‘Pink slime’ products to be permanently removed from commissary shelves

  • Published
  • By Brandice J. O'Brien
  • Tinker Public Affairs
In recent weeks, "pink slime" oozed from the headlines. Despite ground beef shoppers' worries, commissary officials assure Tinker customers that the lean finely trimmed beef antibacterial process has been approved by the United States Department of Agriculture and the Food and Drug Administration for decades. However, commissary officials have made the decision to phase out these products in response to customer concerns.

"Although the USDA continues to assure us this process is safe, we have listened to our customers and modified our contracts to require that our ground beef suppliers only sell us products not treated with the LFTB process," said Chris Burns, Defense Commissary Agency director of Sales at DeCA Headquarters in Fort Lee, Va.

The process will be complete by the end of the month. In the meantime, commissaries are carrying USDA organic ground beef or USDA all-natural ground beef, neither of which has pink slime.

"All stores are scheduled to have these modified contracts in place by the end of May 2012," Mr. Burns said.

The decision to replace ground beef products that use pink slime came as a result of an outpour of concern from recent months of media broadcast. Despite concern and unflattering description of the antibacterial process, the ground beef industry officials insists that pink slime is safe, even beneficial to a consumer.

The American Meat Institute, a trade association for the fresh meat industry, reports that the use of pink slime has contributed to a 55 to 60 percent decrease in the occurrence of E. coli. Additionally, it has made use of lean meat that would otherwise be wasted.

Regardless, it will be replaced.

"First and foremost, the commissary is a quality-of-life benefit for military customers, and it is important to us that we provide a balanced product assortment that meets the needs of our customers," Mr. Burns said.