Posted on 10/17/2015 4:49:18 AM PDT by iowamark
WASHINGTON After a week of controversy surrounding its abrupt removal of pork dishes from the national menu for federal inmates, the government did an about-face this week and put pork roast back on the prison bill of fare.
The Bureau of Prisons disclosed the decision to The Washington Post hours after a Republican Senate leader expressed dismay at what he implied was a wasteful survey of inmates food preferences and a lack of transparency in the decision.
The pork industry is responsible for 547,800 jobs, which creates $22.3 billion in personal incomes and contributes $39 billion to the gross domestic product, Sen. Charles E. Grassley, R-Iowa, wrote in a letter Thursday to Bureau of Prisons Director Charles E. Samuels, Jr.
The United States is the worlds largest exporter of pork, and the third largest producer of pork, Grassley wrote, warning that the unprecedented decision to remove pork from federal prisons would have consequences on the livelihoods of American citizens who work in the pork industry.
Grassley is chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which oversees the federal prison system.
The new pork policy has affected 206,000 federal inmates since it started Oct. 1 with the new fiscal year. It was widely panned by, not surprisingly, the pork industry, a not-insignificant lobbying force in Washington. It was praised by the chicken and beef industries, natural competitors to pork. Muslim groups feared a backlash from anti-Islam groups that could spin the decision into a case of the federal government acting under pressure from Muslims and some did.
Edmond Ross, a spokesman for the prison bureau, could not explain what prompted the governments quick turnaround. Im not cleared to say anything and I dont have answers for you, he said late Thursday. An explanation from senior prison officials could come this week, he said.
Ross had explained last week that based on annual surveys of inmates food preferences, pork lost its appeal in the prison system years ago. In the last two years, the menu had dropped from bacon, pork chops and sausages to just one dish: Pork roast, the entree now back on federal prison dining halls.
Ross also blamed the ban on what he called the growing cost of pork. But Grassley was skeptical. He wrote:
According to a spokesman for the Bureau of Prisons, the decision was based on a survey of prisoners food preferences that reflected that pork has been the lowest-rated food by inmates for a number of years.
To corroborate the validity of the claim that prisoners indicated a lack of interest in pork products, I am requesting copies of the prisoner surveys and responses that were used to support the determination to no longer serve pork in federal prisons. Additionally, the spokesman indicated that pork had been the lowest rated food, for several years. Please supply the surveys and responses dating back as far as prisoners may have indicated their dislike for pork products. In addition, please provide a line item description of the costs incurred to conduct each survey performed.
The Bureau of Prisons spokesman indicated that pork was expensive to provide. Please provide any economic evaluations the Bureau of Prisons has relied on that detail the cost of pork as compared to beef, chicken, and non-meat products such as tofu and soy products.
The National Pork Producers Council, the Washington-based trade association that represents the nations hog farmers, had pledged last week that it would not rule out any options to resolve this and was busy formulating a strategy to fight the prison pork ban.
I’d easily believe that conspiracy. Now I’m finding it impossible to find bone-in chicken breasts at the supermarket - even Wegman’s is no longer selling them. What’s that about? Meat cooked without the bone has no flavor. And American chicken needs all the flavor it can get!
I haven’t thought of the Wizard of Id in years! How funny it was. Thanks for reminding me.
Yes, that is nonsense, isn’t it? Pork is a bargain right now.
Why aren’t these people being served peanut butter sandwiches or tuna sandwiches?
Pork is Federal Civil Service’s life blood.
No!
This should NOT be the result of the PORK LOBBY!
This should be the result of the common sense lobby!!!!!
http://www.usda.gov/factbook/chapter2.pdf
The above link takes you to the USDA website page which shows that the overall consumption of pork has remained virtually unchanged since 1950. That is why the people knew that this ban was a big thumping lie from the beginning.
The chart is down a ways on page three
2017 can’t come soon enough.
Hillary likes roast pork... she’ll fit inn well...
GO GRASSLEY!!
all prisoners really need is a bowl of rice and some water
I don’t want my tax dollars paying for prisoners eating something as good as pork.
I was unaware that our prisons actually conduct surveys on prisoners' menu preferences. I don't believe they would reject bacon - most prisoners, except the Bernie Madoff types, just aren't a brie and caviar crowd.
The US prisons system should serve pork roast twice a week and bacon for breakfast twice a week. Those days the Muzzies can eat their halal peanut butter and jelly sandwiches
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