such 
    exemptions, including certification under Sec. 589.2000 (d)(2) and 
    (d)(3).
        d. Exemptions for purchases of marked protein products.
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(d)(3) would exempt protein blenders, and 
    feed manufacturers and distributors from recordkeeping requirements if 
    they purchased animal protein products that had been marked to indicate 
    the presence of animal protein derived from ruminant or mink tissues 
    complied with the marking requirement itself.
        (Comment 81). One comment would revise this provision to include 
    products that are ``labeled'' as being in compliance. The comment 
    contemplated a system whereby persons could certify that their products 
    did not contain ruminant protein and complied with the rule.
        The agency declines to revise the rule as suggested by the comment. 
    The permanent mark described in Sec. 589.2000(c)(3) serves as a visual 
    cue or other detectable signal that protein derived from mammalian 
    tissue may be present. Labeling is not equivalent to a permanent mark 
    because it may be separated from the product.
        e. Copies of certifications.
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(d)(4) would require copies of the 
    certifications described in Sec. 589.2000 (d)(2) and (d)(3) to be made 
    available for inspection and copying by FDA.
        (Comment 82). FDA received no comments on this provision. However, 
    because the agency has added a new paragraph (d)(4) to exempt pet food 
    products and feeds for nonruminant laboratory animals from the labeling 
    requirement, FDA has renumbered proposed paragraph (d)(4) as paragraph 
    (d)(5).
    5. Section 589.2000(e)--Requirements for Persons That Intend To 
    Separate Mammalian From Nonmammalian Materials
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(e) would require persons that intend to 
    separate ruminant and mink materials from nonruminant material to 
    comply with the labeling requirement for products derived from ruminant 
    and mink tissues or feeds containing such products, would require 
    renderers to obtain nonruminant (excluding mink) materials only from 
    single-species facilities, and would require these persons to provide 
    for measures to avoid commingling and cross-contamination. 
    Additionally, the proposal would exempt renderers, blenders, and feed 
    manufacturers and distributors from these requirements if they met 
    certain exemption criteria.
        a. Cautionary statement.
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(e)(1)(i) would require persons who intend to 
    separate ruminant/mink and nonruminant/mink materials to comply with 
    the labeling requirement in Sec. 589.2000 (c)(1) or (d)(1) for products 
    derived from ruminant and mink tissues or feeds containing such 
    products.
        (Comment 83). One comment would revise this provision to add equine 
    materials.
    
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        Because the final rule now pertains to protein derived from 
    mammalian tissues, the agency has revised Sec. 589.2000(e)(1)(i) so 
    that the labeling requirement only applies to products containing 
    protein derived from mammalian tissues or feeds containing such 
    products. Additionally, FDA, on its own initiative, has made two 
    revisions to this provision. The agency has deleted ``haulers'' from 
    the Sec. 589.2000(e)(1) because such persons are considered to be 
    ``distributors'' as defined in Sec. 589.2000(a)(6). The final rule also 
    refers to ``products containing protein derived from mammalian 
    tissues'' rather than ``products derived from mammalian (other than 
    pure porcine)'' tissues as used in the codified (62 FR 18728), to be 
    consistent with the definition of ``protein derived from mammalian 
    tissues'' in Sec. 589.2000(a)(1).
        b. Nonmammalian or pure porcine or equine materials only from 
    single-species facilities.
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(e)(1)(ii) would require renderers who intend 
    to separate ruminant/mink and nonruminant/mink materials to obtain 
    nonruminant (excluding mink) materials only from single-species 
    facilities.
        (Comment 84). FDA received no comments on this provision. However, 
    because the final rule now pertains to protein derived from mammalian 
    tissues, the agency has revised Sec. 589.2000(e)(1)(ii) so that the 
    renderer must obtain nonmammalian or pure porcine or equine materials 
    only from single-species slaughter facilities. The insertion of the 
    word ``slaughter'' is intended to clarify the type of facility involved 
    in this provision. Additionally, FDA interprets the term ``single-
    species slaughter facilities'' to mean dedicated slaughter facilities 
    that only slaughter one type of animal; the term does not include 
    facilities that slaughter different types of animals on different days 
    or work shifts.
        c. Measures to avoid commingling and cross-contamination.
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(e)(1)(iii) would require persons that intend 
    to separate ruminant/mink from nonruminant (excluding mink) materials 
    to provide for measures to avoid commingling or cross-contamination. 
    This could be achieved through separate equipment or facilities for the 
    manufacture, processing, or blending of such materials or through 
    ``clean-out procedures or other means adequate to prevent carry-over'' 
    of ruminant and mink derived protein into animal protein products or 
    feeds intended for use in ruminants.
        (Comment 85). No comments focused on the concept of maintaining 
    separate equipment or facilities for the manufacture, processing, or 
    blending of materials (although one comment presumed that separate 
    facilities and equipment could be costly). Nevertheless, FDA advises 
    interested persons that it interprets this provision as extending to 
    separate storage of such materials.
        (Comment 86). Most comments on proposed Sec. 589.2000(e)(1)(iii) 
    addressed issues concerning ``adequate'' clean-out and carry-over. Oral 
    comments from the public meetings and written comments to the proposed 
    rule requested that FDA define what constitutes ``adequate'' clean-out. 
    Comments from industry and consumer groups expressed concern that it 
    would be difficult to verify if adequate clean-out procedures were used 
    because there is no test that readily differentiates between ruminant 
    and nonruminant protein. Other comments suggested that firms handling 
    prohibited and nonprohibited products obtain prior approval from FDA, 
    that FDA consider the clean-out provisions of GMP's currently used by 
    the feed industry for medicated feeds to be ``adequate,'' that FDA 
    require clean-out procedures only where raw-product is co-mingled 
    (i.e., equipment is shared), and that the agency publish procedures for 
    ``adequate'' clean-out and solicit public comment. Additionally, one 
    comment noted that much rendering equipment is not designed to be 
    readily opened, so washing the equipment is not a viable option, while 
    a comment from the rendering industry detailed clean-out procedures for 
    the various rendering systems. The procedures varied depending on the 
    system used and the point at which materials shared the same processing 
    steps or equipment.
        FDA agrees that only equipment and storage facilities that are 
    shared by proteins derived from mammalian and nonmammalian tissues are 
    subject to the clean-out requirement.
        With regard to the word ``adequate,'' the agency realizes that 
    equipment utilized by the feed and rendering industries has certain 
    limitations relating to cleanout. In the feed industry, the medicated 
    feed GMP's for sequencing and cleanout have proved to be effective in 
    preventing unsafe drug carry over into feed and thereby preventing 
    unsafe tissue residues in foods of animal origin intended for human 
    consumption. For renderers, blenders, feed manufacturers, and 
    distributors (including haulers), FDA will consider the use of clean-
    out procedures described immediately below to be ``adequate'' for 
    purposes of Sec. 589.2000(e)(1)(iii)(B). The procedures for blenders, 
    feed manufacturers, and distributors are based on the equipment clean-
    out procedures in Sec. 225.65 (21 CFR 225.65). The procedures for 
    renderers are based on comments from the rendering industry on the 
    proposed rule, suggesting clean-out procedures for the four types of 
    rendering systems currently used in the United States. FDA will 
    consider renderers who can document that they are using the clean-out 
    protocol applicable to their system to be using ``adequate'' clean-out 
    procedures under Sec. 589.2000(e)(1)(iii)(B). The clean-out procedures 
    for renderers appear in section II.B.5.c.i of this document.
        i. Separating and processing options for renderers.
        These options are based on what should work in most actual 
    operational conditions that renderers face day-to-day in their plants.
        (1). A single plant with two or more totally segregated processing 
    lines. This includes all process functions from raw material receiving 
    through and including finished product load-out 
    
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    Suggested Clean-out Procedures for Processing Option 1--No clean-out 
    procedures are necessary for this processing situation, as the lines 
    are completely separate. This type of plant should have the ability to 
    process prohibited and nonprohibited products from the same plant so 
    long as procedures are in place to assure total segregation. These 
    procedures may be part of the plant's written procedures specifying the 
    clean-out procedures utilized and would be available for inspection and 
    subject to FDA review for compliance purposes.
        (2). Single plant with two or more segregated raw material 
    receiving, grinding, cooking, and pressing lines but sharing finished 
    product conveying, grinding, and load-out systems
    
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        Suggested Clean-out Procedures for Processing Line Option 2--The 
    clean-out and flushing guidelines for this type of plant deal 
    specifically with the meal grinding (and screening), storage, and load-
    out systems. It is assumed that this type of plant would have separate 
    storage facilities for prohibited versus nonprohibited product. It may 
    have separate or common load-out facilities.
        The first step in the clean-out and flushing procedure should be to 
    empty all transport and process equipment from the first point of 
    commonality of products to the final load-out device. The system should 
    then be flushed with a sufficient volume of nonprohibited product to 
    accomplish one complete change of operating volume of the entire system 
    (exclusive of separate meal storage facilities). The flush material 
    would be considered as prohibited meal and treated as such.
        Once the system has been flushed, all subsequent material processed 
    would be nonprohibited meal. Specific operating procedures would be 
    documented and verified and would be part of the plant's written 
    procedures specifying the clean-out procedures utilized and would be 
    available for inspection and subject to FDA review for compliance 
    purposes.
        (3). Single plant with separate raw material receiving and 
    grinding, common cooking and pressing, common or separate finished 
    product handling.
    
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    BILLING CODE 4160-01-C
        Suggested Clean-out Procedures for Processing Option 3--The clean-
    out and flushing guidance for this type of plant deal specifically with 
    the cooking and pressing systems. The meal grinding, storage, and load-
    out systems should be cleaned and flushed according to the guidance in 
    processing option 2 above. It is also assumed that this type of plant 
    would have separate storage facilities for prohibited versus 
    nonprohibited finished meal. It may have separate or common load-out 
    facilities.
        The first step in the clean-out and flushing procedure should be to 
    empty all transport and process equipment (including the cooker) from 
    the first point of commonality of raw material to the meal grinding 
    system. The system should then be flushed with sufficient prohibited 
    raw material to accomplish the following changes of the operating 
    volume of the cooker:
        In the case of a continuous cooker with a bottom discharge (to 
    provide positive cooker clean-out), raw material equal to at least one-
    half the operating volume of the cooker;
        In the case of a continuous cooker without a bottom discharge, raw 
    material equal to at least the operating volume of the cooker; or
        In the case of a batch cooker system, raw material equal to at 
    least one half the operating volume of the cooker for each batch 
    cooker.
        In general, the volume of material required to flush the cooking 
    system should provide an adequate flush of the meal grinding, storage 
    and load-out system, as well. The flush material should be considered 
    prohibited product and treated as such. All subsequent material 
    processed should be considered nonprohibited product. Specific 
    operating procedures should be documented and verified, should be part 
    of the plant's written procedures specifying the clean-out procedures 
    utilized, and would be available for inspection and subject to FDA 
    review for compliance purposes.
        (4). A single plant with one processing line. This includes all 
    process functions from raw material receiving through and including 
    product load-out.
    
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    BILLING CODE 4160-01-C
        Suggested Clean-Out Procedures for Processing Option 4--The clean-
    out and flushing guidelines for this type of plant deal with the 
    complete plant process. It is assumed that this type of plant would 
    have adequate storage facilities to separate prohibited from 
    nonprohibited finished product. It may have separate or common load-out 
    facilities.
        The first step in the clean-out and flushing procedure should be to 
    empty all transport and process equipment including the raw material 
    receiving hoppers, conveyors, grinders, and cooker from the first point 
    of commonality of raw material through the load-out system. As a 
    guideline, the volume of flushing material should be equal to the 
    operating volume of the process and transport equipment, including the 
    cookers.
        The flush material should be considered prohibited product and
    
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    treated as such. All subsequent material processed would be considered 
    nonprohibited product. Specific operating procedures should be 
    documented and verified, be part of the plant's written procedures 
    specifying the clean-out procedures utilized, and be available for 
    inspection and subject to FDA review for compliance purposes.
        (5). Summary for clean-out procedures.
        Due to the degree of variability among rendering systems, HACCP 
    would be helpful in implementing any of the above clean-out procedures 
    and could enable differences to be addressed on a site-specific basis. 
    Renderers could follow the above clean-out procedures by determining 
    their plant's individual characteristics and apply appropriate time and 
    volume requirements for flushing material to accomplish the intent of 
    the procedures. Individual clean-out procedures, including time and 
    volume calculations, should be part of the plant's written procedures 
    specifying the clean-out procedures utilized and would be available for 
    inspection and subject to FDA review for compliance purposes.
        ii. Separating and processing options for blenders, manufacturers, 
    and distributors.
        FDA is providing the following practical guidance based on what 
    should work in most actual operational conditions that blenders, 
    feedmills, distributors, and haulers face day-to-day in their 
    operations and for complying with Sec. 589.2000(e)(1)(iii)(B). This 
    guidance was adapted from the medicated feed GMP's in Sec. 225.65. The 
    medicated feed GMP's for clean-out were chosen as a model because they 
    have proved to be effective in preventing unsafe drug carry-over into 
    feed and thereby preventing tissue residue in products intended for 
    human food. The medicated feed GMP's are not an entirely appropriate 
    model for clean-out procedures for the rendering industry because of 
    the difference in equipment and operating procedures. The agency will 
    consider firms using the clean-out procedures at least as stringent as 
    those detailed below to be of ``adequate'' as used in 
    Sec. 589.2000(e)(1)(iii)(B).
        Adequate clean-out procedures for all equipment used in the 
    manufacture and distribution of feeds containing mammalian and 
    nonmammalian protein are essential to avoid unsafe contamination of 
    ruminant feeds. Such procedures may consist of cleaning by physical 
    means, e.g., vacuuming, sweeping, washing, etc. Alternatively, flushing 
    or sequencing or other equally effective techniques may be used whereby 
    the equipment is cleaned through use of a nonprohibited product. After 
    cleaning, the non-prohibited product used in the cleaning should be 
    handled and stored in an appropriate manner.
        FDA suggests that all equipment, including that used for storage, 
    processing, mixing, conveying, and distribution that comes in contact 
    with feeds containing mammalian and nonmammalian protein, follow all 
    reasonable and effective procedures to prevent contamination of 
    manufactured feed. The steps used to prevent contamination of feeds 
    often include one or more of the following, or other equally effective 
    procedures: (1) Physical means (vacuuming, sweeping, or washing), 
    flushing, and/or sequential production of feeds; (2) if flushing is 
    utilized, FDA recommends that the flush material be properly 
    identified, stored, and used in a manner to prevent contamination of 
    other feeds. The volume of the flushed material should be sufficient to 
    equal the operating volume of the shared equipment; (3) if sequential 
    production is utilized, FDA recommends that it be on a predetermined 
    basis designed to prevent unsafe contamination of ruminant feeds. An 
    example of appropriate sequencing would be producing a swine feed 
    containing mammalian protein, followed by a swine or poultry feed not 
    using mammalian protein, followed by a ruminant feed containing 
    nonmammalian protein.
        Due to the degree of variability among feedmill systems, an HACCP-
    based approach of process controls would be helpful in implementing any 
    of the above clean-out procedures. This will enable differences to be 
    addressed on a site-specific basis. Feedmills could follow the clean-
    out procedures by determining their plant's individual characteristics 
    and apply appropriate time and volume requirements for flushing 
    material to accomplish the intent of the procedures. Individual clean-
    out procedures, including time and volume calculations, may be part of 
    the plant's written procedures specifying the clean-out procedures 
    utilized, and the written procedures are subject to FDA review for 
    compliance purposes.
        d. Written procedures.
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(e)(1)(iv) would require persons to maintain 
    written procedures specifying the clean-out procedures or other means 
    for separating ruminant and mink materials from nonruminant (excluding 
    mink) materials from the time of receipt until the time of shipment.
        (Comment 87). One comment suggested that firms that intend to 
    separate ruminant from nonruminant protein be required to notify FDA of 
    their intent.
        As applied to the final rule, such a notification requirement could 
    result in a more efficient use of FDA enforcement resources. However, 
    because it would impose an additional burden on the regulated industry, 
    the agency has decided against imposing a notification requirement.
        (Comment 88). FDA, on its own initiative, has revised 
    Sec. 589.2000(e)(1)(iv) to replace ``ruminant and mink materials from 
    nonruminant (excluding mink) materials'' with ``mammalian (other than 
    pure porcine or equine) materials from nonmammalian materials.'' This 
    change was necessary because the final rule now prohibits the use of 
    protein derived from mammalian tissues in ruminant feed.
        FDA also advises persons subject to Sec. 589.2000(e)(1)(iv) to 
    draft their written procedures in sufficient detail to give an FDA 
    investigator a general understanding of the procedures being used to 
    satisfy the regulations. The written procedures should also enable the 
    investigator to take the written procedures into the plant and easily 
    identify operations and procedures stated in the written procedures. In 
    other words, the written procedures should correspond to the facility's 
    actual operations.
        e. Exemptions.
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(e)(2) would, under certain conditions, 
    exempt renderers, blenders, feed manufacturers, and distributors that 
    intend to separate ruminant/mink from nonruminant/mink materials from 
    the requirements in Sec. 589.2000(e)(1).
        (Comment 89). One comment stated that an exemption should be 
    available for facilities using validated separation and clean-out 
    procedures.
        The agency believes that the comment misinterprets 
    Sec. 589.2000(e)(2). If a person separates materials and uses clean-out 
    procedures or other means adequate to prevent carry-over of protein 
    derived from mammalian tissues, then that person is, in effect, 
    complying with Sec. 589.2000(e)(1). Thus, no revision to 
    Sec. 589.2000(e)(2) is necessary.
    6. Section 589.2000(f)--Requirements for Establishments and Individuals 
    That Are Responsible for Feeding Ruminant Animals
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(f) would require establishments and 
    individuals that are responsible for feeding ruminants to
    
    [[Page 30960]]
    
    maintain copies of purchase invoices and labeling for all feeds 
    received and to make copies available for inspection and copying by 
    FDA.
        (Comment 90). One comment stated that it was neither practical nor 
    necessary to require establishments and individuals responsible for 
    feeding ruminant animals to maintain copies of purchase invoices and 
    labeling for all feed received. The comment stated that the 
    recordkeeping requirement should apply only to feed and feed 
    ingredients containing animal protein.
        FDA agrees with the comment and has revised the rule to clarify 
    that the recordkeeping requirement applies only to feed and feed 
    ingredients containing animal protein products. The recordkeeping 
    requirement does not apply to other feed and feed ingredients such as 
    roughage, feed grains, etc.
        The agency recognizes that bulk shipments of feed are commonplace, 
    and that labeling information typically is contained in the invoices 
    for bulk shipments. In those instances, maintenance of the invoice is 
    sufficient. If the only labeling for a bulk product is on a placard, 
    the placard for each shipment should be retained. Feed may also be 
    received in bags or other containers that have attached labeling. In 
    those instances, the labeling should be removed and retained. However, 
    maintenance of only one such labeling piece from each shipment that 
    represents a different product is necessary. Finally, if the labeling 
    cannot be removed from the bag or other container, maintenance of a 
    representative bag or a transposed copy of the labeling information 
    from a container that cannot feasibly be stored will suffice.
    7. Section 589.2000(g)--Adulteration and Misbranding
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(g) would declare that animal protein 
    products and feeds containing such products that do not comply with the 
    requirements in Sec. 589.2000 (c) through (f) may be deemed adulterated 
    under section 402 (a)(2)(C) or (a)(4) of the act. Products that do not 
    comply with the labeling requirements would be misbranded under section 
    403(a)(1) of the act.
        (Comment 91). FDA received no comments on this paragraph. However, 
    the agency, on its own initiative, has revised Sec. 589.2000(g) to 
    include a reference to section 403(f) of the act. Section 403(f) of the 
    act (21 U.S.C. 343(f)) considers a food to be misbranded if any word, 
    statement, or other information required by the act to appear on the 
    label or labeling ``is not prominently placed thereon with such 
    conspicuousness * * * and in such terms as to render it likely to be 
    read and understood by the ordinary individual under customary 
    conditions of purchase and use.'' Here, a reference to section 403(f) 
    of the act is appropriate because the final rule contains a required 
    cautionary statement.
    8. Section 589.2000(h)--Inspection and Records Retention
        Proposed Sec. 589.2000(h)(1) would require records to be made 
    available for inspection and copying and to be kept for at least 2 
    years. Under proposed Sec. 589.2000(h)(2), written procedures required 
    by Sec. 589.2000 would have to be made available for FDA inspection and 
    copying.
        (Comment 92). A small number of comments would revise proposed 
    Sec. 589.2000(h)(1) to extend the time period. Some comments explained 
    that TSE's have a long incubation period so, in the event of a TSE 
    outbreak, the records may no longer exist. These comments suggested 
    lengthening the amount of time records would be retained.
        FDA declines to revise the rule as suggested by the comments. The 
    rule is intended to help prevent the establishment and amplification of 
    TSE's in ruminants through feed, and the records to be retained under 
    the rule are to help FDA determine compliance with the rule. FDA 
    acknowledges that TSE's may have long incubation periods exceeding 2 
    years, but, for purposes of determining whether a person is currently 
    complying with the rule and for reasons expressed earlier in this 
    document, the agency has revised Sec. 589.2000(h)(1) to adopt a 1 year 
    record retention period.
        Additionally, extending the record retention period would have 
    little practical value in determining the source of a TSE in an animal, 
    considering the potentially long time period from ingestion of the TSE 
    agent in feed to manifestation of clinical signs and lesions and the 
    lack of a reliable estimate for the latency period.
        FDA does suggest, however, that records be kept in a clean and 
    orderly manner to facilitate prompt retrieval and be legible.
    
    C. Comments on the Effective Date
    
        (Comment 93). Two comments endorsed implementation of the final 
    rule 60 days after date of publication in the Federal Register. 
    However, one comment suggested that printed packaging materials, 
    labels, and labeling on hand or under production contract be exempt 
    from compliance with the implementation date. The other comment 
    requested an exemption for the finished products on hand or in channels 
    of distribution.
        Another comment, submitted in response to the codified provisions 
    (62 FR 18728), requested a 1-year effective date.
        FDA does not believe that an effective date of 1 year after 
    publication of this final rule is consistent with the agency's 
    objectives. Therefore, the final rule is effective on August 4, 1997. 
    With regard to printed packaging, labels, labeling, and finished 
    products manufactured before the publication of the rule, such 
    materials and products may continue to be used until those supplies are 
    exhausted, but such period should not exceed October 3, 1997. The 
    agency believes this is a reasonable period to exhaust existing 
    supplies during the 60 days before the rule takes effect and within 60 
    days after the rule becomes effective.
    
    D. Miscellaneous Comments
    
        (Comment 94). One comment asserted that the absence of reported BSE 
    cases in the United States can only support the assumption of BSE-free 
    status with an acceptable level of uncertainty if there exists an 
    effective epidemiological surveillance program, and an acceptable 
    reduction in exposure of sensitive animals, based on supportable risk 
    assessment studies, has been achieved. The comment further described an 
    effective epidemiological surveillance system to include an information 
    network among veterinary practitioners, breeders, and the government 
    veterinary services. The comment would also require all suspect 
    animals, including downer cattle, to undergo an histological diagnostic 
    examination for TSE's.
        There is no evidence to date to show that BSE exists in the United 
    States. As stated in the preamble to the proposed rule, APHIS has a 
    comprehensive surveillance program in the United States to ensure 
    timely detection and swift response should BSE occur in the United 
    States (see 62 FR 552 at 562 and 563). The APHIS surveillance program 
    incorporates both the location of imports from the United Kingdom and 
    targeted active and general surveillance for either BSE or any other 
    TSE in cattle. APHIS has not found any evidence of BSE in any British 
    cattle imported into the United States between January 1, 1981, and 
    July 1989 (at which time the United States prohibited the importation 
    of ruminants from countries affected with BSE).
        In May 1990, a targeted active surveillance program for BSE began. 
    BSE is a notifiable disease, and more
    
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    than 250 Federal and State regulatory veterinarians are specially 
    trained to diagnose foreign animal diseases, including BSE. This 
    surveillance effort, which involves APHIS, FSIS, and the Centers for 
    Disease Control and Prevention, examines cases of cattle exhibiting 
    signs of neurological disease, cattle condemned at slaughter for 
    neurological reasons, neurological cases submitted to veterinary 
    diagnostic laboratories and teaching hospitals, and a random sampling 
    of cattle which are nonambulatory at slaughter. The targeted active 
    surveillance program focuses on these animals because they are the 
    highest risk population. As of March 31, 1997, 5,552 brains had been 
    examined for BSE or another TSE in cattle, and no evidence of either 
    condition has been found.
        Additionally, the USDA has a general surveillance program that uses 
    existing data sources, such as a database of diagnoses from 27 
    veterinary schools in the United States, CNS antemortem condemnation 
    data from FSIS, necropsies performed at zoos on various species, and a 
    veterinary diagnostic laboratory reporting system. Referrals of unusual 
    cases by private practitioners to veterinary schools and diagnostic 
    laboratories adds to this surveillance. Through these sources, there 
    has been no reported incidence of a new neurologic disease in cattle 
    and no increase in the number of neurologic diagnoses or referrals.
        Based on these programs, there is no evidence to date to show that 
    BSE exists in the United States. FDA's final rule adds to these 
    programs by preventing the establishment and amplification of BSE in 
    the United States through feed, thereby minimizing the health risk to 
    animals and humans.
        As for the comment that would require all suspect animals to 
    undergo a histological diagnostic examination for TSE's, such 
    examinations are conducted by the USDA and therefore are outside the 
    scope of this rule.
        (Comment 95). One comment objected to a sentence in the preamble to 
    the proposed rule which stated that there is ``no immediate threat to 
    the U.S. public health'' (62 FR 552 at 554). The comment argued that 
    the sentence should say that there is no ``recognized'' immediate 
    threat to public health and claimed that over 10,000 people would 
    eventually die from nv-CJD.
        FDA agrees that there is no recognized immediate threat of BSE or 
    nv-CJD in the United States because neither BSE nor nv-CJD have been 
    diagnosed in the United States. There is a very small probability that 
    undiagnosed cases of BSE and/or nv-CJD might exist.
        (Comment 96). One comment objected to a sentence in the preamble to 
    the proposed rule which stated that ``The agency recognizes that 
    processed ruminant byproducts have a long history of use in animal 
    feeds without known adverse effects'' (62 FR 552 at 566). The comment 
    interpreted this sentence as meaning that an animal fed a high-fat diet 
    will have a body fat composition that is a reflection of the degree of 
    saturation of the fats in the diet.
        FDA does not dispute this dietary interpretation, but the agency's 
    intent was to state that correctly processed and handled ruminant 
    byproducts used in feeds have not previously been implicated as a 
    vector for diseases in animals. BSE is the first instance in which the 
    safe use of these processed products in ruminant feed has been 
    questioned as a possible vector for disease.
        (Comment 97). The same comment also questioned the role of overall 
    food animal management practices (diet, housing, breeding, etc.) and 
    the role these practices have in animal diseases.
        FDA is unaware of any food management practices, other than the use 
    of mammalian protein in ruminant feeds, that presents a risk of 
    contributing to the establishment and amplification of BSE in the 
    United States through feed. FDA is opposed to management practices that 
    result in physical or nutritional harm to animals. A correctly 
    formulated feed containing animal protein should be safe both from a 
    nutritional and animal disease standpoint. BSE has prompted FDA to 
    question the safety, from an animal disease perspective, of feeding 
    mammalian protein products to ruminants, but has not led FDA to 
    question the nutritional value of rendered ruminant products.
        (Comment 98). One comment questioned whether the final rule applies 
    to imported animal feeds and feed ingredients.
        The act does not impose different requirements for imported animal 
    feeds and feed ingredients intended for use in the United States. Such 
    products are subject to the same statutory and regulatory requirements 
    as domestically produced animal feeds and feed ingredients. Thus, under 
    the final rule, protein derived from mammalian tissues is not generally 
    recognized as safe for use in ruminant feed in the United States 
    regardless of whether the feed is domestic or imported.
        (Comment 99). Two comments referred to additional surveillance data 
    which were available from other State and Federal sources but not used 
    in the proposed rule. These comments stated that more complete data are 
    available from accredited and certified State and Federal diagnostic 
    laboratories to supplement surveillance and risk assessments, and the 
    comments requested that FDA assemble, evaluate, and publish the data 
    before issuing a final rule.
        When FDA drafted the proposed rule, it used the most recent data 
    available from the USDA. FDA is aware of the recent data which was 
    published in 1997 (Ref. 12) but the data do not warrant a change to the 
    rule.
        Additionally, contrary to the comments' assertion, there are no 
    State surveillance data.
        (Comment 100). Several comments addressed issues related to 
    surveillance activities. These comments called for: increased import 
    restrictions, including the acceptance of imported products from only 
    BSE-free countries that have active monitoring and surveillance 
    programs and with similar controls on rendering practices; the testing 
    of all downer cows or all animals exhibiting neurological disorders and 
    of beef and dairy herds by using a bovine urine test; the eradication 
    of all TSE's in food animals; examination of the brains of pigs and 
    poultry for CNS disorders; a separate, significant epidemiological 
    study to determine the incidence of TSE in downer cattle through a 
    mandatory inspection program; a mandatory certification program for 
    Suffolk sheep breeders, and for all infected flocks and for all flocks 
    to which infected sheep have been traced back, for all breeds; a 
    mandated scrapie and TSE eradication program with full producer 
    indemnification; and monitoring, surveillance and education regarding 
    all TSE diseases in animals, including veterinary and producer 
    education programs, and the establishment of a national database of TSE 
    monitoring with information from all state veterinarians. Another 
    comment requested that the agency inform consumers of the risk 
    associated with eating meat from animals fed animal byproducts. Several 
    comments addressed the adequacy of United States surveillance efforts. 
    An additional comment questioned the impact that the proposed rule will 
    have on existing and potential animal disease control programs. Another 
    comment suggested that farmers should be reimbursed for the ``pre-
    disease full market value'' for any BSE-infected cattle, which must be 
    killed and carefully disposed of, to prevent farmers from hiding or 
    selling BSE-infected cattle.
        These animal disease monitoring matters are covered by laws which 
    are
    
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    administered by the USDA, and are therefore outside the scope of this 
    rule. FDA intends to work with the USDA to coordinate respective 
    educational programs.
        (Comment 101). One comment argued that the rule was unnecessary 
    because, according to the comment, the heat used in rendering processes 
    reaches 270  deg.F and therefore would kill infectious organisms.
        FDA disagrees, in part, with the comment. While rendering does 
    eliminate conventional infectious organisms such as bacteria and 
    viruses, the TSE agent does not appear to be a conventional living 
    organism. As noted in the preamble to the proposed rule, the TSE agent 
    is resistant to various methods for inactivation, including high 
    temperatures (see 62 FR 552 at 560). Research has shown that some 
    rendering processes may reduce the amount of the TSE agent present, but 
    may not eliminate it completely. FDA is also aware that not all 
    rendering processes reach 270  deg.F; some reach lower temperatures.
        (Comment 102). Two comments pertained to the risk to humans who 
    consume mechanically deboned meat including meat obtained from Advanced 
    Meat Recovery systems. The comments indicated that meat from such 
    systems contains central nervous tissue in the form of the brain stem 
    and spinal cord, thus exposing the public to tissues that potentially 
    contain TSE agents. One comment stated that FDA should work with the 
    FSIS to ensure that the animal population and the human population are 
    protected by minimizing the possibility of BSE reaching the United 
    States.
        FDA does not have jurisdiction over mechanically deboned meat and, 
    therefore, cannot address issues related to mechanically deboned meat 
    in the final rule. Because the rule is intended to prevent the 
    establishment and amplification of BSE within the United States through 
    feed, cattle presented for slaughter should remain free of TSE agents, 
    and any potential risk of transmitting TSE's to humans from consuming 
    of mechanically deboned meat should be reduced substantially.
        (Comment 103). One comment asserted that the comment period on the 
    proposed rule was not adequate in light of the far reaching and 
    complicated issues involved in this rulemaking. The comment stated that 
    the agency should publish an interim final rule to give industry 
    additional time to comment.
        The agency does not agree with this comment. The agency believes it 
    has provided a more than adequate comment period to address the issues 
    presented in this rulemaking. Because of the complex issues involved in 
    this rulemaking, in addition to the 45-day comment period for the 
    proposed rule, the agency has provided four other opportunities for 
    public comment. The advanced notice of proposed rulemaking that was 
    published in the Federal Register on May 14, 1996 (61 FR 24253), 
    provided a 30-day public comment period. In addition, the agency held 
    two open forums to discuss the notice of proposed rulemaking (see 62 FR 
    3848, January 27, 1997). Finally, the agency made available a draft 
    rule and provided a 10-day public comment period (see 62 FR 18728).
        The Administrative Procedure Act (APA) requires only that an agency 
    ``give interested persons an opportunity to participate in the rule 
    making through submission of written data, views, or arguments * * *'' 
    (5 U.S.C. 553(c)). This is all the APA requires; there is no statutory 
    requirement concerning how many days an agency must allow, nor is there 
    a requirement that an agency must extend the period at the request of 
    an interested person (see Phillips Petroleum Co. v. EPA, 803 F.2d 545, 
    559 (10th Cir. 1986)).
        FDA's own regulations generally afford the public 60 days to 
    comment on a proposed rule, unless the Commissioner of Food and Drugs 
    shortens or lengthens the period for good cause (21 CFR 10.40(b)(2)). 
    Executive Order 12889 implementing the North American Free Trade 
    Agreement prescribes a minimum comment period of 75 days on certain 
    proposed rules, except when good cause is shown for a shorter comment 
    period (see 58 FR 69681, December 30, 1993).
        Here, the agency provided the public with 87 days to participate in 
    this rulemaking including 85 days to provide written comments and 2 
    days to present views at the open public forums. The agency does not 
    believe that any interested person has not been provided an adequate 
    opportunity to participate in this rulemaking. The agency received over 
    600 comments on the advanced notice of proposed rulemaking, more than 
    700 comments on the notice of proposed rulemaking. In addition, the 
    agency received oral views at the public forums and over 60 comments on 
    the draft codified provisions that the agency made available pursuant 
    to 21 CFR 10.40(f) and 10.80(d)(2). Given the number of comments the 
    agency received on the proposed rule, at the public forums, and on the 
    draft codified text, the agency does not agree that it should issue an 
    interim final rule under the APA to give the regulated industry 
    additional time to comment on the final rule.
        (Comment 104). FDA, on its own initiative, has revised the 
    ``authority'' citation for the rule to include section 403 of the act. 
    Section 403 of the act applies to misbranded foods and is relevant to 
    this rule because of the required cautionary statement.
    
    III. Description of the Final Rule
    
        As mentioned earlier, the final rule states that proteins derived 
    from mammalian tissues are a food additive subject to section 409 of 
    the act. Consistent with the definition of ``food additive'' in section 
    201(s) of the act, FDA's determination that protein derived from 
    mammalian tissues for use in ruminant feed is a food additive also is a 
    determination that this use is not GRAS. Section 589.2000(a)(1) defines 
    ``protein derived from mammalian tissues'' as being any protein-
    containing portion of mammalian animals, excluding blood and blood 
    products, gelatin, inspected meat products which have been cooked and 
    offered for human food and further heat processed for feed (such as 
    plate waste and used cellulosic food casings), milk products, and 
    products whose mammalian protein consists entirely of porcine or equine 
    products. In general, the exclusions represent tissues that the 
    available data suggests do not transmit the TSE agent or were, at one 
    time, inspected by the FSIS and found fit for human consumption and 
    further heat processed for feed use or tissues from pigs and horses 
    that are slaughtered in single species slaughter facilities.
        Section 589.2000(a)(2) defines ``renderer,'' in part, as any firm 
    or individual that processes slaughter byproducts, animals unfit for 
    human consumption, or meat scraps.
        Section 589.2000 (a)(3) and (a)(4) define the terms ``blender'' and 
    ``feed manufacturer'' respectively. These definitions are essentially 
    unchanged in the final rule.
        Section 589.2000(a)(5) defines ``nonmammalian protein'' as 
    including proteins from nonmammalian sources. This definition 
    corresponds to the final rule's mammalian-to-ruminant prohibition.
        Section 589.2000(a)(6) defines ``distributor.'' This term was 
    initially part of Sec. 589.2000(a)(4) but is now a separate definition 
    to clarify that a distributor does not have to be a feed manufacturer 
    and that persons who transport feed and feed ingredients intended for 
    animals are distributors.
        Section 589.2000(a)(7) defines ``ruminant'' to provide an
    
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    understanding as to what animals are ruminants.
        Section 589.2000(b) declares that protein derived from mammalian 
    tissues for use in ruminant feed is a food additive under section 409 
    of the act. While not stated in the rule itself, FDA's food additive 
    determination is a determination that this use is not GRAS. The final 
    rule states that use of such proteins in ruminant feed will cause the 
    feed to be adulterated and in violation of the act unless it is the 
    subject of an effective notice of claimed investigational exemption for 
    a food additive.
        Section 589.2000(c) describes the principal requirements for 
    renderers. The provision differs from the proposed rule in two 
    principal respects. First, Sec. 589.2000(c)(1)(i) requires products 
    that contain or may contain mammalian proteins to bear a label stating, 
    ``Do not feed to cattle or other ruminants.'' This statement is more 
    concise than the statement in the proposed rule and identifies cattle 
    as ruminants. Second, Sec. 589.2000(c)(1)(ii) requires renderers to 
    maintain records sufficient to track the receipt, processing, and 
    distribution of materials. This provision differs from the proposed 
    rule by addressing the type of information FDA requires rather than 
    referring to a specific type of record. The remaining paragraphs in 
    Sec. 589.2000(c) provide for exemptions from the labeling and 
    recordkeeping requirements if the renderer uses a manufacturing method 
    validated by FDA for deactivating or detecting the TSE agent or a 
    process that minimizes the risk of the TSE agent entering the product 
    or if the renderer uses a permanent method, approved by FDA, to mark 
    the feed to indicate that it contains or may contain protein derived 
    from mammalian tissue.
        Section 589.2000(d) describes the principal requirements for 
    protein blenders, feed manufacturers, and distributors. These persons 
    are subject to the same labeling and recordkeeping requirements as 
    renderers, except that, under Sec. 589.2000(d)(4), pet food products 
    that are sold or intended for sale at retail and feeds for nonruminant 
    laboratory animals do not have to be labeled with the statement, ``Do 
    not feed to cattle or other ruminants.'' Pet food products and feeds 
    for nonruminant laboratory animals that are sold as distressed goods or 
    salvaged are, however, subject to the labeling requirement. Section 
    589.2000(d) also provides exemptions if animal products are purchased 
    from renderers that certified compliance with the requirements 
    pertaining to methods for deactivating or detecting the TSE agent or if 
    the protein blender, feed manufacturer, or distributor complies with 
    such requirements itself. Another exemption exists if protein blenders, 
    feed manufacturers, and distributors purchase animal protein products 
    that are marked in accordance with the regulations or mark such 
    products themselves.
        Section 589.2000(e)(1) sets forth requirements for persons that 
    intend to separate mammalian and nonmammalian materials. This requires 
    compliance with the labeling and recordkeeping requirements, requires 
    renderers that intend to separate these materials to obtain 
    nonmammalian or pure porcine or equine materials only from single-
    species slaughter facilities, and requires persons to avoid commingling 
    and cross-contamination with mammalian materials. The provision further 
    requires persons to maintain written procedures specifying the clean-
    out procedures to prevent carry-over of mammalian protein into ruminant 
    feed and the procedures for separating materials from the time of 
    receipt to the time of shipment. Section 589.2000(e)(2) provides for 
    persons to be exempt from applicable requirements in paragraph (e)(1) 
    if they meet the exemption criteria in paragraph (c)(2), (c)(3), 
    (d)(2), or (d)(3). Persons meeting the exemption criteria in paragraph 
    (c)(3) or (d)(3) are exempt only from the recordkeeping requirements in 
    paragraph (e)(1). Such persons must continue to comply with the 
    labeling requirement in paragraph (e)(1).
        Section 589.2000(f) contains recordkeeping requirements for 
    establishments and individuals that feed ruminant animals. Under the 
    final rule, these requirements would apply only for feed or feed 
    ingredients containing animal protein products.
        Section 589.2000(g) states that animal protein products and feeds 
    containing such products that do not comply with the regulation will be 
    deemed adulterated or misbranded under the act.
        Section 589.2000(h) contains the inspection and record retention 
    requirements. The record retention period is 1 year under the final 
    rule.
    
    IV. Environmental Impact
    
        The ``Environmental Impact'' discussion in the preamble to the 
    proposed rule summarized the agency's environmental assessment (EA) and 
    its analysis of the 6 regulatory alternatives (see 62 FR 552 at 571). 
    The agency considered each alternative under 2 different scenarios; 
    under one scenario, BSE does not occur in the United States, and, under 
    the other scenario, BSE does occur in the United States. The discussion 
    described the range of environmental impacts for the alternatives, 
    including environmental effects from on-farm disposal of animals and 
    landfill use, and concluded that the proposed rule would not have a 
    significant impact on the human environment.
        FDA received several comments on its environmental analysis.
        (Comment 105). One comment questioned the safety of burial as a 
    method for disposal of TSE- infective animals and whether burial should 
    be allowed as a method for disposal of dead stock (as discussed in the 
    agency's EA).
        There is no current disposal method for TSE-infected tissues shown 
    to completely remove all infectivity. FDA recognizes that one report 
    (Brown and Gajdusek, 1991) found that buried scrapie-infected tissue 
    may still be infective after 3 years, although infectivity was reduced 
    by 2 to 3 logs by this exposure.
        Migration of prions from burial sites is expected to be minimal. 
    Prions, as proteinaceous materials carrying electrostatic charges, are 
    unlikely to move with water through soil media, but are apt to be 
    adsorbed to clay particles. This is supported by the Brown and Gajdusek 
    (1991) (Ref. 13) observation that ``no infectivity was detectable in 
    the lower layer of soil 4-8 cm beneath the bottom of the dish.'' In 
    other words, little leaching of the scrapie infective agent was found. 
    This method of disposal, burial, is the method accepted by APHIS for 
    disposing of scrapie infected sheep and goats in the United States.
        Secondly, most on-farm dead stock die from causes other than TSE's, 
    and FDA does not expect that cattle dead stock will include significant 
    numbers of cattle that died from BSE. BSE has not been found in the 
    United States, and this final rule puts into place procedures that will 
    limit the spread of any cases that might occur undiagnosed in the 
    ruminant population.
        Third, States and localities regulate burial of animals, and, in 
    areas where burial is inappropriate due, for example, to high water 
    table or inappropriate soil type, these laws would prohibit burials. 
    The final rule does not require burial of dead stock. Burial is merely 
    an option to be considered where State and local authorities permit it.
        Burial of dead stock has limitations in that it requires resources 
    to dispose of dead stock as a waste rather than to produce useful 
    products. However, at this time, there is no evidence that burial of 
    animals that are susceptible to
    
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    TSE's, in accordance with existing State and local controls, is 
    inherently more environmentally unsafe than incineration, composting, 
    or rendering.
        (Comment 106). Several comments requested that the agency prepare a 
    formal environmental impact statement (EIS) under the National 
    Environmental Policy Act in addition to the Finding of No Significant 
    Impact and Environmental Assessment (FONSI/EA) that was prepared in 
    support of the proposed action.
        A primary difference between the EA prepared in this instance and 
    an EIS is the administrative process that was followed. Both documents 
    are objective analyses that focus on significant environmental issues 
    associated with the proposed action and possible alternative actions. 
    The EIS process, however, is a more formal process that includes 
    issuance of a notice of intent describing the proposed action and 
    possible alternatives, convening of optional public forums to identify 
    (``scope'') environmental issues of concern to the public, preparation 
    of a draft EIS that is filed with the Environmental Protection Agency 
    and distributed to the public for comment, preparation of a final EIS 
    describing how the comments were considered, and preparation of a 
    concise public record of decision describing the weight that 
    environmental effects were given in the decision making.
        As part of the Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on May 14, 
    1996, FDA requested environmental information to assist the agency in 
    determining the scope of issues to be addressed and the significance of 
    environmental issues related to the full spectrum of possible actions 
    being considered by the agency. FDA then solicited comments on the 
    FONSI/EA as part of the proposed rule that appeared in the Federal 
    Register on January 3, 1997. At the same time, FDA made the FONSI/EA 
    available on the Center for Veterinary Medicine's (CVM's) ``Home 
    Page,'' in addition to the traditional means of availability, in order 
    to facilitate submission of additional information through comments to 
    the docket established for the proposed rule. Furthermore, FDA held 
    public meetings on February 4 and 13, 1997, where comments on the 
    FONSI/EA were solicited, and placed transcripts from those meetings on 
    the CVM Home Page, as well as in the docket, to facilitate commenting. 
    The preamble to the proposed rule and this preamble to the final rule, 
    like the record of decision prepared for an EIS, discuss how 
    environmental issues were weighed in the decision.
        Consistent with the National Environmental Policy Act and the 
    Council on Environmental Quality's regulations, FDA discussed in its EA 
    and FONSI the need for action, significant environmental issues, and 
    alternative actions, and carefully listed the sources of information 
    and methods used in preparing the EA. The agency took a hard look at 
    the environmental consequences of its proposed action and the 
    alternatives before deciding that an EIS was not required. FDA 
    encouraged and facilitated public involvement, requesting information 
    and soliciting public comment on all issues involved with this 
    rulemaking, including environmental issues. Given the rigor of FDA's EA 
    and the steps taken to involve the public and the limited benefits from 
    a more searching evaluation, the time and expense of preparing an EIS 
    are not commensurate with the likely benefits of preparing such a 
    document (see River Road Alliance v. Corps of Engineers, 764 F.2d 445, 
    449 (7th Cir. 1985) (``The statutory concept of `significant' impact 
    has no determinate meaning, and to interpret it sensibly in particular 
    cases requires a comparison that is also a prediction; whether the time 
    and expense of preparing an environmental impact statement are 
    commensurate with the likely benefits from a more searching evaluation 
    than an [EA] provides.''), cert. denied, 475 U.S. 1055, (1986).
        (Comment 107). Several comments made FDA aware of some potential 
    environmental impacts that could be mitigated, and these mitigations 
    were integrated, where consistent with other factors, in the final 
    action. The final rule excludes certain items, such as blood and 
    gelatin, from the definition of ``protein derived from mammalian 
    tissues'' and these excluded materials may be used in ruminant feed as 
    well as feed for other species. Thus, materials excluded from the final 
    rule have a reduced potential to become wastes. Plate wastes, used 
    cellulosic food casings, and pure porcine or equine products are all 
    examples of materials that are allowed in cattle feed that would not 
    have been allowed under the mammalian-to-ruminant ban described in the 
    proposed rule which was broader than the mammalian to ruminant ban in 
    this final rule. These materials should now be fully utilized instead 
    of presenting potential environmental issues relating to disposal.
        As a result of comments on the proposed rule, the final rule does 
    not require a cautionary statement on labeling of pet foods at the 
    retail level. Thus, there is no longer the potential for consumers to 
    misinterpret the cautionary statement and incorrectly deduce from the 
    labeling a safety problem for pets. In the absence of the potentially 
    confusing cautionary statement on pet food at the retail level, it is 
    now not expected that meat and bone meal would be dropped from pet food 
    formulations. Consequently, the demand for meat and bone meal derived 
    from ruminants should not be significantly decreased in the pet food 
    industry.
        Therefore, certain anticipated environmental issues will not be 
    realized because of the changes to the action that appear in this final 
    rule, compared to both the proposed rule and the mammalian-to-ruminant 
    alternative originally described. These changes are the consequence of 
    comments received on the proposed action.
        (Comment 108). Comments from the rendering industry, in particular, 
    desired a more quantified environmental analysis of the potential 
    impacts of the actions covered in the EA. These comments were 
    especially concerned about the amounts of dead stock that might no 
    longer be rendered due to an anticipated decrease in the value of meat 
    and bone meal derived from ruminants and, consequently, in the value of 
    raw materials used to make the meat and bone meal.
        Some quantities of dead stock were estimated in a report (the 
    Sparks Report) presented in the comment from the National Renderers 
    Association; however, other comments only spoke in generalities about 
    the issue without providing information that could be used in the 
    requested quantification.
        The Sparks Report (Table III-1, p. 10) estimated that 1.1 billion 
    pounds (lb) of dead cattle are collected from all sources and rendered 
    each year. Presumably, dead sheep, goats, and deer are included in the 
    190 million (m) lb that are collected from ``Other'' species in the 
    Sparks Report. It is not known with certainty whether these estimates 
    represent a large percentage of all ruminant dead stock, as such 
    information is not reported and was not submitted in comments despite 
    requests from FDA. However, some rough calculations can be used to make 
    an estimate. There are approximately 100 m cattle of all ages in the 
    United States at any time. If the overall mortality rate on the farm 
    (i.e., for reasons other than slaughter) is 5 percent per year, then 
    this would result in 5 m dead cattle of all ages available for pick up 
    by renderers each year. If the average weight for a dead cattle carcass 
    (across all age groups) is 650 lb, then the total weight of dead cattle 
    that could be potentially retrieved by renderers each
    
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    year is 3.25 billion lb. Based on this estimate, then renderers are 
    currently retrieving about one-third (by weight) of the available dead 
    cattle that could be rendered. This also indicates that about two-
    thirds of the available dead cattle are currently being disposed of by 
    means other than rendering. If one assumed a mortality rate higher than 
    5 percent or a larger standing population of cattle, then renderers 
    would be picking up a smaller proportion.
        FDA did not receive any comments containing first hand information 
    indicating that the current unretrieved dead stock are being disposed 
    of in an unsafe manner, and the agency has no independent information 
    to this effect. Methods that are available in some, but not all 
    locations include burial, as discussed above, landfilling, and 
    composting (often for animals smaller than 300 lb). In some locations 
    (such as on range land), animals that die may be left exposed. A small 
    number of farms may own or have access to an appropriately designed 
    incinerator. State and local regulation affects the availability of 
    disposal options. While rendering is a desirable option for disposal of 
    dead stock, it is not the only acceptable option.
        The comments provided no basis to estimate the final rule's effect 
    on the retrieval of dead stock by renderers. The agency's economic 
    analysis (which appears later in this document) accepts estimates that 
    the value of meat and bone meal may decrease by $68 per ton. While this 
    price is still profitable, it is possible that there may be some 
    disruption in dead stock retrieval from small producers while the 
    rendering industry adjusts to the new prices. For the sake of 
    discussion, FDA assumes that the upper limit on this temporary decrease 
    in dead stock retrieval could be 20 percent. Twenty percent of 1.1 
    billion lb is 220 m lb, or at an estimated 650 lb per carcass, about 
    340,000 fewer cattle picked up, against a background of 5 m dead cattle 
    per year.
        The estimated, temporary, 20 percent decrease from the current 
    level of dead stock retrieval is probably an overestimate. First, the 
    final rule takes steps different from the proposal to encourage the 
    continued use of ruminant products in acceptable animal feed 
    applications. For example, the final rule eliminates potentially 
    confusing labeling in pet foods at retail. Second, protein supplements 
    manufactured from dead stock are expected to remain in strong demand, 
    especially from countries that remain BSE free and have taken 
    precautionary steps to minimize the potential for its amplification 
    through the food chain. (In other words, a strong market will exist 
    because foreign buyers will be confident in the safety of rendered 
    products from the United States.) Meat and bone meal today in the 
    United States is worth more than before FDA published the advanced 
    notice of proposed rulemaking in May 1996. Third, trends in feedlots 
    and dairies in the United States have been towards larger facilities. 
    Large facilities, because of the larger population of animals, generate 
    the most dead stock. This centralized location is efficient for 
    renderers to retrieve dead stock, as opposed to traveling a collection 
    route among smaller farms. In many locations, owners of large feedlots 
    and dairies are currently being paid by renderers for their dead stock. 
    Even if the credit for dead stock were erased, large facilities would 
    likely still find it convenient to use rendering as the disposal option 
    for their dead stock. Fourth, cattle producers would still demand 
    protein and mineral supplements derived from animal sources, for 
    example blood meal, poultry meal, and pure porcine or equine meat and 
    bone meal. Therefore, continued demand for animal protein products by 
    ruminant producers will contribute to overall demand for animal protein 
    products, including those affected by the final rule, for use in feed 
    of all species of animals. Lastly, mammalian-derived protein affected 
    by this rule is still expected to be profitable to produce and to sell. 
    Adjustments by renderers to buy additional equipment and incorporate 
    new procedures are expected to proceed rapidly during the delayed 
    effective date for this rule.
        For the reasons stated above, any decreases in dead stock retrieval 
    from farms that occurs as a result of disruptions caused by this final 
    rule should be short term and small in magnitude. Long term trends will 
    continue to encourage use of dead stock as a feed ingredient raw 
    material.
        Outside of these types of estimations, quantifications of the 
    environmental benefits and costs of any of the regulatory alternatives 
    including ``No Action,'' are not feasible with the quality of 
    information currently available. Much needed information, for example 
    the dead stock issue above, appears to be unavailable. Other 
    environmental benefits and costs rely on chains of events occurring 
    where there is considerable uncertainty. These uncertainties are 
    detailed in the EA, consistent with the guidance in 40 CFR 1502.22 of 
    the Council on Environmental Quality's regulations.
        FDA will continue to be receptive to information that could assist 
    in a better quantification of impacts and will use such information in 
    considering what amendments, if any, should be made to the final rule 
    in the future. FDA has a continuing interest in this matter, as 
    environmental costs of disposal alternatives for dead stock will be a 
    major consideration in the event that BSE is ever found to be 
    established in the U.S. cattle population. Remedial actions by FDA, 
    alone and in concert with other agencies, at such a time will be 
    considered separately for potential environmental impacts.
        The potential long term and short term environmental effects of the 
    final rule are qualitatively similar, perhaps intermediate in magnitude 
    when compared with the proposed ruminant-to-ruminant ban and the 
    alternative mammalian-to-ruminant ban described in the EA. These 
    potential effects were compared at Table 1 of the EA, pages 63 and 64. 
    Because the potential environmental impacts of the final rule are 
    bracketed by these two alternative actions that were considered equally 
    in the EA, because a hard look at the consequences of both alternatives 
    led to a finding of no significant impact, and because additional 
    information was not submitted or identified that would improve the 
    quantification of the EA, FDA does not believe that it is necessary to 
    further amend the EA apart from the clarifications to the analysis 
    found in this Environmental Issues section of the preamble to the final 
    rule.
        (Comment 109). Several comments asserted that there would be large 
    increases in the quantity of dead stock and offal requiring disposal 
    and questioned the environmental safety of landfilling as a disposal 
    method. One comment stated that landfilling of dead stock was not 
    permitted in some areas. Another comment objected to the use of 
    landfills for the disposal of offal or carcasses. No comment provided 
    supporting details or other information on this issue.
        Similar to the situation with burial of dead stock as a disposal 
    method, landfilling is not available as a disposal method where State 
    or local authorities do not permit it. This final rule, however, does 
    not require disposal of dead stock or offal by landfilling, although it 
    may be an option in some areas. Where landfilling is an option, there 
    is no reason to suspect that this means of disposal is unsafe. FDA did 
    not receive any comments from a State environmental office or local 
    landfill or waste control authority on this issue or any related issue.
        FDA expects that, to the extent that landfilling occurs due to a 
    decrease in the retrieval of dead ruminant stock by renderers, the 
    increased use of landfill
    
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    space for disposal of dead stock would be small and temporary. In any 
    event, as discussed above, it is evident that the majority of dead 
    ruminant stock is currently being disposed of by means other than 
    retrieval by renderers and that such means includes landfilling.
        As for offal, the agency does not anticipate that there will be any 
    significant reduction in the collection of offal by renderers. Thus, 
    there should be no significant increases in landfilled offal resulting 
    from this rule. Hide and tallow provide significant economic incentive 
    for continued collection and rendering of offal and carcasses whether 
    or not the protein products have greater or lesser value.
        (Comment 110). Some comments claimed that there will be adverse 
    effects to the environment because of changes in disposal practices at 
    small locker plants and grocers.
        As markets adjust to the rule, FDA believes that there may be a 
    temporary, small decrease in the pickup by renderers at small locker 
    plants that process ruminants (i.e., there will be a corresponding 
    small increase in material disposed of by composting, by on-site 
    burial, by incineration and in local landfills). Additionally, because 
    the rule should enhance the value of rendered ruminant products from 
    the United States on the world market, FDA believes that most of the 
    anticipated increase in disposal by means other than rendering at small 
    locker plants will be temporary (see also discussion relating to 
    retrieval of dead stock, above, for a discussion of additional factors 
    that, in the long term should support the value of raw materials used 
    to make animal protein feed ingredients).
        FDA believes that fat trimmings and out-of-date meat are the major 
    products picked up by renderers at most small grocers. Because fat, 
    tallow, and grease are not affected by this rule and most out-of-date 
    meat is collected with these materials at grocers, renderers will 
    continue to pickup virtually all material from small grocers. Thus, FDA 
    foresees minimal, if any, adverse environmental effects from this rule 
    on small grocers.
        (Comment 111). Other comments inquired as to the environmental 
    effects when feeds containing ruminant proteins must be disposed 
    because they cannot be sold. This would primarily involve feed 
    formulated especially for ruminants.
        This final rule becomes effective on August 4, 1997. Furthermore, 
    as stated earlier in this document, FDA intends to permit persons to 
    exhaust existing supplies of products that were manufactured before 
    June 5, 1997, but this period should not exceed October 3, 1997. Thus, 
    at this time, FDA foresees minimal, if any, disposal or reconditioning 
    of feed required by this rule.
        (Comment 112). Several comments raised concern that poultry, as 
    consumers of ruminant-derived meat and bone meal, may excrete intact 
    prions in chicken litter. This litter could later be spread on crops, 
    causing an unexpected contamination of vegetables. Some comments also 
    noted that chicken litter is sometimes recycled as a cattle feed and 
    could therefore serve as a source of TSE for ruminants. The source of 
    this concern appears to be a hypothesis offered by Clarence Gibbs in 
    his testimony to the House of Representatives' Subcommittee on Human 
    Resources and Intergovernmental Relations on January 29, 1997.
        FDA has no evidence, other than Clarence Gibbs' statement, that 
    would indicate that infective ruminant prions survive the chicken 
    intestinal tract and/or the composting process. Such a hypothetical 
    route of transmission would appear to be of more immediate importance 
    in countries where BSE has been diagnosed.
        To FDA's knowledge, none of the countries where BSE is present have 
    reported the presence of prions in poultry litter. FDA is not aware of 
    any epidemiologic evidence that associates BSE with the incorporation 
    of poultry litter in cattle rations or on crop land. In Suffolk sheep 
    with scrapie, there is no detectable infectivity in the feces (see 
    Bulletin of the World Health Organization, 70(2):183-190 (1992)). This 
    is the only report, to FDA's knowledge, of testing of TSE infectivity 
    in feces of any species. FDA will continue to monitor scientific 
    developments in this area for findings clarifying this issue.
        (Comment 113). One comment, with little explanation, disagreed with 
    the agency's environmental analysis and suggested that FDA consult the 
    Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) ``to accurately assess the 
    impact.''
        Consistent with the National Environmental Policy Act and the 
    Council on Environmental Quality's regulations, FDA maintains an 
    interdisciplinary staff of scientists with broad expertise in EA 
    methodology, animal disease and nutrition, the feed industry, and 
    animal and agricultural waste management. FDA used this expertise in 
    preparing the EA for this action. FDA is not required to involve EPA in 
    the preparation of an EA.
        Nonetheless, FDA has extensive, long-standing contact with EPA at 
    scientific and managerial levels. The agencies cooperate in many areas 
    where there is a common mission or complementary expertise. The 
    development of the action described here began in the work leading up 
    to the 1994 proposed rule on scrapie in sheep and goats. FDA 
    coordinated its efforts with many groups in the USDA and the Centers 
    for Disease Control and Prevention to obtain the best expertise 
    available. FDA carefully considered whether EPA, by virtue of its 
    expertise or mission, needed to be involved in developing the EA or 
    other aspects of this action, and concluded that, because FDA already 
    uses EPA's environmental risk assessment paradigm, EPA's involvement 
    would not yield additional benefits to the analysis.
    
    V. Analysis of Impacts
    
        FDA has examined the impacts of the final rule under Executive 
    Order 12866, under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612), 
    and under the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (Pub. L. 104-4). Executive 
    Order 12866 directs agencies to assess all costs and benefits of 
    available regulatory alternatives and, when regulation is necessary, to 
    select regulatory approaches that maximize net benefits (including 
    potential economic, environmental, public health and safety, and other 
    advantages, and distributive impacts and equity). The Regulatory 
    Flexibility Act requires agencies to examine the economic impact of a 
    rule on small entities. The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act requires 
    agencies to prepare an assessment of anticipated costs and benefits 
    before enacting any rule that may result in an expenditure in any one 
    year by State, local and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by 
    the private sector, of $100,000,000 (adjusted annually for inflation).
        FDA concludes that this final rule is consistent with the 
    principles set forth in the Executive Order and in these two statutes. 
    FDA's analysis, as presented in the remainder of this section, 
    demonstrates that the final rule constitutes an economically 
    significant rule, as described in Executive Order 12866. The agency has 
    further determined that the final rule may have a significant economic 
    impact on a substantial number of small entities. This analysis, 
    therefore, along with the other relevant sections of this preamble and 
    the two reports of FDA's economics contractor, the Eastern Research 
    Group (ERG), constitute the agency's final regulatory flexibility 
    analysis as required under the Regulatory Flexibility Act. Because this 
    rule makes no mandates on government entities and will result in 
    expenditures of less than $100,000,000 in any one year, FDA need
    
    [[Page 30967]]
    
    not prepare additional analyses pursuant to the Unfunded Mandates 
    Reform Act.
        FDA presented a summary of its preliminary economic analysis in the 
    preamble to the proposed rule (62 FR 552 at 572). The summary discussed 
    the potential benefits of the proposed rule and described an industry 
    impact analysis conducted by FDA's contractor, ERG. In response, the 
    agency received many comments, both oral and written, which addressed 
    economic issues and concerns. Many industry comments criticized FDA's 
    analysis for underestimating the burden that the rule would impose and 
    for counting the economic gains as well as the costs in aggregating the 
    net impacts of the rule. Only a few comments spoke to the estimates 
    included in the benefits discussion. Although most industry comments 
    presented little quantitative information, a report prepared by the 
    Sparks Companies Inc. for the National Renderers Association, Inc., and 
    the Animal Protein Producers Industry provided detailed industry data 
    and alternative estimates of the regulatory burdens. FDA has examined 
    and evaluated the reasoning and data presented in all these comments 
    and has incorporated many of these elements into this revised analysis 
    of the final rule. (An addendum to ERG's preliminary cost analysis 
    presents the industry impact estimates in even greater detail.)
    
    A. Need for Regulation
    
        In its analysis of the proposed rule, FDA explained that the need 
    for regulatory action is based on the risk that BSE will be established 
    and proliferate in the United States. In its guidelines for the 
    preparation of Economic Impact Analyses, OMB directs Federal regulatory 
    agencies to determine whether a market failure exists, and if so, 
    whether that market failure could be resolved by measures other than 
    new Federal regulation. In this instance, FDA determined that private 
    incentive systems for both suppliers and purchasers in markets for 
    cattle, rendering, and ruminant feed may inadequately address the risk 
    of BSE. The potential for market failure among suppliers in these 
    sectors results from the externality that could be created by 
    individual suppliers imposing economic hardships on other suppliers 
    within the industry. The potential for market failure among purchasers 
    results from the inadequate information that would be available to 
    purchasers of potentially infective products.
        With respect to suppliers, any renderer, feed manufacturer, or 
    cattle producer that permits animal protein derived from at-risk 
    mammals to be placed in ruminant feed increases the risk that other 
    renderers, feed manufacturers, or cattle producers will suffer the 
    severe economic consequences that would follow an outbreak of BSE in 
    the United States. Although the benefits of voluntary programs designed 
    to reduce or eliminate this risk accrue to all members of these 
    industries, compliance with these measures is incomplete, because 
    individual noncomplying members can avoid the costs of risk reduction 
    measures while still enjoying the benefits of compliance by others in 
    the industry.
        If purchasers could easily identify the risk of the infective agent 
    associated with products from specific suppliers, they could more 
    easily take defensive actions to reduce these risks (e.g., refusing 
    products from cattle known to have consumed specified ruminant 
    proteins). Purchasers are unlikely to obtain the information they need, 
    however, for several reasons. First, the long incubation period for BSE 
    creates a lag between the actual onset and the recognition of the 
    disease and could lead to a suboptimal level of risk prevention by the 
    concerned parties during the incubation period. By the time the first 
    signs of disease are observed, many animals may have been exposed. 
    Moreover, renderers sell their product to feed manufacturers who 
    frequently combine proteins from many different sources and animal 
    species to produce cattle feed. Ruminant producers, therefore, have no 
    sure way of knowing whether a particular batch of feed is free from 
    potentially infective proteins and cannot easily avoid purchasing risky 
    feed. Finally, if renderers or feed manufacturers do not believe that 
    BSE is an important threat, they may choose not to take preventive 
    action, regardless of the risk levels perceived by epidemiological 
    experts or consumers. FDA received no comments that directly questioned 
    the existence of this market failure.
    
    B. Benefits
    
        The primary benefits of this regulation are the costs that would be 
    averted by reducing the risk that BSE will become established and 
    proliferate in the United States through feed. As described in FDA's 
    analysis of the proposed rule, a quantitative measure of these benefits 
    must consider three distinct factors: (1) The probability that, in the 
    absence of this rule, BSE would be established and amplified in the 
    United States through feed, (2) the costs, both direct and indirect, 
    that would be associated with the spread of BSE in the United States, 
    and (3) the extent to which this rule would reduce the likelihood of 
    these costs. FDA explained that it could not develop an overall 
    quantitative estimate of these benefits, primarily because it could not 
    adequately measure the first of these factors, the probability that BSE 
    would otherwise occur in the United States. While the agency determined 
    that the risk was positive, the available data were inadequate to 
    develop a quantitative risk assessment. The agency did, however, derive 
    a partial estimate of the potential direct costs that would result from 
    the proliferation of BSE in the United States (the second factor), and 
    present a strong qualitative assessment of the probable effectiveness 
    of the proposed rule (the third factor).
        For its estimate of the potential direct costs associated with the 
    outbreak and spread of BSE in the United States, FDA extrapolated from 
    the experience of the United Kingdom, but adjusted for certain 
    differences between the United States and the United Kingdom. The 
    relevant United Kingdom variables included the number of cattle that 
    had died from BSE (despite the implementation of a feed ban in that 
    country after BSE was identified) and the slaughter and destruction of 
    additional cattle considered to be at risk of BSE. Based on these 
    projections, FDA estimated that, if BSE were to occur in this country, 
    the disease would be associated with approximately $3.8 billion in 
    losses due to the destruction of BSE-exposed livestock and the taking 
    of other measures needed to prevent continued BSE proliferation. While 
    FDA could not quantify the expected additional costs to consumers and 
    producers in the United States that would result from the loss of 
    consumer confidence following a BSE outbreak, the agency found that 
    plausible scenarios indicated that the likely drop in the demand for 
    cattle and beef products could cause billions of dollars in lost market 
    values. In addition, FDA noted, but did not attempt to quantify, the 
    value of the human lives that might be lost or the associated medical 
    treatment costs that might follow a domestic outbreak of BSE.
        (Comment 114). One comment on the proposed rule stated that FDA 
    should modify its projection of the potential amplification and 
    subsequent proliferation of BSE in the United States, because FDA's use 
    of the United Kingdom's experience as a model is misleading and 
    exaggerates the real risk. The comment suggested that an
    
    [[Page 30968]]
    
    extensive epidemiological study be conducted instead, based on use of 
    ruminant proteins in ruminant feed over the past 50 years, to produce a 
    more accurate risk assessment.
        FDA does not believe that its projection was invalid or misleading, 
    because although the United Kingdom's and United States' cattle 
    industries are not identical, the United Kingdom experience provides 
    the most detailed and least speculative basis available for 
    understanding the potential impact of BSE on this nation's cattle 
    industry. FDA's methodology incorporated adjustments to reflect the 
    younger average age of United States cattle and the later age of first 
    exposure of United States dairy cattle to meat and bone meal. The 
    analysis concurred that, compared to the United Kingdom, a much lower 
    proportion of cattle in the United States would be at risk of 
    contracting BSE if an outbreak occurred. Nonetheless, because of the 
    delay between infection and identification, it found that a substantial 
    number of cattle in the United States could become infected before the 
    disease was contained.
        Although further epidemiological study on the use of mammalian 
    protein in ruminant feed (with exclusions) could provide useful 
    information, FDA believes that such a study would not significantly 
    alter the agency's conclusions, because the degree of infectivity at 
    various exposures to mammalian protein is not known. Moreover, only a 
    small part of the overall cost to industry of a BSE outbreak would 
    depend on the number of cattle actually infected. The greatest costs 
    would be associated with the measures that would be needed to restore 
    consumer confidence in beef and dairy products, and these measures 
    would be undertaken irrespective of the precise level of infectivity.
        FDA has, however, updated its estimates of the projected costs of a 
    BSE outbreak, based on: (1) The more recent estimates of the number of 
    United Kingdom cattle diagnosed with BSE (projected here at 
    approximately 169,600 cumulative BSE deaths through 1997); (2) the 
    current United Kingdom estimates of 1.3 m cattle culled by the end of 
    1996 to end the epidemic; (3) the more recent estimates of the size of 
    the United States cattle population (now estimated at approximately 101 
    m cattle); (4) the assumption that cattle at risk of BSE would require 
    disposal at a cost of $33 per animal, and that cattle with known BSE 
    could require medical-waste level incineration at a cost of $100 per 
    animal; and (5) the updated estimates of the costs of implementing a 
    feed ban at the time of a BSE outbreak (currently estimated, as 
    described below, at $52.9 m per year).
        FDA's revised calculation again addresses only three of the costs 
    that would be associated with the proliferation of BSE in the United 
    States: (1) The cost of direct livestock losses due to BSE infection, 
    (2) the costs associated with slaughtering at-risk cattle culled to 
    prevent BSE spread and restore consumer confidence, and (3) the costs 
    associated with imposing feed regulations at the time BSE was detected. 
    Recalculating BSE-related costs using the updated figures yields an 
    estimated present value for these three components of $93 m, $4.7 
    billion, and $593 m, respectively. In sum, these updated projections 
    yield an estimated present value of $5.3 billion in costs that would be 
    associated with the establishment and proliferation of BSE in the 
    United States through feed.
        Additional costs that could not be quantified include the lost 
    human lives and medical treatment costs that could result from BSE-
    related disease, as well as the consumer and producer losses that would 
    result from the expected decrease in the sales and consumption of beef. 
    Sales of medical products and cosmetics containing cattle-derived 
    components could also be affected.
        (Comment 114a). One comment stated that a single case of BSE in the 
    United States would have an enormous impact on the American cattle 
    industry and that a 1 percent change in consumer purchases of cattle 
    products results in a $350 m impact on farm and ranch income. Other 
    comments stated that action must be taken to maintain consumer 
    confidence in meat products, and one estimated that, if BSE were 
    detected, first year costs to the economy would total $64 billion.
        Nevertheless, FDA is still unable to quantify the expected benefits 
    of this rule, because the agency cannot estimate the probability that, 
    in the absence of this regulation, BSE would occur and proliferate in 
    the United States.
        Moreover, to the extent that the rule will not completely eliminate 
    all chance of a BSE outbreak, the expected value of the potential 
    benefits is less than the expected value of the potential BSE-related 
    costs. Several comments pointed out that a lack of enforcement of the 
    proposed rule would greatly reduce its efficacy. FDA agrees that 
    adequate enforcement is critical to achieving the full potential 
    benefit of the rule, and, as discussed elsewhere, has attempted to 
    craft the rule in a way that will maximize its enforceability. Thus, 
    FDA believes that the vigorous implementation of this rule will very 
    nearly eliminate the risk of the widespread proliferation of BSE in the 
    United States.
    
    C. Industry Impacts
    
        FDA has carefully examined numerous public comments that addressed 
    industry impacts of the proposed rule. In addition, FDA asked ERG to 
    prepare an addendum to its earlier impact analysis. This section 
    summarizes the ERG reports, responds to public comments related to the 
    analysis of industry impacts, describes the composition, size, and 
    scale of economic activity for the various affected industry sectors, 
    and presents FDA's estimates of the cost and market impacts of the 
    final rule and six other regulatory alternatives (see Table 1).
    
          Table 1.--Estimated Annual Affected Protein and Annual Costs of Alternative Regulatory Prohibitions 1     
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                Mammalian-to-                                       
                                                                  ruminant,      Partial                            
                 Annualized impacts               Mammalian-to-     with      ruminant-to-  Sheep/mink-  Sheep/goat-
                                                    ruminant    exceptions 2    ruminant    to-ruminant  to-ruminant
                                                                (final rule)                                        
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Quantity of restricted meat and bone meal (m                                                                    
     lb)........................................        6,086         5,031         2,283          16.9          0.6
    Capital costs ($ m).........................          7.1           7.1           4.9            NA           NA
    Plant Operating costs ($ m).................           20            20          26.9            NA           NA
    Transportation costs ($ m)..................         10.7           7.5           5.3            NA           NA
    Documentation costs ($ m)...................          0.3           0.3           0.2             0            0
    Reformulation, reregistration and relabeling                                                                    
     costs ($ m)................................          2.1           1.3             0            NA           NA
    Feed substitution costs ($ m)...............          9.7             8           3.6            NA           NA
    Disposal costs ($ m)........................           NA            NA            NA           5.1          0.2
    
    [[Page 30969]]
    
                                                                                                                    
    Subtotal ($ m)..............................         49.9          44.3          41.1           5.1          0.2
    Meat and bone meal revenue losses 3 ($ m)...        206.9           171          77.6           4.2          0.2
    Nonruminant sector gains ($ m)..............       (196.6)       (162.5)        (73.7)           NA           NA
    Aggregate net costs ($ m)...................         60.2          52.9          44.9           9.3         0.4 
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    1 Totals may not match text due to rounding error.                                                              
    2 Also reflects costs of proposed ruminant-to-ruminant rule.                                                    
    3 Assumes $68 per ton decrease in price of affected meat and bone meal.                                         
    
    1. Summary of Impacts of Final Rule
        The final regulation prohibits the use of mammalian protein 
    (excluding pure porcine or equine protein and certain other materials) 
    in ruminant feeds. FDA estimates that the direct compliance costs of 
    the rule, including annualized capital and operating costs, will be 
    about $44.3 m per year. In addition, FDA has accepted an industry 
    forecast that the regulatory prohibition will lower the price of the 
    affected meat-and-bone-meal (MBM) by as much as $68 per ton, reducing 
    the initial value of this product to the rendering industry by $171.0 m 
    annually. In contrast, nonruminant animal producers may gain up to 
    $162.5 m in lower feed costs. Thus, FDA estimates that the aggregated 
    net annualized costs of this rule, accounting for both losses and 
    gains, will total $52.9 m. Renderers will pass much of the economic 
    burden of the new regulations upstream to meat packing operations, 
    which will incur increases in renderer charges (or declines in renderer 
    payments) of up to 1 percent of revenues. In turn, meat packers will 
    raise slaughtering fees and lower the price paid for slaughter cattle. 
    In the long run, these actions will result in a modest reduction in the 
    size of the affected animal herds.
    2. Market Impacts
        a. Introduction to regulatory alternatives.
        The regulatory action selected by FDA is one of seven regulatory 
    alternatives examined by the agency, of which six would prohibit some 
    type of animal protein in ruminant feed, generating compliance costs 
    and revenue impacts on industry. The seven alternatives are, in order 
    of their regulatory stringency: (1) A prohibition on mammalian-derived 
    protein in ruminant feed; (2) the final rule, a prohibition of 
    mammalian proteins in ruminant feed, excluding protein exclusively from 
    porcine and equine sources, and selected other materials; (3) the 
    proposed rule, a prohibition on ruminant protein in ruminant feed; (4) 
    a prohibition on selected ruminant tissues, i.e., those believed most 
    likely to be infectious, in ruminant feed; (5) a prohibition on protein 
    from those species in which TSE has been identified, including sheep, 
    goat, deer, and mink in ruminant feed; (6) a prohibition on sheep and 
    goat protein in ruminant feed; and (7) a no action alternative, or an 
    agency position of watchful waiting. The estimated costs for five of 
    the alternatives are displayed in Table 1 of this section. (Estimates 
    for the third and seventh alternative as described above, are not 
    displayed, because the estimated costs for the third alternative (the 
    proposed rule) are almost identical to those of the second alternative 
    (the final rule), and the seventh alternative generates no regulatory 
    costs.)
        b. Quantities of offal and meat and bone meal affected.
        The regulatory alternatives are differentiated by the types of 
    animal protein prohibited in ruminant feed. The final rule will affect 
    the sale of protein generated from the annual slaughter or processing 
    of about 50 m animals. An estimated 5 billion lb of protein (see Table 
    1 of this section) is rendered from the animals and other protein 
    sources covered by the final rule. This rule is less inclusive than 
    Alternative 1, which would prohibit all mammalian protein in ruminant 
    feed and therefore restricts the sale of pure porcine or pure equine 
    protein as well. The final rule is similar in coverage to the ruminant-
    to-ruminant alternative, which FDA had first proposed and most industry 
    comments addressed. The least restrictive regulatory alternative would 
    target only sales of sheep and goat offal, affecting minor quantities 
    of animal offal and protein. Alternative 7, under which the agency 
    takes no action but continues to monitor the health of U.S. herds, does 
    not affect the processing of animals.
        c. Affect on meat and bone meal prices.
        There was little disagreement within the public comments that the 
    first four regulatory alternatives, by prohibiting the sale of certain 
    types of meat and bone meal for use in ruminant feed, would cause 
    declines in the long-run equilibrium price of this product. The other 
    three alternatives were believed to have negligible effects on the 
    market for meat and bone meal.
        In its economic assessment of the proposed rule, FDA accepted the 
    estimate of its contractor (ERG) that the more restrictive alternatives 
    would cause a price decline for meat and bone meal of $25 to $100 per 
    ton. The size of the estimated range reflected considerable uncertainty 
    over the reaction of the affected markets to the new restrictions. 
    Nevertheless, even under the high market impact scenario, ERG forecast 
    that the market for meat and bone meal would reach an equilibrium 
    (i.e., quantity demanded would equal quantity supplied) at a positive 
    market price.
        A number of comments on the proposed rule addressed the estimated 
    decline in the price of ruminant-containing meat and bone meal. The 
    National Renderers Association commissioned a comprehensive study by 
    Sparks Companies, Inc. (SCI) to assess the regulatory impact on the 
    meat and bone meal markets. SCI developed an independent estimate of 
    the size and breadth of the agricultural markets affected by the 
    proposed regulation and estimated that 15 percent of meat and bone meal 
    is consumed by ruminant animals, compared to the 10 percent presented 
    in the ERG study. SCI considered questions relating to the disposition 
    and price of ruminant-containing meat and bone meal under the proposed 
    rule by analyzing the historical statistical relationship between meat 
    and bone meal and soybean meal and by conducting telephone interviews 
    with 30 executives
    
    [[Page 30970]]
    
    of affected industries. For its most likely scenario, SCI concluded 
    that ``all raw materials would continue to be rendered, and all 
    ruminant-containing meat and bone meal would be consumed by nonruminant 
    operations, though a price discount would be necessary to induce these 
    operations to purchase the additional quantities that otherwise would 
    have been used in ruminant feed.'' For this scenario, SCI estimated 
    that meat and bone meal prices would decline by $68.27 per ton, or 
    almost the midpoint of the $25 to $100 per ton range previously 
    estimated by ERG ($62.50 per ton).
        (Comment 115). A comment by a federation of American farm bureaus 
    predicted that the proposed ruminant-to-ruminant prohibition would 
    cause a fairly small price effect, but many other comments suggested 
    that the price of meat and bone meal would fall sharply due to the 
    perceived stigma that would be placed on the product. Most of these 
    comments, however, expressed strong opposition to the proposed rule's 
    labeling requirement, asserting that the proposed labels would generate 
    unwarranted public concern over the safety of meat and bone meal in pet 
    foods and, in turn, would significantly reduce the demand for meat and 
    bone meal by pet food manufacturers.
        FDA believes that it has alleviated this concern by exempting 
    retail pet food packaging from the labeling requirements of the final 
    rule.
        (Comment 116). One major feed industry association had initially 
    argued that meat and bone meal prices would fall to zero, triggering 
    large-scale disposal of the material and other economic impacts. These 
    comments, however, contained no market analysis for their forecast of 
    meat and bone meal prices. This association later acknowledged that its 
    forecasted price decline was an assumption.
        (Comment 117). One comment disagreed with FDA's position that a 
    lower meat and bone meal price would increase sales of meat and bone 
    meal to the nonruminant sector (62 FR 552 at 576). The comment claimed 
    that the poultry and swine industries cannot absorb 450,000 tons of 
    meat and bone meal (which would otherwise have been used for ruminant 
    feed) and that substituting meat and bone meal for other meal (such as 
    soybean meal) would adversely affect animal production.
        FDA disagrees with the comment because it failed to provide 
    information to demonstrate that the poultry and swine industries were 
    at their maximum use level for meat and bone meal. Moreover, the 
    comment did not consider the ability of the pet food industry to 
    include more meat and bone meal in its products. Given the expected 
    price reductions, the agency believes that these industries will find 
    it cost-effective to absorb the additional meat and bone meal.
        The comment also misconstrues FDA's position. The agency does not 
    expect meat and bone meal to serve as a total substitute for soybean 
    meal. Instead, FDA finds that the nonruminant sector will be able to 
    include more meat and bone meal in its formulations without the 
    negative effects predicted by the comment. For example, just a 1.5 
    percent increase of meat and bone meal in the diets of all swine in the 
    United States would absorb the entire excess.
        In the addendum to its final report, ERG explained that because 
    meat and bone meal can be readily substituted for other protein sources 
    in many uses, the resulting price decline for meat and bone meal could 
    be towards the lower end of its previously estimated $25 to $100 per 
    ton range. ERG acknowledged, however, that the price decrease could be 
    greater if large buyers of meat and bone meal for poultry feed or pet 
    food react adversely to public uncertainty or concerns about BSE 
    dangers. ERG also noted that such reactions could occur irrespective of 
    this rule in response to fears triggered by the presence of BSE in 
    Europe, or to new research findings of greater health risk. Since the 
    industry has not presented any data suggesting price declines outside 
    of the projected range of $25 to $100 per ton, ERG revised its analysis 
    to maintain the range, but used the approximate midpoint of $68 per 
    ton, as suggested by the SCI study, to project the probable industry 
    impacts.
        FDA has similarly adopted SCI's forecast of a $68 per ton decline 
    in the price of affected meat and bone meal as a basis for calculating 
    reasonable estimates of regulatory impacts. This estimate was derived 
    directly from discussions with industry representatives, is fully 
    consistent with the earlier analysis prepared by ERG, and no other 
    industry comment offered more persuasive, alternative data.
    3. Costs of Compliance
        a. Direct costs.
        i. Documentation and relabeling costs
        The final rule requires renderers, feed manufacturers, and other 
    affected parties to perform specific recordkeeping and labeling 
    activities to demonstrate compliance. For its analysis of the proposed 
    rule, FDA had estimated that added recordkeeping, including relabeling, 
    would cost $1.5 m to $1.8 m per year. These estimates generated a 
    number of comments.
        (Comment 118). A representative of the AAFCO commented in public 
    hearings that relabeling costs had been underestimated because 
    necessary changes in the AAFCO definitions for certain collective terms 
    would involve more animal feed mixes than simply those containing meat 
    and bone meal. Specifically, the comment claimed that the proposed rule 
    would have necessitated a change in the AAFCO collective term ``animal 
    protein products'' which is used on bag labels and tags for products 
    containing proteins other than ruminant protein.
        Under the final rule, AAFCO will need to amend its definition of 
    the collective term ``animal protein products'' to identify those feed 
    ingredients that are prohibited from use in ruminant rations. FDA 
    intends to work with AAFCO on this matter. Although manufacturers of 
    ruminant feeds that use this collective term may need to reformulate 
    their rations, there should be no change required in the ingredient 
    list on the labels for any feed manufacturer that uses the ``animal 
    protein products'' collective term.
        (Comment 119). A number of industry associations expressed concern 
    about the market impact of the proposed labeling requirement, 
    particularly as it was potentially applicable to retail sales of pet 
    food that contain ruminant meat and bone meal.
        FDA agrees that the cautionary statement is not necessary on pet 
    food intended for retail sale, and the final rule eliminates the 
    requirement for pet food for retail sale.
        (Comment 120). Other comments expressed general concerns or made 
    suggestions about documentation and labeling requirements, but did not 
    provide specific information on costs.
        As shown in the addendum to its final report, ERG revised its 
    earlier estimates by distinguishing between relabeling and 
    documentation costs and changing its method of estimating relabeling 
    costs from per facility to per label costs. As shown in its addendum, 
    ERG also increased the projected number of feed mix reformulations that 
    would be necessary under the final rule. Although ERG determined that 
    it had previously undercounted the number of affected labels, the net 
    result of these changes yielded an annualized incremental cost for 
    relabeling, reregistration and reformulation of $1.3 m and an 
    annualized feedmill documentation cost of $0.3 m. FDA has included 
    these adjustments in its revised estimates of capital and operating 
    costs.
        ii. Plant and equipment costs.
    
    [[Page 30971]]
    
        FDA does not expect renderers to invest in separate processing 
    lines for mammalian and nonmammalian tissues. ERG reported that large 
    packer/renderers process only a single animal species and will have no 
    incentive or use for separate processing lines. Independent renderers 
    were assumed to be too dependent upon mammalian animals and dead stock 
    to have sufficient economic rationale to invest in a separate 
    processing line for nonmammalian protein. The SCI report confirmed this 
    view by presenting a financial assessment of the investment that would 
    be needed by independent renderers to construct separate processing 
    lines for nonmammalian protein. This analysis concluded that renderers 
    would lose money by operating separate lines.
        ERG determined, however, that the rule is likely to prompt new 
    capital expenditures by certain feedmills. Many feedmills, including 
    some in areas with both cattle and hog production, now have storage bin 
    capacity for only one type of meat and bone meal. If the price of 
    affected meat and bone meal falls substantially, a number of feedmills 
    will choose to add storage bin capacity in order to carry both types of 
    meat and bone meal (i.e., containing protein from pure porcine and 
    mixed mammalian sources), so that the price discount for meat and bone 
    meal containing mammalian protein can be passed on to their hog-
    producing customers. No comments questioned ERG's initial estimate that 
    1,000 major commercial feedmill operations would install a second meat 
    and bone meal storage tank to handle both restricted and unrestricted 
    meat and bone meal.
        (Comment 121). One comment from a major feed industry association 
    suggested that the ERG capital cost estimate of $50,000 per feedmill 
    for capacity expansion was too low.
        ERG had noted that this expenditure would be sufficient to add a 
    storage tank capable of receiving one and one-half truckloads of meat 
    and bone meal. This size (representing approximately 30 to 40 tons) is 
    economically efficient because it would allow a feedmill to receive a 
    full truckload of new product before exhausting the previous shipment. 
    Also, the National Grain and Feed Association (NGFA) estimated the cost 
    of capacity expansion at feedmills at $25,000 to $30,000. As such, FDA 
    has retained ERG's $50,000 estimate for feedmill expansion costs and 
    estimates the annualized capital costs of the final rule (discounting 
    over 10 years at 7 percent) to be $7.1 m.
        iii. Plant operating costs.
        ERG initially estimated the incremental operating costs of adding 
    new clean up procedures at each feedmill that handles both ruminant and 
    nonruminant protein to be $10,000 per year. FDA received no comments on 
    the accuracy of this estimate, which ERG derived from data provided in 
    the NGFA comments to the advance notice of proposed rulemaking. Thus, 
    FDA has retained this figure as the best available measure of the 
    incremental operating costs for these feedmills. Additionally, further 
    analysis contained in ERG's addendum concludes that the $10,000 annual 
    cost estimate should also be applied to the 1,000 major feedmills which 
    already have the excess capacity to handle both types of meat and bone 
    meal. This adds $10 m to the annual clean out cost estimate for 
    feedmills for a total of $20 m.
        iv. Transportation costs.
        In its analysis of the proposed rule, ERG had found that renderers 
    would incur incremental transportation costs to sell meat and bone meal 
    to new customers, many of whom might be in more distant regions, and 
    that feedmills and animal producers would purchase substitute feed 
    inputs, which sometimes would come from more distant suppliers. 
    Renderers were not assumed to incur incremental transportation costs 
    for the collection of animal tissue because, as noted, they were not 
    expected to separate animal offal and, therefore, would not change 
    their sources of animal tissue.
        ERG had allocated an average incremental transportation cost of $25 
    per ton for that portion of meat and bone meal (estimated at 
    approximately 500 m lb in ERG's initial cost analysis) that would be 
    displaced by the restrictions on ruminant feed. ERG had also allocated 
    $5 per ton of meat and bone meal to address incremental transportation 
    costs for feed substitutes. While these data were limited, these 
    amounts were considered overall averages sufficient to represent this 
    element of the regulatory impact.
        (Comment 122). A few comments noted that transportation costs could 
    be significant, but no comments provided specific estimates of expected 
    increases in transportation costs. One comment criticized the ERG study 
    for lacking analysis of specific regional transportation difficulties.
        FDA recognizes that ERG did not present a regional transportation 
    analysis and that renderers in regions most distant from prospective 
    new markets might incur relatively high transportation costs. 
    Nevertheless, no industry comment provided quantitative data on this 
    point or sufficient analysis to indicate that transportation costs 
    would be higher than that predicted. Therefore, FDA has accepted ERG's 
    methodology. Table 1 indicates that these compliance costs are 
    estimated at $7.5 m per year.
        v. Disposal costs.
        (Comment 123). A number of comments stated that renderers or 
    meatpackers would incur additional disposal costs if economic 
    conditions deteriorate to the point where animal offal or dead stock is 
    no longer rendered.
        As discussed above, FDA believes that these costs will be small, 
    because essentially all animal offal will continue to be rendered. The 
    agency agrees, however, that some incremental on-farm disposal of dead 
    stock may occur in response to increases in renderer pickup charges. As 
    explained below in the discussion of market adjustments, these 
    activities would not raise the agency's overall cost estimates.
        b. Indirect costs.
        i. Initial revenue losses.
        Table 1 summarizes the initial decline in meat and bone meal 
    revenues under the various regulatory alternatives. These estimates 
    were derived by multiplying the quantity of meat and bone meal affected 
    by the forecasted $68 per ton meat and bone meal price decline. As 
    shown, the final rule is expected to generate an initial revenue 
    decline for renderers of $171 m per year. The industry-sponsored SCI 
    study used essentially the same methodology and estimated the most 
    likely loss to renderers from the ruminant-to-ruminant prohibition at 
    $160 m. Both ERG and SCI predicted that most of these losses will be 
    passed back to suppliers of the raw materials.
        ii. Feed costs in ruminant sectors.
        The restriction on the use of mammalian protein (with exceptions) 
    in ruminant feed will require existing purchasers of this material to 
    substitute new feed ingredients. FDA's estimate of the cost of this 
    substitution effect was derived from an American Feed Industry 
    Association (AFIA)-sponsored analysis of feed price impacts. In this 
    analysis, Dr. Thomas Lenard calculated the costs of substituting 
    soybean and replacement minerals for ruminant meat and bone meal and 
    estimated a unit price increase of $0.01588 per pound of ruminant-
    containing meat and bone meal replaced. Because Dr. Lenard assumed that 
    no meat and bone meal would be sold once the rule was in place, his 
    analysis applied this incremental feed substitution cost to all current 
    meat and bone meal consumption. Both the ERG and the SCI analyses, 
    however, concluded that it is
    
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    much more likely that meat and bone meal will continue to be sold for 
    nonruminant feed. Thus, FDA has rejected the assumption that additional 
    feed substitution costs will be incurred to replace all meat and bone 
    meal and has extrapolated the unit cost over only the 10 to 15 percent 
    share of mammalian meat and bone meal now consumed by cattle to 
    calculate an expected cost increase of $8.0 m per year.
        (Comment 124). Some comments expressed additional concern about the 
    cost of feed. Some mentioned higher prices for new dairy cattle feeds 
    than are derived using Dr. Lenard's unit cost estimates.
        These comments, however, did not provide sufficient data for FDA to 
    evaluate their assumptions and calculation methodologies. ERG attempted 
    to confirm the validity of one very high estimate of feed substitution 
    costs, but that comment could not verify the factors used in the 
    estimate. Thus, FDA has retained the AFIA unit cost increment to 
    support its $8.0 m estimate for feed substitution costs.
        iii. Feed costs in nonruminant sectors.
        The forecasted decline in the price of restricted meat and bone 
    meal will reduce feed costs for those sectors, such as poultry and hog 
    producers and pet food manufacturers, that will continue to use the 
    product. As shown in Table 1, FDA forecasts that these feed cost 
    savings will be $162.5 m per year under the final rule. The estimated 
    savings to these purchasers are slightly less than the estimated 
    revenue decline for producers of ruminant meat and bone meal, because 
    the meat and bone meal will be somewhat less efficient in these uses.
        (Comment 125). Only a few comments noted that the nonruminant 
    sectors would gain from the decrease in ruminant-derived meat and bone 
    meal prices, and no quantitative estimates of such savings were 
    provided to the agency. A number of comments, however, suggested that 
    these cost savings not be used to offset costs to other sectors.
        As discussed below, FDA believes that the societal perspective 
    appropriate for agency analyses of federal regulations must consider 
    significant impacts on all affected sectors. FDA is fully aware, 
    however, that any gains to the nonruminant sectors will not reduce the 
    regulatory burden imposed on the rendering, livestock feed, and cattle 
    industries. These sectors will experience significant costs and revenue 
    reductions.
        iv. Distribution of costs and revenue losses by sector.
        (1) Initial impacts.
        (Comment 126). Many comments raised questions about the 
    distribution of the economic impacts of the regulatory alternatives. A 
    number noted that FDA summed the revenue impacts across sectors and 
    asserted that FDA was concerned only with the aggregate size of the 
    combined cost impacts and not with the separate impacts on each 
    agricultural sector. Actually, FDA aggregated the cost impacts for the 
    purpose of providing a concise and comprehensive accounting of the 
    societal impacts, as is normally performed for regulatory analysis.
        FDA estimates that the final rule will impose total annualized 
    direct compliance costs of $6.3 m on rendering facilities, $30.0 m on 
    feedmills, and $8.0 m on ruminant producers. Renderers will also incur 
    an initial revenue decline of $171.0 m per year which will be largely 
    passed on to other agricultural sectors. As noted, producers of 
    nonruminant animals and other purchasers of meat and bone meal 
    containing mammalian protein will benefit from a decline in feed prices 
    of $162.5 m per year.
        (Comment 127). Many comments expressed concern that FDA had not 
    adequately considered the economic impact on their particular industry.
        FDA notes that the preamble to the proposed rule included only a 
    summary of the ERG final report. That ERG report, as well as the more 
    recent addendum, addresses the economic impacts on all of the affected 
    sectors.
        (2) Market adjustments.
        (Comment 128). Several comments noted that renderers will endeavor 
    to pass the majority of the revenue losses to others in the 
    agricultural market.
        FDA finds that the affected markets will adjust to this rule in 
    numerous ways. The primary adjustments are: (1) Renderer payments for 
    raw materials will decrease, and charges for rendering services, such 
    as dead stock pickup, will increase; (2) meat packing plants will 
    reduce prices paid for cattle, and small meat packing plants, often 
    referred to as locker plants, will increase charges for custom 
    slaughtering services; (3) ruminant animal producers will pay increased 
    feed prices as they substitute other protein sources for meat and bone 
    meal; and (4) ruminant and other affected livestock producers will 
    decrease their demand for grazing lands in the long run, in response to 
    the decline in the value of cattle and other affected livestock.
        Renderers will experience the greatest initial lost revenues, but 
    these losses will largely be passed on back to the meat packers and 
    animal producers that supply the raw materials. SCI explained that most 
    renderers have contracts with raw material suppliers that link prices 
    paid for animal tissue to publicly available information on the price 
    of meat and bone meal. Its analysis reported that:
    
        Although the rendering industry will be on the front lines of 
    any cost shock emanating from the FDA regulation, the economic 
    impact eventually would be distributed among the individuals and 
    companies that form the marketing chain for cattle (ruminants) and 
    derived products--affecting cattle producers, beef packers, meat 
    fabricator/processors, and renderers unevenly. The costs will not 
    disappear as they make their way down the marketing chain; rather, 
    they will be shared.
    
        FDA agrees with this assessment, but finds that the rendering 
    industry will continue to incur negative impacts due to the gradual 
    decline in raw material throughput and the other costs and incremental 
    marketing expenses associated with the rule.
        (Comment 129). Some comments claimed that renderer pickups of 
    animal offal would cease, arguing that the regulatory impacts would 
    make meat and bone meal unmarketable. Others predicted that the 
    regulatory impacts would create substantial disposal costs. A number of 
    comments noted that local landfills will not accept animal offal or 
    dead stock.
        As noted above, both ERG and the industry-sponsored study by SCI 
    predicted that ruminant-derived meat and bone meal will most likely 
    continue to be marketed, albeit at lower prices. Thus, FDA expects that 
    renderers will continue to pick up animal offal from nearly all of 
    their raw material suppliers, negating the need for substantial new 
    disposal costs for animal offal.
        Nevertheless, as discussed in the previous section on environmental 
    impacts, a move by renderers to raise pickup fees may reduce the number 
    of dead animals supplied to renderers. ERG found that this effect is 
    likely to be strongest among those small-scale animal producers that 
    could respond to increased renderer charges by simply dragging animals 
    off to remote areas and leaving them. In comparison, the larger 
    operations were thought less likely to change management practices in 
    response to a decline in renderer payments (or an increase in pickup 
    charges) for dead animals, because of limitations on available land or 
    other complications involved with changing methods for managing dead 
    stock disposal.
        ERG found that the costs reflected in Table 1 of this section imply 
    a drop in
    
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    the market value of protein in animal carcasses of about $2 per calf or 
    pig, and up to $7 per head for a 900-lb cow. Thus, although some 
    renderers may raise their pickup fees by amounts that cause the loss of 
    some dead stock, such fee hikes would be unprofitable, and therefore 
    unlikely, if the resulting loss to the renderer exceeded $2 per calf or 
    pig, or $7 per cow. As a result, the costs included in Table 1 reflect 
    an upper bound estimate of the regulatory costs and any subsequent 
    market adjustments will serve only to redistribute or potentially 
    reduce these costs.
        Other sectors will also adjust to these impacts by raising fees or 
    reducing payments. ERG calculated that a $68 decline in the price per 
    ton of meat and bone meal implies a 3.4 cents per lb decline in the 
    value of protein from current values of around 15 cents per pound. Most 
    meat packing plants are likely to pass this loss on to customers 
    through an increase in the charge for slaughtering, although some small 
    locker plants may have difficulty. Manufacturers of ruminant feeds will 
    shift increased costs to ruminant producers, who could face feed price 
    increases of 1.6 cents per pound of meat and bone meal replaced. Other 
    sectors, however, will gain by these market adjustments. For example, 
    nonruminant producers will experience lower feed prices and hog 
    producers are likely to see a small increase in slaughter values as 
    increases in porcine meat and bone meal prices increase the value of 
    hog offal.
        In the long run, each adversely affected sector will experience 
    some cost impacts that cannot be passed on. Renderers will experience 
    lower raw material throughput to the extent that fewer animals are 
    slaughtered and more dead stock remain unrendered. Meat packers will 
    see a reduced supply of slaughter animals due to the lower prices paid 
    for cattle and the increased charges for custom slaughtering services. 
    Livestock producers will make modest reductions in the size of their 
    herds because of the reduced animal prices. If the predominant part of 
    the decline in the value of meat and bone meal is passed back to cattle 
    producers, the value of cattle would fall by roughly $3 per head (about 
    one-half of one percent). One official of a major cattleman's 
    association acknowledged that the high range cost estimate could result 
    in a cost to cattle producers of $6 a head, but recognized the need for 
    regulation and explained that, ``[w]e made a commitment to incur this 
    cost.''
        v. Additional small business impacts.
        (1) Statement of purpose and objectives of the final rule.
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act requires that agencies present a 
    succinct statement of the purpose and objectives of any rule that will 
    have a significant effect on a substantial number of small entities. As 
    explained earlier in this document, FDA is instituting this rule to 
    reduce the risk of BSE becoming established and amplified in the United 
    States through feed. Existing epidemiological evidence suggests a link 
    between the incidence and proliferation of BSE in the United Kingdom 
    and the practice of feeding mammalian proteins to cattle. This rule 
    prohibits that practice. Thus, the need for regulatory action is based 
    on the need to prevent the spread of BSE among the nation's livestock.
        (2) Description of the affected small entities.
        Most businesses in the affected agricultural industries are small, 
    as defined by the standards used by the Small Business Administration 
    (SBA). SBA provided information to FDA on the employment size of 
    businesses in several of the affected sectors. SBA noted that 86.9 
    percent of the businesses in the Animal and Marine Fats and Oils 
    Industry (which encompasses animal rendering) employ fewer than 500 
    employees. In the meat packing industry and sausage and other prepared 
    meats industries, 96.1 percent and 93.3 percent of businesses, 
    respectively, employ fewer than 500 workers. Similarly, the great 
    majority of cattle producers are also small, family-owned businesses. 
    According to statistics collected by the National Beef Cattlemen's 
    Association, 98 percent of cattle producers are small- to mid-sized 
    family businesses with less than 500 head. In 1993, the average size of 
    beef cow herds was 38.3 head (NCA, 1996). Among the feedmills 
    classified in Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) 2048 (Prepared 
    Feeds and Feed Ingredients for Animals and Fowls, Except Dogs and Cats) 
    and SIC 5191 (Farm Supplies), the large majority employ fewer than 500 
    employees, and thus are small businesses. SBA data show that 95 percent 
    of feedmill firms in SIC 2048 and 99 percent of firms in SIC 5191 
    employ fewer than 500 employees. The small businesses in SIC 2048 
    operate 70 percent of all feedmill establishments. A total of 61 large 
    companies operate the remaining 30 percent of feedmills classified in 
    SIC 2048 (Bureau of the Census, 1996). The ERG final report projects 
    the number of establishments in all of these sectors with less than or 
    greater than 500 employees.
        c. Description of economic impacts.
        i. Small renderers.
        The ERG final report provided detailed information on the expected 
    economic impacts of the proposed rule on small renderers. The addendum 
    presents ERG's revised estimates of the impacts of the final rule on 
    small independent renderers. On average, each of these establishments 
    is estimated to incur initial revenue declines of approximately 
    $371,000 per year. (Meat-and-bone-meal price reductions greater or 
    smaller than the estimated $68 per ton would yield proportional changes 
    in these estimates.)
        As noted in the SCI report, most of the revenue impacts will 
    quickly be passed on to material suppliers. The smallest independent 
    renderers, however, are likely to experience the most severe impacts. 
    According to ERG, the number of rendering establishments has been 
    decreasing for a number of years, and many small operations have 
    already closed. Moreover, since the smallest renderers tend to be those 
    most dependent on the availability of dead stock supplies for raw 
    materials, these operations will be least able to shift losses to raw 
    material suppliers. (Larger renderers obtain raw material supplies 
    predominantly from medium to large meat packing plants and are less 
    dependent on dead stock supplies, which could fall in response to 
    increased pick up fees.)
        ERG estimated in its final report that 20 to 25 rendering 
    establishments are in this vulnerable group of small businesses. While 
    many renderers submitted comments on the proposed regulation, no 
    rendering companies submitted comments predicting plant closures. The 
    SCI study did not address plant closures other than in the case, which 
    it described as unlikely, that all meat and bone meal is unmarketable. 
    No other comments provided additional information on the number of 
    possible plant closures. Nevertheless, as suggested in the ERG report, 
    FDA agrees that some business closures are possible among these 
    companies, but the data are not sufficient to determine how many 
    closures may occur.
        ii. Small meat packing operations.
        Many small meat packing facilities will be required by their 
    renderers, generally through contractual arrangements, to pay higher 
    prices for renderer pickups of animal offal. Large and medium meat 
    packing operations (many of which are small businesses according to the 
    SBA definitions) will continue to receive payments from renderers for 
    raw materials, although the size of the payments will decline with the 
    fall in restricted meat and bone meal prices. These plants will 
    endeavor
    
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    to pass through costs by paying less for slaughter cattle. To the 
    extent that competitive market conditions exist, all meat packers will 
    experience similar declines in renderer payments, and new equilibrium 
    prices will reflect a pass-through of these charges to producers of 
    cattle and other affected livestock.
        The smallest plants in the industry, often referred to as locker 
    plants, provide custom slaughtering services, thereby differentiating 
    themselves from the large packer/renderers. Small meat packing or 
    locker plants have been in decline for a number of years for several 
    reasons, including the decline in small farm operations and in the 
    consumption of red meat and custom meat products. ERG reported that the 
    smallest meat packing plants, i.e., those with 2 to 5 employees, are at 
    a cost disadvantage relative to even slightly larger plants, such as 
    those with 12 or more employees.
        To assess whether impacts on these small plants are significant, 
    ERG developed revenue estimates for locker plants with slaughtering 
    rates representative of the smallest plants in the industry. The 
    smallest locker plants have substantially less raw material for 
    rendering, and the renderers' charges (which are heavily influenced by 
    the fixed costs of operating the collection truck) currently represent 
    a relatively large share of plant operating costs. Also, because animal 
    offal cannot be stored for long periods, small operations require 
    nearly as many renderer pickups as much larger facilities. ERG 
    determined that the increase in renderer charges will represent 
    approximately one percent of revenues for these plants and that these 
    increased charges might be sufficient to depress profits by significant 
    amounts.
        According to ERG, some industry representatives predicted that 
    increased renderer pickup charges would precipitate failures among the 
    smallest meat packers. Other small meat packers anticipated that they 
    would be able to pass on some charges to customers and expected to 
    remain in business. ERG concluded that some of the smallest meat 
    packers, particularly those with five or fewer employees, are 
    vulnerable to increased renderer charges and, in the context of a poor 
    economic environment, some might cease operations. No reliable 
    quantitative estimate could be made, however, of the number or 
    percentage of facilities likely to close.
        iii. Small cattle producers.
        The reduction in slaughter prices and the increase in cattle feed 
    prices are not expected to differentially impact small ruminant 
    producers, as the impact of this decline on cattle producers will be 
    directly proportional to the size of the producer's herd. Nevertheless, 
    all cattle producers will experience lost revenues of roughly $3 per 
    head, or about one-half of one percent of the animal's market value.
        iv. Small feedmills.
        Feedmills will incur costs to document their handling of mammalian 
    protein and to perform clean out procedures to ensure separation of 
    mammalian and pure porcine or pure equine meat and bone meal. Also, 
    feedmills that currently serve both ruminant and nonruminant producers, 
    but lack the capacity to handle two types of feeds, will be encouraged 
    to add storage capacity if the price of the two types of meat and bone 
    meal diverge significantly. The ERG study indicates that these capital 
    and operating costs may be substantial, but finds that the larger 
    feedmills would be much more likely to make this investment.
        d. Description of the recordkeeping burden of the rule.
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act directs agencies to describe the 
    recordkeeping requirements of its rules. This regulation will require 
    certain feed manufacturers to develop new written operating procedures. 
    No unusual skills or expertise will be required to establish such 
    systems. In addition, many firms will have to retain invoices or other 
    materials sufficient to track the materials, but FDA believes that the 
    retention of such records is already a widely accepted business 
    practice. The addendum to the ERG report summarizes the paperwork and 
    the other documentation costs for the final regulation and for each 
    alternative considered.
        e. Analysis of regulatory alternatives.
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act requires an evaluation of any 
    regulatory overlaps and regulatory alternatives that would minimize the 
    costs to small entities. FDA is unaware of any significant regulatory 
    conflicts with other Federal rules. FDA examined six regulatory 
    alternatives in addition to the no action alternative: (1) The 
    mammalian-to-ruminant prohibition; (2) the mammalian (with exceptions)-
    to-ruminant prohibition; (3) the ruminant-to-ruminant prohibition; (4) 
    the partial ruminant-to-ruminant prohibition; (5) the prohibition of 
    all sheep, goat, mink, deer, and elk proteins in ruminant feed; and (6) 
    the prohibition of sheep and goat proteins in ruminant feed. As 
    described above, FDA and its contractor, ERG, have prepared a detailed 
    comparison of the respective impacts of these alternatives and have 
    found that the estimated net costs of the final regulation are lower 
    under the mammalian-to-ruminant prohibition, with exceptions, than it 
    would have been under the full mammalian-to-ruminant prohibition (no 
    exceptions), and are comparable to the costs of the proposed ruminant-
    to-ruminant prohibition. Although the partial ruminant-to-ruminant 
    prohibition is probably less costly, and the other two alternatives 
    would be considerably less costly, these alternatives would not be as 
    effective in reducing the risk of an outbreak and spread of BSE. Thus, 
    FDA believes that the rule selected is the most cost-effective 
    regulatory alternative that meets the objective of the agency.
        In response to the many comments from small businesses requesting 
    agency consideration of their views, FDA has revised the rule in 
    several ways to decrease the burden on small entities. For example, FDA 
    has exempted all pet food at the retail level from the requirement to 
    display the cautionary statement on labeling. This exemption will 
    substantially mitigate the lost value of mammalian meat and bone meal, 
    lessening the market adjustments for all entities. Also, the agency has 
    exempted plate wastes and used cellulosic food casings from coverage of 
    the rule. Moreover, the scope of the recordkeeping burden has 
    decreased, so that those producers using only nonmammalian protein 
    products will be exempt from recordkeeping requirements for these 
    products. Finally, FDA has accepted industry comments urging the 
    acceptance of GMP definitions of acceptable clean out procedures for 
    feedmills. This interpretation will reduce the need for any additional 
    training of medicated feedmill employees. Most feedmills manufacture 
    medicated feeds and the employees in those mills are already familiar 
    with good manufacturing practices.
        f. Miscellaneous comments on the analysis of impacts discussion in 
    the proposed rule.
        (Comment 130). Several comments, including several oral comments at 
    the public meetings, claimed that FDA erred in not declaring the 
    proposed rule to be a ``major rule.''
        The comments appear to have misinterpreted the proposed rule and 
    the terminology used in the proposed rule. The preamble to the proposed 
    rule clearly stated that the rule ``constitutes an economically 
    significant rule as described in (Executive Order 12866)'' (62 FR 552 
    at 573). The Executive Order 12866 process uses the term ``economically 
    significant'' to denote those rules which may have an annual
    
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    effect on the economy of $100 m or more or adversely affect in a 
    material way the economy, a sector of the economy, productivity, 
    competition, jobs, the environment, public health or safety, or State, 
    local, or tribal governments or communities (see Executive Order 12866, 
    Section 3(f)(1)). This definition is similar to the definition of 
    ``major rule'' in Executive Order 12291 (which declared a rule to be a 
    major rule if it was likely to have an annual effect on the economy of 
    $100 m or more, a major increase in costs or prices for consumers, 
    industries, governments, or geographic regions, or significant adverse 
    effects on competition, jobs, investment, productivity, innovation, or 
    competition with foreign-based enterprises). However, Executive Order 
    12866 revoked Executive Order 12291. Thus, when FDA said that the rule 
    was an economically significant rule within Executive Order 12866, it 
    was using current terminology.
        (Comment 131). Some comments contended that prohibiting the use of 
    protein derived from certain tissues in ruminant feed would impose an 
    unfunded mandate on the States.
        FDA disagrees with the comments. For purposes of determining 
    whether an unfunded mandate will be imposed on the states, 2 U.S.C. 658 
    defines ``Federal intergovernmental mandate,'' in relevant part, as 
    ``any provision in legislation, statute, or regulation that * * * would 
    impose an enforceable duty upon State, local, or tribal governments.'' 
    Therefore, the statute applies to regulations which impose a 
    nondiscretionary function on a State, local, or tribal government and 
    compliance with the regulation could be enforced against the State, 
    local, or tribal government. Neither the proposed rule nor the final 
    rule imposes any nondiscretionary functions on any State. Furthermore, 
    no provisions of the proposed or final rule are enforceable against any 
    State. As such, neither the proposed nor the final rule imposes any 
    unfunded mandate on the States.
        The agency noted in response to an earlier comment that states with 
    employees commissioned by FDA under section 702(a) of the act could be 
    used for enforcement of the final rule. The costs of these commissioned 
    employees, however, are borne by FDA, not the states. In addition, 
    states have worked with FDA for many years under voluntary cooperative 
    agreements in regulating animal feeds. FDA expects that such voluntary 
    cooperation from the states will continue.
    
    VI. The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
    
        This final rule contains information collection provisions that 
    were submitted to OMB for review under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 
    1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3520) at the time the proposed rule was published 
    (62 FR 552). The title, description, and the respondent description of 
    the information collection provisions are shown below with an estimate 
    of the annual reporting and recordkeeping burden. Included in the 
    estimate is the time for reviewing instructions, gathering and 
    maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the 
    collection of information.
        Title: Animal Proteins Prohibited in Ruminant Feed--21 CFR 
    589.2000.
        Description: This final rule (Sec. 589.2000) provides that protein 
    derived from mammalian tissues (with some exceptions) for use in 
    ruminant feed is a food additive subject to section 409 of the act (21 
    U.S.C. 348). Proteins derived from animal tissues contained in such 
    feed ingredients in distribution cannot be readily identified (i.e., 
    species) by recipients engaged in the manufacture, processing and 
    distribution, and use of animal feeds and feed ingredients.
        Thus, under the agency's authority in section 701(a) of the act (21 
    U.S.C. 371(a)) to issue regulations for the efficient enforcement of 
    the act, this final rule places three general requirements on persons 
    that manufacture, blend, process, distribute, or use products that 
    contain or may contain protein derived from mammalian tissues, and 
    feeds made from such products. The first requirement is for cautionary 
    labeling of these products with direct language developed by FDA. This 
    labeling requirement is exempt from the scope of the Paperwork 
    Reduction Act because it is a ``public disclosure of information 
    originally supplied by the Federal government for the purpose of 
    disclosure to the public'' (5 CFR 1320.3(c)(2)).
        The second requirement is for these establishments to maintain and 
    make available to FDA records that are sufficient to track any material 
    that contains protein derived from mammalian tissues (as defined in 
    Sec. 589.2000(a)(1)) throughout the material's receipt, processing, and 
    distribution. Based on available information, FDA believes that 
    maintenance of such records is a usual and customary part of normal 
    business activities for such firms. Therefore, this recordkeeping 
    requirement creates no paperwork burden.
        The third requirement is that individuals or firms that 
    manufacture, blend, process, or distribute both mammalian and 
    nonmammalian materials must maintain written procedures to prevent 
    commingling and cross-contamination. An estimate of the burden 
    resulting from this recordkeeping requirement is provided below. The 
    estimate is based on the time required to develop the written 
    procedures, which FDA anticipates will be a one-time effort.
        In the preamble to the proposed rule, FDA included estimates for 
    capital cost and operating cost in the recordkeeping burden chart. 
    These estimates have been deleted from the chart below because the 
    capital and operating costs, although properly included in the analysis 
    of impacts discussion in this document, are not a result of the 
    recordkeeping provisions of the rule and therefore are not part of the 
    recordkeeping burden.
        Description of respondents: Individuals or firms that manufacture, 
    blend, process, distribute, or use feed or feed ingredients that 
    contain or may contain protein derived from mammalian tissues.
    
                                    Table 2.--Estimated Annual Recordkeeping Burden 1                               
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                        No. of                                                      
                                                        record                    Total      Hours per              
                     21 CFR section                    keepers/    Frequency      annual       record    Total hours
                                                        firms                    records                            
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    589.2000(e)(1)(iv).............................        2,000            1        2,000           14      28,000 
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ There are no capital costs or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of            
      information.                                                                                                  
    
    
    [[Page 30976]]
    
        The January 1997 proposed rule provided a 45-day comment period and 
    specifically requested comments regarding collection of information. 
    OMB did not approve the package submitted with the proposed rule and 
    filed the following comments as terms of clearance:
    
        OMB is concerned that the reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements in the NPRM may be overly burdensome and not maximize 
    utility, and wishes to allow the public the opportunity to consider 
    the NPRM. When the paperwork package is resubmitted for OMB approval 
    at the final rule stage, FDA will directly address OMB's concerns 
    and all comments received on these issues in the preamble of the 
    rule and in the paperwork submission package.
    
        During the 45-day comment period provided by the proposed rule, FDA 
    received no comments regarding the requirement that individuals or 
    firms that manufacture, blend, process, or distribute both mammalian 
    and nonmammalian materials must maintain written procedures to prevent 
    commingling and cross-contamination. Thus, FDA received no comments 
    that suggested that the recordkeeping requirements were overly 
    burdensome or did not maximize utility.
        The agency also announced the availability of a draft rule in the 
    Federal Register of April 17, 1997 (62 FR 18728). This document 
    contained the codified section of the draft final rule and provided an 
    additional comment period of 10 days. None of the comments received 
    concerned collection of information.
        FDA is announcing that the proposed collection of information has 
    been submitted to OMB for review and clearance under the Paperwork 
    Reduction Act of 1995. Section 589.2000(e)(1)(iv) will be effective 
    upon approval by OMB. FDA now invites comments on: (1) Whether the 
    proposed collection of information is necessary for the proper 
    performance of FDA's functions, including whether the information will 
    have practical utility; (2) the accuracy of FDA's estimate of the 
    burden of the proposed collection of information, including the 
    validity of the methodology and assumptions used; (3) ways to enhance 
    the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be collected; 
    and (4) ways to minimize the burden of the collection of information on 
    respondents, including through the use of automated collection 
    techniques, when appropriate, and other forms of information 
    technology. FDA will announce the effective date in the Federal 
    Register. Submit written comments on the collection of information by 
    July 7, 1997.
        Submit written comments on the collection of information to the 
    Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, OMB, New Executive Office 
    Bldg., 725 17th St. NW., rm. 10235, Washington, DC 20503, Attn: Desk 
    Officer for FDA. For further information contact: Denver Presley, 
    Office of Information Resources Management (HFA-250), Food and Drug 
    Administration, 5600 Fishers Lane, rm. 16B-19, Rockville, MD 20857, 
    301-827-1472. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not 
    required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays 
    a currently valid OMB control number.
    
    VII. Federalism
    
        FDA has analyzed the final rule in accordance with the principles 
    set forth in Executive Order 12612 and has determined that this final 
    rule does not warrant the preparation of a Federalism Assessment.
    
    VIII. Congressional Review
    
        This final rule has been determined to be a major rule for purposed 
    of 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq., Subtitle E of the Small Business Regulatory 
    Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104-121). FDA is submitting 
    the information and reports as required by that statute.
    
    IX. References
    
        The following references have been placed on display in the Dockets 
    Management Branch (HFA-305), Food and Drug Administration, 12420 
    Parklawn Dr., rm. 1-23, Rockville, MD 20857, and may be seen by 
    interested persons between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday.
    
    1. Dawson, M., et. al., ``Parenteral Transmission of BSE to the 
    Pig,'' Veterinary Record, 127: 338 (1990).
    2. Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, ``BSE in Great 
    Britain a Progress Report,'' 24, November 1996.
    3. Kimberlin, R. H., et. al., ``An Overview of Bovine Spongiform 
    Encephalopathy,'' at the Symposium on Virological Aspects of the 
    Safety of Biological Products, London, England, in Developments in 
    Biological Standardization, 75: 75-82 (1990).
    4. Collinge, J. et. al., ``Molecular Analysis of Prion Strain 
    Variation and the Aetiology of `New Variant' CJD,'' Nature, 383: 
    685-670 (1996).
    5. Coucerne, S. N., ``Predicting the CJD Epidemic in Humans,'' 
    Nature, 385: 197-198 (1997).
    6. Davis, A., ``Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy--United States 
    Surveillance,'' Dx Monitor, Winter 1996--Spring 1997: 11 (1997).
    7. Groschup, M. H., et. al., ``Detection of Scrapie Agent in 
    Peripheral Nervous System of a Diseased Sheep,'' Neurobiology of 
    Diseases, 3: 191-195 (1996).
    8. Lasmezas, C. I., et. al., ``Transmission of the BSE Agent to Mice 
    in the Absence of Detectable Abnormal Prion Protein,'' Science, 275: 
    402-405 (1997).
    9. Moon, H., ``Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy: Hypothetical Risk 
    of Emergence as a Zoonotic Foodborne Epidemic,'' Journal of Food 
    Protection, 59(10): 1106-1111 (1996).
    10. Spraker, T. R., et. al., ``Spongiform Encephalopathy in Free-
    Ranging Mule Deer, White-Tailed Deer, and Rocky Mountain Elk in 
    North Central Colorado,'' Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 33(1): 1-6 
    (1997).
    11. European Commission, Decision, 27 June 1994, 94/381/EC, Official 
    Journal of the European Commission, 172/23.
    12. Davis, A., ``Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy--United States 
    Surveillance,'' Dx Monitor, Winter 1996--Spring 1997, 11 (1997).
    13. Brown, P. and D. C. Gajdusek, ``Survival of Scrapie Virus After 
    3 Years'' Interment,'' Lancet, 337: 269-270 (1991).
    14. Eastern Research Group, ``Cost Analysis of Regulatory Options to 
    Reduce the Risk of an Outbreak of Transmissible Spongiform 
    Encephalopathies (TSE's) in the United States,'' Addendum to the 
    Final Report, April 29, 1997.
    
    List of Subjects in 21 CFR Part 589
    
        Animal feeds, Animal foods, Food additives.
    
        Therefore, under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and under 
    authority delegated to the Lead Deputy Commissioner, 21 CFR part 589 is 
    amended as follows:
    
    PART 589--SUBSTANCES PROHIBITED FROM USE IN ANIMAL FOOD OR FEED
    
        1. The authority citation in 21 CFR part 589 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Secs. 201, 402, 403, 409, 701 of the Federal Food, 
    Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 321, 342, 343, 348, 371).
    
        2. New Sec. 589.2000 is added to subpart B to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 589.2000  Animal proteins prohibited in ruminant feed.
    
        (a) Definitions.--(1) Protein derived from mammalian tissues means 
    any protein-containing portion of mammalian animals, excluding: Blood 
    and blood products; gelatin; inspected meat products which have been 
    cooked and offered for human food and further heat processed for feed 
    (such as plate waste and used cellulosic food casings); milk products 
    (milk and milk proteins); and any product whose only
    
    [[Page 30977]]
    
    mammalian protein consists entirely of porcine or equine protein.
        (2) Renderer means any firm or individual that processes slaughter 
    byproducts, animals unfit for human consumption, or meat scraps. The 
    term includes persons who collect such materials and subject them to 
    minimal processing, or distribute them to firms other than renderers 
    (as defined here) whose intended use for the products may include 
    animal feed. The term includes renderers that also blend animal protein 
    products.
        (3) Blender means any firm or individual which obtains processed 
    animal protein from more than one source or from more than one species, 
    and subsequently mixes (blends) or redistributes an animal protein 
    product.
        (4) Feed manufacturer includes manufacturers of complete and 
    intermediate feeds intended for animals, and includes on-farm in 
    addition to off-farm feed manufacturing and mixing operations.
        (5) Nonmammalian protein includes proteins from nonmammalian 
    animals.
        (6) Distributor includes persons who distribute or transport feeds 
    or feed ingredients intended for animals.
        (7) Ruminant includes any member of the order of animals which has 
    a stomach with four chambers (rumen, reticulum, omasum, and abomasum) 
    through which feed passes in digestion. The order includes, but is not 
    limited to, cattle, buffalo, sheep, goats, deer, elk, and antelopes.
        (b) Food additive status. The Food and Drug Administration has 
    determined that protein derived from mammalian tissues for use in 
    ruminant feed is a food additive subject to section 409 of the Federal 
    Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the act). The use or intended use in 
    ruminant feed of any material that contains protein derived from 
    mammalian tissues causes the feed to be adulterated and in violation of 
    the act, unless it is the subject of an effective notice of claimed 
    investigational exemption for a food additive under Sec. 570.17 of this 
    chapter.
        (c) Requirements for renderers that are not included in paragraph 
    (e) of this section. (1) Renderers that manufacture products that 
    contain or may contain protein derived from mammalian tissues and that 
    are intended for use in animal feed shall take the following measures 
    to ensure that materials identified in paragraph (b) of this section 
    are not used in the feed of ruminants:
        (i) Label the materials as follows: ``Do not feed to cattle or 
    other ruminants''; and
        (ii) Maintain records sufficient to track the materials throughout 
    their receipt, processing, and distribution, and make the copies 
    available for inspection and copying by the Food and Drug 
    Administration.
        (2) Renderers described in paragraph (c)(1) of this section will be 
    exempted from the requirements of paragraphs (c)(1)(i) and (c)(1)(ii) 
    of this section if they:
        (i) Use exclusively a manufacturing method that has been validated 
    by the Food and Drug Administration to deactivate the agent that causes 
    transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) and whose design has been 
    made available to the public;
        (ii) Use routinely a test method that has been validated by the 
    Food and Drug Administration to detect the presence of the agent that 
    causes TSE's and whose design has been made available to the public. 
    Renderers whose products test positive for agents that cause TSE's must 
    comply with paragraphs (c)(1)(i) and (c)(1)(ii) of this section. 
    Records of the test results shall be made available for inspection by 
    the Food and Drug Administration; or
        (iii) Use exclusively a method for controlling the manufacturing 
    process that minimizes the risk of the TSE agent entering the product 
    and whose design has been made available to the public and validated by 
    the Food and Drug Administration.
        (3) Renderers described in paragraph (c)(1) of this section will be 
    exempted from the requirements of paragraph (c)(1)(ii) of this section 
    if they use a permanent method, approved by FDA, to make a mark 
    indicating that the product contains or may contain protein derived 
    from mammalian tissue. If the marking is by the use of an agent that 
    cannot be detected on visual inspection, the renderer must use an agent 
    whose presence can be detected by a method that has been validated by 
    the Food and Drug Administration and whose design has been made 
    available to the public.
        (d) Requirements for protein blenders, feed manufacturers, and 
    distributors that are not included in paragraph (e) of this section. 
    (1) Protein blenders, feed manufacturers, and distributors that 
    manufacture, blend, process, and distribute products that contain or 
    may contain protein derived from mammalian tissues shall comply with 
    paragraph (c)(1) of this section.
        (2) Protein blenders, feed manufacturers, and distributors, shall 
    be exempt from paragraphs (d)(1) of this section if they:
        (i) Purchase animal products from renderers that certified 
    compliance with paragraph (c)(2) of this section or purchase such 
    materials from parties that certify that the materials were purchased 
    from renderers that certified compliance with paragraph (c)(2) of this 
    section; or
        (ii) Comply with the requirements of paragraph (c)(2) of this 
    section where appropriate.
        (3) Protein blenders, feed manufacturers, and distributors, shall 
    be exempt from paragraph (c)(1)(ii) of this section if they:
        (i) Purchase animal protein products that are marked in accordance 
    with paragraph (c)(3) of this section or purchase such materials from 
    renderers that certified compliance with paragraph (c)(3) of this 
    section, or purchase such materials from parties that certify that the 
    materials were purchased from renderers that certified compliance with 
    paragraph (c)(3) of this section; or
        (ii) Comply with the requirements of paragraph (c)(3) of this 
    section where appropriate.
        (4) Pet food products that are sold or are intended for sale at 
    retail and feeds for nonruminant laboratory animals are exempt from the 
    labeling requirements in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section. 
    However, if the pet food products or feeds for nonruminant laboratory 
    animals are sold or are intended for sale as distressed or salvage 
    items, then such products shall be labeled in accordance with paragraph 
    (c) or (d) of this section, as appropriate.
        (5) Copies of certifications as described in paragraphs (d)(2) and 
    (d)(3) of this section, shall be made available for inspection and 
    copying by the Food and Drug Administration.
        (e) Requirements for persons that intend to separate mammalian and 
    nonmammalian materials. (1) Renderers, protein blenders, feed 
    manufacturers, distributors, and others that manufacture, process, 
    blend and distribute both products that contain or may contain protein 
    derived from mammalian tissues or feeds containing such products, and 
    protein products from other animal tissues or feeds containing such 
    products, and that intend to keep those products separate shall:
        (i) Comply with paragraphs (c)(1) or (d)(1) of this section as 
    appropriate except that the labeling requirement shall apply only to 
    products that contain or may contain protein derived from mammalian 
    tissues or feeds containing such products;
        (ii) In the case of a renderer, obtain nonmammalian or pure porcine 
    or pure equine materials only from single-species slaughter facilities;
        (iii) Provide for measures to avoid commingling or cross-
    contamination;
    
    [[Page 30978]]
    
        (A) Maintain separate equipment or facilities for the manufacture, 
    processing, or blending of such materials; or
        (B) Use clean-out procedures or other means adequate to prevent 
    carry-over of products that contain or may contain protein derived from 
    mammalian tissues into animal protein or feeds that may be used for 
    ruminants; and
        (iv) Maintain written procedures specifying the clean-out 
    procedures or other means, and specifying the procedures for separating 
    products that contain or may contain protein derived from mammalian 
    tissue from all other protein products from the time of receipt until 
    the time of shipment.
        (2) Renderers, blenders, feed manufacturers, and distributors will 
    be exempted from applicable requirements of paragraph (e)(1) of this 
    section, if they meet the criteria for exemption under paragraphs 
    (c)(2) or (c)(3) of this section, and (d)(2) or (d)(3) of this section.
        (f) Requirements for establishments and individuals that are 
    responsible for feeding ruminant animals. Establishments and 
    individuals that are responsible for feeding ruminant animals shall 
    maintain copies of purchase invoices and labeling for all feeds 
    containing animal protein products received, and make the copies 
    available for inspection and copying by the Food and Drug 
    Administration.
        (g) Adulteration and misbranding. (1) Animal protein products, and 
    feeds containing such products, that are not in compliance with 
    paragraphs (c) through (f) of this section, excluding labeling 
    requirements, will be deemed adulterated under section 402(a)(2)(C) or 
    402(a)(4) of the act.
        (2) Animal protein products, and feeds containing such products, 
    that are not in compliance with the labeling requirements of paragraphs 
    (c) through (f) of this section will be deemed misbranded under section 
    403(a)(1) or 403(f) of the act.
        (h) Inspection; records retention. (1) Records that are to be made 
    available for inspection and copying, as required by this section, 
    shall be kept for a minimum of 1 year.
        (2) Written procedures required by this section shall be made 
    available for inspection and copying by the Food and Drug 
    Administration.
    
        Dated: May 9, 1997.
    Michael A. Friedman,
    Lead Deputy Commissioner for the Food and Drug Administration.
    
        Dated: May 9, 1997.
    Donna E. Shalala,
    Secretary of Health and Human Services.
    [FR Doc. 97-14682 Filed 6-3-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4160-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
8/4/1997
Published:
06/05/1997
Department:
Food and Drug Administration
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
97-14682
Dates:
This final rule becomes effective on August 4, 1997, except Sec. 589.2000(e)(1)(iv), which contains collection of information provisions subject to review and clearance by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). FDA is announcing that the proposed collection of information has been submitted to OMB for review and clearance under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995. The provision of this section will be effective upon approval. FDA will announce the effective date of Sec. 589.2000(e)(1)(iv) ...
Pages:
30936-30978 (43 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. 96N-0135
RINs:
0910-AA91: Substances Prohibited From Use in Animal Food or Feed; Protein Derived From Ruminants Prohibited in Ruminant Feed
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/0910-AA91/substances-prohibited-from-use-in-animal-food-or-feed-protein-derived-from-ruminants-prohibited-in-r
PDF File:
97-14682.pdf
CFR: (21)
21 CFR 589.2000(a)(1)
21 CFR 589.2000(a)(7)
21 CFR 589.2000(a)(1))
21 CFR 589.2000(c)
21 CFR 570.38(c)(2)
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