Nestle workers may be hit by E.coli investigation
TRACI WHITE/REGISTER & BEE
The entrance sign to the Nestle USA Danville plant inside Airside Industrial Park is seen Friday. About half the workers at the plant may be out of work temporarily after an E. coli outbreak was traced to raw cookie dough, which is manufactured at the Danville facility.
About half of the 550 workers at Nestle USA’s Danville plant may be out of work temporarily after the company halted the plant’s production and shipment of its recalled Toll House refrigerated cookie dough.
“Danville is the center of our refrigerated cookie dough expertise,” said Roz O’Hearn, a spokeswoman for the company. “We do have some employees in the facility that are affected by the recall. And we’re anticipating that we’re going to have temporary layoffs.”
Company officials recalled the product Thursday after learning of a Food and Drug Administration and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention investigation of an E. coli outbreak that may be related to the consumption of raw Toll House cookie dough.
The recall does not affect other Toll House products, including Toll House cookies that were prebaked, chocolate baking bars, all Toll House morsels and cocoa. Dreyer’s and Edy’s ice cream that contain Toll House cookie dough also are not affected.
The strain of E. coli that patients are suffering from has not been found in the company’s cookie dough, O’Hearn said. But officials decided to cut production and shipment as a safety measure.
“We take our responsibilities for the health and safety of our consumers very, very seriously,” O’Hearn said. “The most responsible thing we could do was to stop making cookie dough.”
O’Hearn said she was not sure how long the cookie dough production in Danville would be shut down.
“It’s a temporary layoff until we get this investigation concluded,” she said. “It’s distressing, and we understand that.”
The Danville facility makes the majority of the company’s Toll House cookie dough. The plant also makes refrigerated pasta, which hasn’t been affected by the E. coli outbreak. Production of the pasta will continue.
O’Hearn said that Nestle is working with the FDA and CDC in their investigations.
The FDA will do trace-back work at the Danville plant to look for the contamination’s source, said Mike Herndon, a spokesman for the FDA.
“We’re going to go to the firm and do our investigative work as we normally do,” Herndon said. “It may not be at that plant, but certainly that’s part of the process.”
Herndon said there’s no timeline for an investigation of an E. coli outbreak and no way of knowing when the investigation will end.
“They’re all unique,” he said.
E. coli is a potentially fatal bacterium illness with symptoms that include dehydration, abdominal cramping and diarrhea.
Sixty-five cases nationwide and two cases in Virginia of a specific strain of E. coli have been reported across 29 states, since March, according to a news release from the CDC. Twenty-five patients have been hospitalized, and seven patients developed a type of kidney failure known as hemolytic uremic syndrome. No one has died.
The CDC interviewed patients with E. coli during a preliminary investigation of the outbreak, according to a news release from the CDC. The patients answered questions about food they had eaten in the days before becoming ill. Most patients said they ate refrigerated prepackaged Nestle Toll House cookie dough products raw.
“We’ve had much larger outbreaks than this,” said Lola Russell, a spokeswoman for the CDC. “This is very early. We don’t know how many people are affected.”
Russell said the CDC will work with the 29 states’ health departments and investigate cases of E. coli as they arise.
“Some of the states do have product samples,” Herndon said. “CDC will be taking some of those samples to see if there’s a genetic match.”
Russell said the CDC does not know how long the outbreak will last.
“It depends on if people continue to eat them or not,” she said. “It depends on our eating habits.”
The illness has affected people from the ages of 2 to 57, she said. More than 70 percent are younger than 19 years old, and 75 percent are female. Children and the elderly are at the most risk for the illness, Russell said.
“Most healthy adults can recover completely in a week,” she said.
Nestle is asking all distributors to take the product off of their shelves. Consumers who bought the recalled cookie dough can return it for a full refund.
O’Hearn and Russell also said that everyone should follow the cooking directions on the package.
“Any product that is intended to be consumed cooked, don’t eat it raw,” O’Hearn said.
Cooking the product will protect consumers from E. coli, but Russell said the Toll House cookie dough should not be handled at all so consumers won’t get the bacteria on their hands or other cooking surfaces.
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Reader Reactions
Anyone who’s stupid enough to consume your product after knowing that it’s been linked to E-coli deserves to get E-coli. Why don’t you and Brad Alford eat some raw cookie dough to prove it’s safe?
Don’t be surprised if you all end up losing your jobs over this. Once things die down they will quietly move production somewhere else. Gonna be hard for people to find another $9/hr job in Danville. See you at the welfare office, loser!
Thus far, it’s strongly proven that we DO NOT have e.coli infested product. As far as anyone else buying it, we’ve had customers to call since the recall and say they did not want to throw it away because they were confident it had no E.coli in it. I’m sure our business will take a hit, even if nothing turns up in the investigation. Nestle is a strong company, with some wonderful associates. We will bounce back! Laryans, you don’t seem to have a clue what you’re talking about!
The reason why Nestle has so many plants in the US is because they make money. And when they don’t make enough money, they close them or move them to other countries where people earn less money. If it was cheaper to make cookie dough somewhere else, you can bet they would. They don’t give a damn about you, just getting as much tax free cash back to Vevey, Switzerland, as possible.
I bet Nestle has a few lawyers running around your factory, too…like Doug Besman, Esq., Mr. Insured Litigation, who’s getting ready to deny everyone’s claims. We’ll see how it goes…all I know I am not not buying your E-coli infested cookie dough and neither is anyone else…..
Think all you want to Laryans, but no E.coli has been found to date. And as for the lay off Nestle lays people off due to marketing sales. There’s always a short term lay off in the summer anyways due to low market. Baking season is in the winter time so cookie dough folks are used to the short term month or 2 lay off they get.
As for the cookie dough from the people who got sick, The CDC.FDA whoever can’t test the dough due to the fact that its an open container. Its contaminated after being open for a period of time and there can’t be anything proven from that.
And where do you get off saying Nestle in Switzerland is an anti-american company? If they were then please tell me why there are so many Nestle Facilities in this country?
The simple fact is, testing is being completed. The associates here ALwAYS wear sanitary clean new gloves when coming into contact with product. I agree with our plant manager in thinking there is no E.Coli in this plant, and our QA department and many other big wigs are in here now 24/7 sampling and sending stuff off to prove just that!
Laying people off due to some down time would be PR suicide. Nestle loves to lay people off but this would represent a new low.
I definitely think there is E-coli in that factory and it will be found shortly. There are way too many people who’ve gotten ill and I believe that some of the people who became sick still had a portion of the unused product that tested positive for E-coli.
I feel sorry for the locals who may be impacted, but not a shred of sorrow for Nestle in Switzerland, which is definitely an anti-American company.
If all Nestle was worried about is numbers, they would not have done a VOLUNTARY recall. As far as continuous runs, I have never known of anytime that the factory has run longer than 24 hours without cleaning. Don Nodvedt was a wonderful plant manager. There is a new plant manager now, and she is also a wonderful plant manager. She is very honest and has represented the company and communicated with the associates in a very honest manner. Yes, I am a Nestle employee, so I know.
well as a former employee of Nestle I must say they make a superior product both tollhouse and buitoni,BUT as years have gone on Nestle"s work habits have changed.if those people ate the cookie dough i’m sure it wasn’t the first time.Did they get sick b4 after eating it, I hadnt heard of any E-coli outbreaks.Nestle has a sanitation unit that cleans the machine and when I first started there they clean the machines everynight3 to 6 hrs.Now its continuos running on some of the lines with no clean up for maybe days.Could that be the preblem,maybe. I can tell you one thing its not the employees fault because they are doing what they’re being told.Don no longer works at Nestle but when he did it was just like the birds in the nest logo a “FAMILY”,but since his retirement the “TITANIC” has been sinking and no one seem to notice it.Me personally I think it’s in the ingredients that Nestle receive.maybe QA missed a check,possible but the product is consumer friendly.a lot of pressure is being put on the employess’s since the DOL came in and made changes and theyre payn for it with their jobs.they are wotking everyday afraid of making mistakes for the fear of losing their jobs trust me i know “I LOST MINE”.but i hold no grudges but only pray for my former co-workers and my friends that god takes care of YOU because as most know Nestle wants numbers and they don’t seem to care how they get them.there is more going on out there thats beneath the eye so lets wait it out and see.
I applaud Nestle for the voluntary recall, but consumers should follow the instructions on the packaging.
My prayers are with the employees of Nestle affected by possible layoffs.
Thanks, but its just common sense. People are gettin all freaked out with out the facts, which if they would follow the news and read articles, they’d see that nothing has been found yet proving anything. “ The strain of E. coli that patients are suffering from has not been found in the company’s cookie dough” Case Closed.
RandyDowdy,
Maybe the E Coli came from the barrels on your property ?
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