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REGULATIONS AND DIRECTIVES DEVELOPMENT


U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE

NUTRITION LABELING/SAFE HANDLING INFORMATION STUDY

 

DECEMBER 1996

RAW MEAT AND POULTRY

 

CONTRACT # 223-97-2320

 

 

 

Retail Diagnostics, Inc.
Oradell, New Jersey
Final Report
March 10, 1997

 


REPORT ON PARTICIPATION BY FOOD RETAILERS IN PROVIDING NUTRITION LABELING / SAFE HANDLING INSTRUCTIONS INFORMATION

FOR RAW MEAT/POULTRY

DECEMBER 1996

 

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

PAGE

PART 1 BACKGROUND

3 - 4

PART II METHODOLOGY

4 - 7

PART III RESULTS

7 - 9

PART IV SAFE HANDLING RESULTS

10

PART V APPENDICES

11 - 41

 

NOTE:   Tables 3, 4, 8, 11, 14, 19, and 21, are not included in this HTML document.  These tables are, however, available in the Docket Clerk’s Office: Room 102 Cotton Annex Building, 300 12th Street, SW, Washington, DC.  A link to the remaining Tables is provided below for your viewing convenience:

Table 1

Table 2

Table 5

Table 6

Table 7 Table 9 Table 10 Table 12
Table 13 Table 15 Table 16 Table 17
Table 18 Table 20 Table 22 Table 23
Table 24

 

 

REPORT ON PARTICIPATION BY FOOD RETAILERS IN 
PROVIDING NUTRITION LABELING/SAFE HANDLING INSTRUCTION/INFORMATION FOR RAW
MEAT/POULTRY

DECEMBER 1996

 

  1. BACKGROUND

The U. S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) has responsibility for the appropriate labeling of raw meat/poultry products as mandated under the Federal Meat Inspection Act and Poultry Products Inspection Act.

Regulations published in January 1993 established a voluntary nutrition labeling program for single ingredient raw meat and poultry products, and allowed quantitative nutrition information to be supplied by means of point-of-purchase materials. Every two years, FSIS must survey retailers for significant participation in the Voluntary Nutrition Labeling Program. A total of 45 major cuts of meat and poultry have been identified to measure voluntary nutrition labeling participation. (See pp. 37 for a listing of these foods and an example of the nutrition information.)

Regulations published in 1994 made safe handling instructions mandatory on all raw meat and poultry product labeling. The scope and design of the nutrition labeling survey includes data which estimates the prevalence of stores that are providing safe handling instructions for raw meat and poultry items packaged at the retail level.

A nationally projectable survey was conducted in June 1995 to measure compliance with these requirements. On the nutrition labeling portion of the survey, participation by retailers was determined to be "significant". At that time, survey criteria encompassed both "new" and "old" formats for nutrition information at the point-of-purchase. The current survey, however, considers only "new" materials (located within the appropriate department) as the current measure of compliance. The June 1995 survey also reported safe handling instructions for raw meat/poultry to be less than the mandatory 100%.

This report summarizes the results of the Nutrition Labeling Safe Handling Instructions Survey for Raw Meat and Poultry conducted in December 1996, in order to comply with FSIS regulations that require a review of the program every two years.                                                        

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II. METHODOLOGY

A.   Sampling of Retail Food Stores

Store samples are designed to be representative of the larger universes from which they are derived. The extent to which data and assumptions extracted from this sub-sample deviate from the larger actual universe produces a "sampling error". The size of the sample, relative to its data universe, predetermines the precision (i.e., degree of certainty or sampling error) of estimates governing the final evaluation of survey data.

The United States Department of Agriculture/Food Safety and Inspection Service (USDA/FSIS) determined that a scientifically drawn nationally representative sample of approximately 2,000 retail food stores should be selected to obtain the information necessary to assess compliance with the guidelines for the voluntary nutrition labeling of raw meat and poultry. A sample of approximately 2000 stores provides a relatively narrow margin of error around an observed compliance level. For example, for a sample of 2000, the error for an identified compliance level of 50% would be a maximum of plus or minus 4 percentage points, with a degree of statistical confidence of 95%. In other words, for a compliance level of 50%, we would be 95% certain that any and all other assessments of compliance (using the same sample size and sample design) would provide estimates falling somewhere between 46% and 54%. Furthermore, as the percent of compliance increases, the percent of uncertainty decreases, with additional increases in sample size achieving only small, and diminishing, reductions in uncertainty.

While sample size determines the precision of survey estimates, intricacies in the sample design determine how closely the sample represents the total population. In order to ensure representativeness to the overall national population of food retailers, USDA/FSIS include four characteristics in the selection of the sample:

  • Store Sales Volume
  • Store Type
  • State
  • County Size

Two levels representing average annual sales were established in the sample design to segment the sale volume of retailers. The volume factor is indicative of both the size of the store and the portion of the market it serves. The two annual sales levels are:

  • Large Stores ($2 million or more in sales)
  • Medium/Small Stores (sales between $500,000 and $2 million)

Store Type was based upon definitions, which placed each food retailer in one of two categories:

  • Chain (four or more stores under common ownership)
  • Independent (an independently operated store)

The inclusion of regional variation indicators, State and County Size, provided the means of representing highly urbanized, urbanized, rural and very rural county factors from all over the country in the survey sample. All states in the continental United States were include in the sample design, as well as four levels of county size based upon Metropolitan Areas that were established by the Office of Management and Budget. County size categories included:

  • A Counties - All counties belonging to the 25 largest Consolidated Statistical Metropolitan Areas (CSMAs) or Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs).
    • B Counties - All counties not included in A that are either over 150,000 population or in CMSAs or MSAs with population of at least 150,000.
    • C Counties - All counties not included in A or B that are either over 40,000 population or in MSAs with over 40,000 population.
    • D Counties - All other counties.

B. Data Collection

Data collection for the assessment of the prevalence of nutrition labeling information compliance was completed by Retail Diagnostics, Inc., an independent market research contracting firm located in Oradell, New Jersey.

RDI conducts a monthly syndicated observation service in a sample of food stores. The retail food store listings used by the contractor are comprehensive and subject to a continual updating process which reflects store openings, take-overs, and other developments. To obtain this sample, the RDI sample was sub-sampled as needed, and additional sample stores selected for those components not ordinarily covered by RDI’s syndicated survey. A scientifically drawn, nationally representative sample of retail stores based upon sales volume, store type, state, and county size, was selected by RDI. A sample of 2000 food retailers was designated to accommodate the survey criteria and reflect the test design. (See Table 1 and Table 2.) A breakdown of the store sample by County Type within State is included on page 33 of this report.

After receiving training in the contract requirements and data collection, field representatives were asked to enter and survey each of the 2,000 retail food stores in the sample. Data was collected during a two-week period beginning in mid December 1996, within the two reassessment period required by regulations. Field representatives inspected raw meat and raw poultry departments to determine the on-site status of nutrition labeling information for these products. Vehicles displaying information (e.g., signs, posters, brochures, notebooks, pamphlets, etc.) were studied and relevant data were recorded on a form, custom designed by RDI specifically for use in this survey. Data were reviewed for accuracy and completeness, entered into a computer, tabulated by the contractor, and delivered to USDA/FSIS.

C. Basis of Reporting

Data descriptive of compliance are reported on two bases: Store Count and All Commodity Volume. Store Count represents the actual number of sampled stores visited in the survey. AACV data, on the other hand, are weighted estimates that represent annual store sales volumes and reflect the percent of the market serviced. Furthermore, ACV data approximates, more representatively than Store Count, the percent of the population exposed to the nutrition labeling information. While USDA/FSIS determined that substantial compliance would be met if at least 60% of the food retailers sampled provided nutrition labeling (as specified in the guidelines) for at least 90 percent of the foods they sell, the agency strongly believes that ACV data provides valuable information and should also be reported.

For example, a store count compliance estimate of 60% means that 60% of the stores sampled provided nutrition labeling information. An ACV compliance estimate of 60% is interpreted to mean that the stores providing nutrition labeling information sell 60% of all products sold in all stores. A second, equally appropriate interpretation of a 60% ACV compliance estimate is that at least three out of five of all consumers are being exposed to the nutrition labeling information.

[Back to Table of Contents]

III. RESULTS

The aggregate percentages for previous compliance determinations that were derived from Nutrition Labeling Information Survey of June 1995 were deemed significant and substantial for raw meat/poultry (66.5% Store Count/72.2% ACV) with regard to the 60% compliance goal and the presence of both "old" and "new" nutrition information vehicles. In June 1995 vehicles with the "new" nutrition information had just recently been printed/manufactured and had just begun to be distributed to stores via the efforts of the Food Marketing Institute and other organizations. Therefore, not all stores had access to the "new" vehicles at that time. Fair credit was given to any store, which displayed a vehicle, "old" or "new" as an indicator of intent to comply. For assessment purposes, a store which displayed the "old" format vehicles was no less compliant than a store which displayed the "new" format vehicles. When discounting the use of "old" vehicles, compliance was much lower (53.7% Store Count / 59.1% ACV) for all stores in the survey.

The criteria for the December 1996 survey were shaped by different circumstances. By the time of the December 1996 survey, the "new" format vehicles had been in distribution for a period of time deemed sufficient for all stores to have had access to them. Therefore, the December 1996 survey criteria restricted crediting compliance to only those situations where the "new" vehicles were in use. If a store used only the "old" vehicles, it was regarded as non-complying. Therefore, a comparison of compliance results between June 1995 and the current survey necessarily reflects the different criteria used to assess the data.

The percent of stores which were using "new" vehicles in June 1995 (53.7%) is slightly lower than the percent of stores using "new" vehicles during December 1996 (57.7%). The present survey did not include a measure of the number of stores still using "old" format vehicles. Stores which did not comply in this survey either had no nutrition information present in the store or had only "old" format vehicles at the time of the survey. The 8.8 percentage point decrease in compliance represents a decline in voluntary participation in the program by food retailers.

The December 1996 survey results for raw meat/poultry indicates that voluntary nutrition labeling compliance by food retailers has dropped from 66.5% in June 1995 to 57.7% in December 1996, or a drop of almost 9 percentage points. (See Table 3.) On a store count basis, the current compliance level of 57.7% slightly exceeds the 53.7% benchmark for the "new" vehicles present 18 months ago. Based upon ACV (All Commodity Volume) the margin widens by 11 percentage points to 60.9% in December 1996 versus 72.2% in June 1995. (See Table 4.) On an ACV basis, December 1996 compliance just achieves the target goal of 60%; on a store count basis, December 1996 compliance still falls short of the target goal by over 2 percentage points.

Examination of the data in greater detail shows that large chain stores continue to outperform independents by a wide margin (64.2% versus 44.8% on a store count basis and 64.3% versus 48.5% on an ACV basis). Similarly, large stores continue to outperform medium/small stores by a similar margin (61.7% versus 39.7% on a store count basis and 61.9% versus 38.0% on an ACV basis). (See Table 5.) A/B counties only slightly outpaced C/D counties in terms of overall compliance (57.9% versus 57.1% on a store count basis and 61.9% versus 58.3% on an ACV basis). (See Table 6.)

In order to meet the compliance standard a store needed accurate nutrition labeling in some form for 90% of all the major cuts of raw meat and poultry stocked in that store. Looking at the compliance range detail (Table 7) it is interesting to note that 32.3% of the stores were not in compliance for any of their raw meat/poultry products. The remaining 10% of the stores had sporadic nutrition information, which never achieved the required level of covering 90% of the survey items stocked in their stores.

A look at the broad categories of raw meat/poultry reveals that Beef/Veal, Pork/Lamb, and Chicken/Turkey all achieved similar levels of compliance (61.9%, 61.0%, and 63.1% respectively based on store count). (See Table 8.) The net compliance level of all raw meat/poultry is generally lower (57.7%) due to the fact that a store could be in compliance on beef/veal and not pork/lamb or chicken/turkey or any other combination thereof. The net compliance was determined by taking all of the survey items stocked in the store and determining if a 90% level was achieved across all of these items. The date indicates that there were instances of individual category compliance within stores where the store did not achieve net compliance encompassing all of these items.

The most common vehicle for displaying labeling information when present continues to be the poster (91.5% of all complying raw meat/poultry labeling). (See Table 11, Table 12, and Table 13.) This figure is significantly larger than the corresponding figure from June 1995 (66.3%) and may represent a trend towards utilizing this method for providing nutrition information at the retail level. However, it is also important to note that more stringent criteria were in effect in the December 1996 survey which may have some effect upon the reported percentages. In June 1995, other forms of nutrition labeling (such as "label affixed to package") were recorded even if posters were also present. In the current survey, other forms of nutrition labeling were only recorded if the primary forms (poster, panel, pamphlet, brochures, and notebooks) were not present. Therefore, a comparison of the percentages between the two studies must be made with an awareness of the different methodologies and the subsequent differences in the base numbers from which the percentages were derived.

[Back to Table of Contents]


                               IV. SAFE HANDLING INSTRUCTIONS LABELING

The measure for compliance for safe handling instructions labeling required that the store have the appropriated "safe handling instructions" label affixed to each and every item stocked in the fresh meat/poultry category, including but not restricted to, the 45 items included in the nutrition labeling portion of the survey. The presence of this labeling is mandatory and the target goal is 100%.

Eighteen months ago in the June 1995 survey, a safe handling compliance level of 92.2% was achieved at the aggregate level. The data for the current survey indicates that the level of compliance in this mandatory area has remained essentially the same, rising slightly to 93.3%. (See Table 18 and Table 19.) All of the meat and poultry categories performed within a 1 to 1.5% range of their previous June 1995 results. Large chain stores remained essentially the same (+0.5%), with large independents and medium/small independents exhibiting only slightly better increases (+1.7% and 2.0% respectively).

[Back to Table of Contents]

V.  APPENDICES


Table 1

 

 

NUMBER OF STORES SAMPLED BY
STORE SALES VOLUME AND STORE TYPE
 


Chain Stores


Independents


Total
(Volume Class)

Large Stores
($2 Million or More Annual Sales)


1320


314


1634

Small Stores
(Between $500,000 & $2 Million in Annual Sales)


---


366


366


Total (Store Type)


1320


680


2000

[Back to Table of Contents]

 

Table 2

 

NUMBER OF STORES SAMPLED
BY COUNTY SIZE


County Size


Number of Stores Sampled


A


  782


B


  612


C


  303


D


  303


Total


2000

[Back to Table of Contents]

 

Table 5

USDA NUTRITION LABELING/SAFE HANDLING
INFORMATION STUDY DECEMBER 1996

NUTRITION LABELING INFORMATION
SUMMARY OF COMPLIANCE
RESULTS BY STORE TYPE/SIZE

 

Total Stores Sampled
 

Chains

Independents

Total

Large

1320

314

1634

Medium/Small

---

366

  366

Total

1320

680

2000

 

 

Total Qualifying Stores
 

Chains

Independents

Total

Large

1320

313

1633

Medium/Small

---

363

  363

Total

1320

676

1996

Total Complying Stores
 

Chains

Independents

Total

Large

848

159

1007

Medium/Small

---

144

 144

Total

848

303

 115

 

Complying Stores Percent of Qualifying Stores - By Cell
 

Chains

Independents

Total

Large

64.2%

50.8%

61.7%

Medium/Small

---

39.7%

39.7%

Total

64.2%

44.8%

57.7%

 

Complying Stores Percent Volume of Qualifying Stores - By Cell
 

Chains

Independents

Total

Large

64.3%

51.0%

61.9%

Medium/Small

---

38.0%

38.0%

Total

64.3%

48.5%

60.9%

[Back to Table of Contents]


Table 6

USDA NUTRITION LABELING/SAFE HANDLING
INFORMATION STUDY DECEMBER 1996

NUTRITION LABELING INFORMATION
SUMMARY OF COMPLIANCE
RESULTS BY COUNTY SIZE

Total Stores Sampled
 

Total

A/B Counties

1394

C/D Counties

  606

Total

2000

 

Total Qualifying Stores
 

Total

A/B Counties

1394

C/D Counties

  602

Total

1996

 

Total Complying Stores
 

Total

A/B Counties

807

C/D Counties

344

Total

1151


Complying Stores Percent of Qualifying Stores - By Cell

 

Total

A/B Counties

57.9%

C/D Counties

57.1%

Total

57.7%

 

Complying Stores Percent Volume of Qualifying Stores - By Cell
 

Total

A/B Counties

61.9%

C/D Counties

58.3%

Total

60.9%

[Back to Table of Contents]


Table 7

USDA NUTRITION LABELING/SAFE HANDLING
INFORMATION STUDY DECEMBER 1996

NUTRITION LABELING INFORMATION COMPLIANCE
RANGE DETAIL

BY STORE TYPE/SIZE - STORE COUNT - NEW VEHICLES

Percent
Range


Large Chain

Large Independents

Medium/Small Independents

Total Stores


%

90% or more

 848

159

144

1151

  57.7

80% - 89.9%

 14

2

-

16

  0.8

70% -79.9%

  14

2

2

  18

   0.9

60% - 69.9%

   24

2

5

   31

    1.6

50% - 59.9%

   15

4

4

    23

    1.2

under 50%

   84

 17

12

  113

    5.7

None

 321

127

196

  644

  32.3

Total

       1320

313

363

1996

100.0

 

 

COMPLIANCE RANGE DETAIL
BY COUNTY SIZE - STORE COUNT - NEW VEHICLES


Percent Range

A/B
Counties

C/D Counties


Total Stores


%

90% or more

   807

344

1151

57.7

80% - 89.9%

11

5

16

0.8

70% -79.9%

13

5

18

0.9

60% - 69.9%

15

16

31

1.6

50% - 59.9%

12

11

23

1.2

under 50%

82

31

113

5.7

None

454

190

644

32.3

Total

1394

602

1996

100.0

[Back to Table of Contents]


Table 9

USDA NUTRITION LABELING/SAFE HANDLING
INFORMATION STUDY DECEMBER 1996

NUTRITION LABELING INFORMATION


SUMMARY OF COMPLIANCE BY MEAT CATEGORY

 
Meat Category

Total Stores Carrying

# Stores Complying

%
Compliance


All Meat Items


1996


1151


57.7


Beef / Veal


1985


1229


61.9


Pork/Lamb


1954


1191


61.0


Chicken/Turkey


1847


1165


63.1

[Back to Table of Contents]

 

Table 10

USDA NUTRITION LABELING/SAFE HANDLING
INFORMATION STUDY DECEMBER 1996

NUTRITION LABELING INFORMATION


SUMMARY OF COMPLIANCE BY TYPE OF MEAT

 
Type of Meat

Stores Carrying

Stores Complying

% Compliance

Ground Beef

1893

1212

64.0

Other Beef

1973

1225

62.1

Veal

1022

731

71.5

Beef/Veal

1985

1229

61.9

 
Pork

1949

1188

61.0

Lamb

1222

821

67.2

Pork/Lamb

1954

1191

61.0

 
Chicken

1716

1102

64.2

Turkey

1376

897

65.2

Chicken/Turkey

1847

1165

63.1

 
All Raw Meat & Poultry

1996

1151

57.7

[Back to Table of Contents]


Table 12

USDA NUTRITION LABELING/SAFE HANDLING
INFORMATION STUDY DECEMBER 1996

NUTRITION LABELING INFORMATION

SUMMARY OF VEHICLE TYPE - RESULTS BY STORE TYPE/SIZE

STORE COUNT

 
Vehicle Type


Large Chain

Large Independents

Medium/Small Independents


Total


Posters


874


170


139


1183

Pamphlets,
    Brochures,
        Notebooks


75


13


22


110


Net


949


183


161


1293

 

 

% OF STORES
 
Vehicle Type


Large Chain

Large Independents

Medium/Small Independents


Total


Posters


67.6


13.1


10.8


91.5

Pamphlets,
    Brochures,
        Notebooks


5.8


1.0


1.7


8.5


Net


73.4


14.1


12.5


100.0

[Back to Table of Contents]

 

Table 13

USDA NUTRITION LABELING/SAFE HANDLING
INFORMATION STUDY DECEMBER 1996

NUTRITION LABELING INFORMATION

SUMMARY OF VEHICLE TYPE - RESULTS BY COUNTY SIZE

STORE COUNT

 
Vehicle Type

A/B Counties

C/D Counties


Total


Posters


817


366


1183

Pamphlets,
    Brochures,
        Notebooks

 

75

 

35

 

110


Net


892


401


1293


% OF STORES

 
Vehicle Type

A/B Counties

C/D Counties


Total


Posters


63.2


28.3


91.5

Pamphlets,
    Brochures,
        Notebooks

 

5.8



2.7

 

8.5


Net


69.0


31.0


100.0

[Back to Table of Contents]

Table 15

USDA NUTRITION LABELING/SAFE HANDLING
INFORMATION STUDY DECEMBER 1996

NUTRITION LABELING INFORMATION

NUMBER OF MEAT ITEMS STOCKED - RESULTS BY STORE TYPE/SIZE

Number
of Items


Large Chains

Large Independents

Medium/Small Independents

Total Stores
#           %

1 -  5

7

4

23

34

1.7

6 - 10

17

5

52

74

3.7

11 - 15

86

32

76

194

9.7

16 - 20

 217

77

89

383

19.2

21 - 25

 296

80

53

429

21.5

26 - 30

 281

55

37

373

18.7

31 - 35

 251

38

 22

311

15.6

36 - 40

 107

18

7

132

6.6

41 - 45

58

4

4

66

3.3

Total

1320

         313

363

1996

100.0

 

 

NUMBER OF MEAT ITEMS STOCKED - RESULTS BY COUNTY SIZE

Number
 of Items


A/B Counties

 
C/D Counties

Total Stores
#           %

1 - 5

25

9

34

1.7

6 - 10

52

22

74

3.7

11 - 15

109

85

194

9.7

16 - 20

245

138

383

19.2

21 - 25

309

120

429

21.5

26 - 30

274

99

373

18.7

31 - 35

229

82

311

15.6

36 - 40

101

31

132

6.6

41 - 45

50

16

66

3.3

Total

           1394

            657

 1996

100.0

[Back to Table of Contents]


Table 16

USDA NUTRITION LABELING/SAFE HANDLING
INFORMATION STUDY DECEMBER 1996

BEEF & VEAL CATEGORY

NUMBER OF ITEMS STOCKED - RESULTS BY STORE TYPE/SIZE

Number
of Items


Large Chains

Large Independents

Medium/Small Independents

Total Stores
#              %

1 -  5

43

22

95

160

8.1

6 - 10

429

150

170

749

37.7

11 - 15

631

115

80

826

41.6

16 - 19

213

25

12

250

12.6

Total

1316

312

357

1985

100.0

 

 

NUMBER OF ITEMS STOCKED - RESULTS BY COUNTY SIZE

Number
of Items


A/B Counties


C/D Counties

Total Store
#              %

1 - 5

109

51

160

8.1

6 - 10

485

264

749

37.7

11 - 15

598

228

826

41.6

16 - 19

195

55

250

12.6

Total

1387

598

1985

100.0

[Back to Table of Contents]

Table 17

USDA NUTRITION LABELING/SAFE HANDLING
INFORMATION STUDY DECEMBER 1996

PORK & LAMB CATEGORY

 

NUMBER OF ITEMS STOCKED - RESULTS BY STORE TYPE/SIZE


Number
of Items


Large Chains


Large Independents


Medium/Small Independents


Total Stores
#             %

1 - 5

219

71

177

467

23.9

6 - 10

630

193

133

956

48.9

11 - 16

460

43

28

531

27.2

Total

1309

307

338

1954

100.0

 

 

NUMBER OF ITEMS STOCKED - RESULTS BY COUNTY SIZE


Number
of Items



A/B Counties



C/D Counties


Total Stores
# %

1 - 5

300

167

467

23.9

6 - 10

638

318

956

48.9

11 - 16

430

101

531

27.2

Total

1368

586

1954

100.0

[Back to Table of Contents]

Table 18

USDA NUTRITION LABELING/SAFE HANDLING
INFORMATION STUDY DECEMBER 1996

CHICKEN & TURKEY CATEGORY

NUMBER OF ITEMS STOCKED - RESULTS BY STORE TYPE/SIZE

umber
of Items

Large Chains

Large Independents

Medium/Small Independents

Total Stores
# %

1 - 5

  569

142

220

931

50.4

6 - 10

  639

157

120

616

49.6

Total

1208

299

340

1847

100.0

 

 

NUMBER OF ITEMS STOCKED - RESULTS BY COUNTY SIZE


Number
of Items



A/B Counties



C/D Counties


Total Stores
# %

1 - 5

649

282

931

50.4

6 - 10

649

267

916

49.6

Total

1298

549

1847

100.0

[Back to Table of Contents]

 

Table 20

 

USDA NUTRITION LABELING/SAFE HANDLING
INFORMATION STUDY DECEMBER 1996

SUMMARY OF SAFE HANDLING LABELING COMPLIANCE

BY MEAT CATEGORY

ALL STORES

Meat Category

# Stores Carrying

# Stores Complying

% Compliance


Ground Beef


1883


1805


95.9


Other Beef


1973


1887


95.6


Veal


1022


 999


97.7


Pork


1949


1874


96.2


Lamb


1222


1193


97.6


Chicken


1716


1638


95.5


Turkey


1376


1340


97.4


Other Meat


  981


 952


97.0


Other Poultry


  550


 526


95.6


Aggregate


1996


1863


93.3

[Back to Table of Contents]


Table 22

 

USDA NUTRITION LABELING/SAFE HANDLING
INFORMATION STUDY DECEMBER 1996

SUMMARY OF SAFE HANDLING LABELING COMPLIANCE
BY MEAT CATEGORY

LARGE CHAIN

Meat Category

# Stores Carrying

# Stores Complying

%
Compliance


Ground Beef


1269


1247


98.3


Other Beef


1314


1293


98.4


Veal


833


821


98.6


Pork


1307


1282


98.1


Lamb


974


965


99.1


Chicken


1105


1079


97.6


Turkey


959


945


98.5


Other Meat


608


599


98.5


Other Poultry


306


297


97.1


Aggregate


1320


        1269


96.1

[Back to Table of Contents]

 

Table 23

 

USDA NUTRITION LABELING/SAFE HANDLING
INFORMATION STUDY DECEMBER 1996

SUMMARY OF SAFE HANDLING LABELING COMPLIANCE
BY MEAT CATEGORY

LARGE INDEPENDENT

Meat Category

# Stores Carrying

# Stores Complying

%
Compliance


Ground Beef


296


279


94.3


Other Beef


311


290


93.2


Veal


108


105


97.2


Pork


305


288


94.4


Lamb


145


135


93.1


Chicken


282


267


94.7


Turkey


230


222


96.5


Other Meat


279


271


97.1


Other Poultry


157


150


95.5


Aggregate


313


285


91.1

[Back to Table of Contents]


Table 24

 

USDA NUTRITION LABELING/SAFE HANDLING
INFORMATION STUDY DECEMBER 1996

SUMMARY OF SAFE HANDLING LABELING COMPLIANCE
BY MEAT CATEGORY

 

MEDIUM/SMALL INDEPENDENT

Meat Category

# Stores Carrying

# Stores Complying

%
Compliance


Ground Beef


318


279


87.7


Other Beef


348


309


88.8


Veal


81


73


90.1


Pork


337


304


90.2


Lamb


103


93


90.3


Chicken


329


292


88.8


Turkey


187


173


92.5


Other Meat


94


82


87.2


Other Poultry


87


79


90.8


Aggregate


363


309


85.1

[Back to Table of Contents]

 

" "



USDA NUTRITION LABELING/SAFE HANDLING
INFORMATION STUDY DECEMBER 1996

SAMPLE COMPOSITION BY COUNTY SIZE WITHIN STATE

P E R C E N T O F  S T A T E  S A M P L E


STATE


         A

         B         B

         C         C

            D

               
      TOTAL

    SAMPLE
        SIZE

ALL STATES

35.0

29.6

17.7  17.7 100.0

2000

             

ALABAMA

5.0

57.5 20.0 17.5 100.0

  40

ARKANSAS

.

40.0

20.0 40.0 100.0

  25

ARIZONA 58.6 17.2 17.2 6.9 100.0

  29

CALIFORNIA 77.6 15.9 4.0 2.4 100.0

 208

COLORADO 45.8 12.5 16.7  25.0 100.0

  24

 
CONNECTICUT 27.3 72.7  . . 100.0

  22

DC 100.0  . . . 100.0

   5

DELAWARE 100.0 . . . 100.0

   4

FLORIDA 46.1 34.3 13.7 5.9 100.0

 102

GEORGIA    41.4 19.0 13.8 25.9 100.0

  58

 
IOWA . 34.8 26.1 39.1 100.0

  23

IDAHO . 30.0 30.0  40.0 100.0

  10

ILLINOIS 67.1 12.3 11.0 9.6 100.0

  73

INDIANA 18.2 43.2 18.2 20.5 100.0

  44

KANSAS 25.0 25.0 10.0 40.0 100.0

  20

 
KENTUCKY 10.5 34.2 15.8 39.5 100.0

  38

LOUISIANA . 56.4 23.1 20.5 100.0

  39

MASSACHUSETTS 55.6 27.8 16.7 . 100.0

  36

MARYLAND 71.1 . 13.2 15.8 100.0

  38

MAINE . 30.0 50.0 20.0 100.0

  10

 
MICHIGAN 44.4 30.6 9.7 15.3 100.0

  72

MINNESOTA 33.3 18.5 18.5 29.6 100.0

  27

MISSOURI 47.7 9.1 13.6 29.5 100.0

  44

MISSISSIPPI . 37.0 18.5 44.4 100.0

  27

MONTANA . . 54.5 45.5 100.0

  11

 
NORTH CAROLINA . 56.4 30.8 12.8 100.0   78
NORTH DAKOTA . . 57.1 42.9 100.0    7
NEBRASKA . 58.3 . 41.7 100.0   12
NEW HAMPSHIRE 44.4 . 33.3 22.2 100.0    9
NEW JERSEY 94.5 . 5.5 . 100.0   55
 
NEW MEXICO 40.0 . 40.0 20.0 100.0   10
NEVADA . 54.5 27.3 18.2 100.0   11
NEW YORK 62.6 25.2 9.2 3.1 100.0  131
OHIO 36.3 38.6 16.3 8.8 100.0   80
OKLAHOMA . 51.7 17.2 31.0 100.0   29
 
OREGON . 66.7 20.0 13.3 100.0   30
PENNSYLVANIA 51.2 30.0 16.5 2.2 100.0   91
RHODE ISLAND . 100.0 . . 100.0    7
SOUTH CAROLINA . 62.5 20.0 17.5 100.0   40
SOUTH DAKOTA . . 50.0 50.0 100.0    8
 
TENNESSEE . 62.0 6.0 32.0 100.0   50
TEXAS 48.5 26.5 10.6 14.4 100.0  132
UTAH . 75.0  . 25.0 100.0   12
VIRGINIA 28.1 45.6 8.8  17.5 100.0   57
VERMONT .  . 63.6 36.3 100.0   19
 
WASHINGTON 53.7 24.4 12.2 9.8 100.0   41
WISCONSIN 29.3 24.4 26.8 19.5 100.0   41
WEST VIRGINIA . 42.9 57.1 . 100.0   14
WYOMING . . . 100.0 100.0    7

                   

 

USDA NUTRITION LABELING / SAFE HANDLING

Information Study December 1996

45 Major Meat/Poultry Items

The following meat/poultry items were used as the basis for determining if a store was in compliance with Nutrition Information Labeling.
 

Beef & Veal

Beef Items

Ground Beef (81% or more Lean)
Ground Beef (70% - 77% Lean)
Brisket, Whole
Chuck, Arm Pot Roast
Chuck, Blade Roast
Rib Roast, Large End
Rib Steak, Small End
Top Loin, Steak
Loin, Tenderloin Steak
Loin, Sirloin Steak
Eye Round, Roast
Bottom Round Steak
Round, Tip Roast
Top Round, Steak

Veal Items

Shoulder, Arm Steak
Shoulder, Blade Steak
Rib Roast
Loin Chops
Cutlets

Pork & Lamb

Pork Items

Ground Pork
Shoulder, Blade Steak
Loin, Country Style Ribs
Loin, Rib Chop
Center Chop, Loin
Top Loin, Chop
Top Loin, Roast
Loin, Tenderloin Roast
Loin, Sirloin Roast
Spareribs

Lamb Items

Shoulder, Arm Chop
Shoulder, Blade Chop
Shank
Rib Roast
Loin Chop
Leg, Whole


Chicken & Turkey

Chicken Items

Whole
Breast
Wing
Drumstick
Thigh

Turkey Items

Whole
Breast
Wing
Drumstick
Thigh

[Back to Table of Contents]

 

 

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