Following USDA Guidance, State Clinics Destroyed Thousands of Cans of Usable Baby Formula
The government worsens the baby formula shortage, again.

Amid a national shortage of baby formula, family care centers in at least two states discarded thousands of cans of unopened, unexpired baby formula—because state and federal officials said so.
Guidance issued by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) in November 2019 advises clinics run by state-level Women, Infant, and Children (WIC) programs to "dispose of unused, returned…infant formula." Formula might be returned for a number of reasons: parents might decide to switch brands at the recommendation of a doctor or due to an infant's allergic reaction, or they might simply not use all they've been given. When that happens, clinics are told to discard the returned formula—even if it is not expired.
"Unused, returned infant formula may have been inappropriately stored (e.g., exposed to extremely high temperatures), may be past its use-by-date, or subjected to tampering (e.g., labels or use-by dates changed)," the USDA advisory reads, in part. The same memo also warns against "donating unused, returned WIC infant formula to entities such as food banks or food pantries."
Apparently taking that memo to heart, WIC centers in Georgia have reportedly destroyed at least 16,459 cans of baby formula since October of last year, according to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, which first reported on the frustrating policy last month.
The state also banned donations of formula to food banks and other locations. As a result, Georgia was "throwing formula down the sink," Vanesa Sarazua, founder of the Hispanic Alliance of Georgia, a nonprofit, told the paper. "I mean, talk about waste."
After that story gained widespread attention in Georgia media, the department announced this week that it was rescinding those guidelines for the state's WIC clinics. Under the new rules, WIC clinics will be instructed to donate returned, unopened cans of formula to local food banks, the state's Department of Public Health announced this week.
In North Carolina, an unknown number of cans of baby formula have been discarded by clinics following the same set of state and federal guidelines, according to a report from Raleigh-based WRAL. "Family care centers are among the last hopes for people searching for baby formula in North Carolina, but we now know they've also been throwing out supplies despite countless parents being in desperate need right now," WRAL reported last week.
A spokeswoman for the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services confirmed to Reason that North Carolina's WIC programs "follow the USDA's guidance on returned formula to ensure safety." She added that the state does not keep count of how many cans of formula are returned and subsequently destroyed.
"The federal guidance on redistributing returned formulas addresses the multiple, potentially serious health risks to infants from using formula that was returned," the spokeswoman, Summer Tonizzo, said via email. She noted that the state was in the process of reviewing that policy due to the shortage, but could not provide additional details about how long that review might take or when a change might be enacted.
At the federal level, meanwhile, the USDA argues that states probably shouldn't have listened to their guidelines in the first place.
"To ensure the safety of infant formula, current [USDA Food and Nutrition Service] policy, recommends but does not require that WIC clinics dispose of unused, returned WIC infant formula in accordance with state and local health and safety laws," Daniel Shedd, a USDA spokesman, wrote to Reason in an email. The agency "is not planning to alter existing policy as WIC state agencies have flexibility to develop and/or update policies for the donation of unused, returned infant formula and are encouraged to do so in concert with their state health department and legal counsel," he added.
Of course, the USDA's worries about how returned formula might have been stored are worth taking seriously. Even if it is unexpired and unopened, there might be good reasons why a parent might not want to feed their infant that formula—and why a clinic might not want to vouch for it.
But in an environment where parents are scrambling to find any formula, those risks seem relatively less significant. Even when there isn't a shortage, parents should be given the option to take that formula. Now, especially, they should have that choice.
Destroying perfectly good formula when there are infants going hungry is yet another appalling government failure, on top of the trade and regulatory policies that created this mess in the first place. It's been months since the baby formula shortage became apparent, and yet the USDA guidance has not been updated or changed. Kudos to Georgia officials for changing their own rules, but that seems to have only happened because the media drew attention to this issue.
There's also something deeply troubling about the lack of responsibility being expressed by the agencies involved. The USDA says it sees no need to change its guidance because states ultimately make their own rules. State officials in North Carolina point to the USDA guidelines to justify their decision making. Prior to the change in state policy, Georgia officials told the Journal-Constitution that they were also following USDA guidance.
That's the great thing about a governmental screw-up, isn't it? There's always someone else to blame.
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Government: can't live with them, can't live without them. Whatcha gonna do?
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Build your own baby formula factory...
Turns out my wife has two of them - - - - - - - - - - - -
What happens when the government shuts them down?
No bid, sole source contracting is just bad policy. Prenup better.
I'm not sure about all the new fangled political lingo; is it PROGRESSIVE when we evolve from Clinton bombing baby formula factories overseas to Biden blowing up our own? What's that 'domestic terrorist' thing mean while we're at it..
I do know this: when we're in hot soup like never before, it's not Progresso!
Most people live perfectly fine without ever receiving any benefits from the federal government.
Will these discarded cans be tallied as food wastage, of which we peasants should be ashamed? Or does it not count on the grounds it was by government edict and thus a safety measure?
The former, of course. Why just do one thing at a time when you can do two?
The problem is who to lay the blame on. Can't be government.
uidance issued by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) in November 2019 advises clinics run by state-level Women, Infant, and Children (WIC)
How 2019...
Nice catch. I propose
changingtransitioning it to "Infants, Children, and Kids (ICK)".Birthing-persons, Infants, Trans-Children and Hoes (BITCH)
Women, Infants, Children, and Kids and grab some popcorn when one of their dogs gets killed.
"Unused, returned infant formula may have been inappropriately stored (e.g., exposed to extremely high temperatures), may be past its use-by-date, or subjected to tampering (e.g., labels or use-by dates changed)," the USDA advisory reads, in part.
Oh, FFS! *Anything* *may* have been inappropriately stored or tampered with! Better throw *everything* away!
You jest, but that's precisely why a lot of restaurants and community pantries have to throw out shit loads of food every day instead of giving it away to poor and homeless people. Private charity might actually help people out of poverty. Can't have that.
"The federal guidance on redistributing returned formulas addresses the multiple,
potentially serioushighly speculative health risks to infants from using formula that was returned"Fixed it for you.
To steal a joke from Black Gallagher:
When parents spoil formula, they PANIC
When governments spoil formula, they PLAN IT
It's the same reason we can't have guns: because our governors can't vouch for the safety of items that aren't in their own hands.
So no one commenting would have a problem giving their baby formula that may have been sitting somewhere in a 100-degree storage room or warehouse for an unknown amount of time, or may have had the label tampered with and use-by date changed to make it "unexpired", etc? Y'all are crazy.
Baby formula is a solution of glucose and protein with a few vital minerals added. If it were a miraculous concoction, today's kids wouldnt be such wusses. Breast feed them or give them cow's milk.
It's so retarded that people advertising to parents make jokes about it. Pacifier falls out of the first kid's mouth, it gets squirreled away to be autoclaved later and replaced with a fresh one. Pacifier falls out of the second kids mouth, it *maybe* gets wiped on a *maybe* clean article of clothing and reinserted.
DeAnnP hasn't reached the wisdom or maturity of my (then) 4-yr.-old who sits there letting me 'check' 'expired' blueberries to make sure their OK before realizing that they can either let me continue to 'check' them and wind up with no blueberries or yell "Dad!" and figure out for themselves if the blueberries are OK.
You're comparing blueberries (bought in a grocery store I presume) to baby formula in an enclosed labeled bottle that was returned by some person who ended up not using it and returned it to WIC that for all you know was kept in this said persons car in 80-degree weather for 3 weeks? 5 weeks? Feed your kids wtf you want, but you do so at your own (or your kids') risk. I repeat, y'all are crazy.
What, precisely, happens to dried baby formula at 80 F? How are those chemicals changed? What, in fact, happens at any temperature up to the level necessary to cook (that is, to start denaturing proteins)?
The answer, in case you don't know how to look it up yourself, is nothing. Dehydrated infant formula is designed to be durable and long-lasting. It is not, for example, delivered to grocery stores in refrigerated trucks.
Bluntly put, you can be as irrationally risk-averse as you like but you don't get to call the rest of us crazy for not joining in with your dysfunctional views.
You're comparing blueberries (bought in a grocery store I presume) to baby formula in an enclosed labeled bottle that was returned by some person who ended up not using it and returned it to WIC that for all you know was kept in this said persons car in 80-degree weather for 3 weeks? 5 weeks?
And you don't know a damn thing about how food goes bad or breaks down and don't care because you want to be a helpless little four year old and have Papa Biden check your blueberries for you even if it means you don't get any. Like a dumbass.
Fresh blueberries grow mold. Mold that produces no-shit toxins. Baby formula, in extreme heat, given large fractions if not whole years past its expiration date might scorch or carmelize into some inedible shit that's in no way nutritive but it doesn't become outright toxic without the same sorts of growth as your cheese or blueberries would display. The sort of growth that it's sanitized and sealed against, that prolonged high temps would kill, and that, so long as the expiration date weren't completely obliterated, fairly judged by the user based on their need at the time of use.
But, again, you don't give a shit. You just want to be a panicky dumbass and agree that your Daddy is the best Daddy and he knows best.
This is America! We think ahead to eliminate risks. Logistics experts determined that eliminating unnecessary stops of the delivery trucks prevented spoilage. Eliminating now occurs in empty gallon plastic milk containers...
^Tell me you don't have any kids without telling me you don't have any kids.
That might happen with baby formula that I bought at the store too. While state agencies might have been throwing out returned formula, grocery stores certainly were not. You buy a can of formula — or anything except milk and underwear and a few other items — it very well might have been purchased and returned.
Even if you knew to a certainty that a particular can had never been in the hands of another parent, that is no protection at all against mishandling or deliberate sabotage.
Most grocery stores do have a policy of not re-stocking returned food. You get your refund, but it is not put back on the shelf for resale, especially baby food products.
Any goods donated to food pantries could have the same issues. Burn it all. Feed no one.
Any food items bought at any grocery store might have been stored in a hot warehouse, too, for that matter.
In the cases of grocery stores storing food it sells, at least there is a chain of custody that can be traced back and proper action taken. I don't care if you choose to feed your kids crap an unnamed, unknown stranger had in their possession. Your choice. Most sane people I know would choose not to.
Wow, you're a ball of fun. Sorry those food pantry folks can be as discerning as you.
Personally, I had opened and eaten part of a jar of Jif peanut butter before the recall notice went out for salmonella. A jar that I had paid good money for at a big-name grocery store. Bought the name-brand stuff too. Sure whis there was some chain-of-custody to be sure I didn't get sold rotten food.
Let's not even start talking about restaurant kitchens and what is served and how it is handled. You must have to stay home and eat food you raised yourself, just to be sure it wasn't mishandled along the way.
The government's only concern is to protect us from all that foreign matter. That's why American beef has to be labeled as such. Nothing prevents you from sending it to Ancestry.com or the like to verify if that specifically means South American, Central American, or anything closer to home...
And if anybody gets sick as a result, the grocery store will be held liable and will be paying a boatload of money.
Do you have any evidence that any of those things happened? Or are you frightening yourself over a parade hypothetical horribles? Do you live in equal fear of a meteorite coming through your roof and killing you in your sleep? Do you insist on driving an armored car because of other drivers might be behave inappropriately? Do you grow all your own food because a grocery store (or any other company in the supply chain) might also have stored your food incorrectly?
Simple solution is to open and evaluate a representative number of cans. If they’re OK, they’re OK. If they aren’t, ~then~ toss the rest. A “use by” or “sell by” date is only a suggestion about how long something’s usable. Milk, for example, is either good or
spoiled at some point in time. If it’s still good, it is still good.
This isn’t magic. It’s no more than common sense. And that’s what’s been in severely short supply in the US for the past several decades.
Why hasn’t anyone else talked about this?
Possibly the people with common sense are out doing productive stuff, like figuring out how to get us dweebs to buy into this metaverse crap for their fun and profit!
If the CDC had only focused on average expiration dates of covid fatalities, most of us would get 2 years back..
They just don't care. Period.