Archive for December, 2009

Can Raw Oysters Be Safe & Delicious?

LONDON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 02:  Competitors t...
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They need to be treated through a pasturization or post harvesting process in order to be considered safe

*******

With Avure HPP, Being “Under Pressure” Delivers Both!

While the discussion about the safety of raw oysters and potential new regulations continues, there is one thing for sure: safety and taste are not mutually exclusive for raw oysters!

Some of today’s award-winning raw oyster producers are using High Pressure Processing (HPP) from Avure Technologies – without heat or chemicals – to eliminate the potentially deadly Vibrio vulnificus bacteria, while maintaining the quality, texture and taste that raw oyster lovers demand. Avure, the global leader in high pressure science and technologies, has been keeping oysters, other shellfish and crustaceans safe from Vibrio, while reducing labor costs of shucking.

Read The Pressure Is On – Making Raw Oysters Safe AND Delicious to find out how ultra-high water pressure can solve the challenge of raw oyster safety – keeping safety regulators and customers happy!

Read How Raw Oysters Can Be Safe

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Texans with Disabilities – Transitioning from High School to College

*** posted from Deaf Network of Texas***

Going To College
http://www.going-to-college.org/
This new website contains information about living college life with a disability. It is designed for high school students. The site provides video clips, activities, and resources that can help them get a head start in planning for college. Video interviews with college students with disabilities offer a way to hear firsthand from students with disabilities who have been successful. Modules include activities that will help students explore more about themselves, learn what to expect from college, and equip them with important considerations and tasks to complete when planning for college.

Resource Guide on Higher Education for People with Disabilities
http://www.txddc.state.tx.us/resources/publications/collegehtml.asp

Key Laws link to Disability Laws – General
http://governor.state.tx.us/disabilities/resources/higher_education/

The Next Step Higher Ed Video
http://www.txddc.state.tx.us/resources/publications/NextStepVideo.asp

TEA Special Education Division
512-463-9414
http://www.tea.state.tx.us/special.ed/

Secondary Transition guidance:
http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/special.ed/guidance/transition.html

College – Financial Aid
Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board
Contact info:  512-427-6100
Texas Financial Aid Center:  888-311-8881texasprojectfirst.org/AgePostGraduation.html
Websites: http://www.hhloans.com/cfbin/tofa.cfm?Kind=E
(Exemptions)  http://www.collegefortexans.com/cfbin/tofa.cfm?Kind=E
(Deaf/Blind Waiver and others) http://www.collegefortexans.com/cfbin/tofa.cfm?Kind=W

A Resource Guide for Special Education Students on Transition Services:
http://www.transitionintexas.org/transitionintexas/site/default.asp

AHEAD in Texas   (Association of Higher Education and Disability)
http://www.texasahead.org/work_force/education.html

Project FIRST (Family, Information, Resources, Support and Training)
http://texasprojectfirst.org/AgePostGraduation.html

Advocacy, Inc.
(800) 252-9108
http://www.advocacyinc.org/

The ARC of Texas
800-252-9729
http://www.thearcoftexas.org/

Partners Resource Network
http://partnerstx.org
800-866-4726
Partners@PartnersTx.org

Job Accommodation Network
Office of Disability Employment Policy
http://www.jan.wvu.edu/

U.S. Department of Education
Office of Special Education Programs (IDEA)
http://idea.ed.gov/explore/home

Office for Civil Rights

http://www.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/index.html

Customer Service Team
550 12 Street, SW
Washington, D.C.  20202-1100
800-421-3481
877-521-2172 (TDD)
202-245-6840 (fax)
OCR@ed.gov

Office for Civil Rights
U.S. Department of Education
1999 Bryan Street, Suite 2600
Dallas, TX  75201
972-437-5923
214-880-2456 (TDD)
214-880-3082 (fax)
OCR_Dallas@ed.gov

Recording for the Blind and Dyslexic
http://www.rfbd.org
866-732-3585
*recorded textbooks

Vcampus, The e-Learning Solution Provider!
http://www.vcampus.com/webuol/index.cfm
800-915-9298
1850 Centennial Park Drive, Ste.200
Reston, VA  20191
*Provides online courses through several accredited colleges and universities that allow for starting a degree from scratch or finishing up a degree.

National Dissemination Center for Children with Disabilities
http://www.nichcy.org
P.O. Box 1492
Washington, DC 20013-1492
800-695-0285 (Voice/TT)
202-884-8200 (Voice/TT)
*NICHCY Briefing Paper is intended to serve as a guide to help parents and educators know what ADD is, what to look for, and what to do. NICHCY is one of four clearinghouses established by Congress to provide specialized information on disabilities

The Higher Education Act
http://www.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ope/library.html

Parent Tips For Transition Planning
http://www.pacer.org/publications/pdfs/ALL14.pdf
Information on transition planning (TP) which helps to prepare young people for their futures. TP is required in the Individualized Education Program (IEP) for students with a disability by age 16. Provides tips on how to prepare a student for transitioning from school to further education, employment and independent living. This link opens a PDF document.

The Governor’s Committee on People with Disabilities

The Governor’s Committee on People with Disabilities is within the office of the Governor. The Committee’s mission is to further opportunities for persons with disabilities to enjoy full and equal access to lives of independence, productivity, and self-determination. The Committee is composed of 12 members appointed by the governor, and of nonvoting ex officio members. The appointed members are appointed for staggered terms of two years. At least seven of the appointed members must be persons with disabilities. The Committee serves as a central source of information and education on the abilities, rights, problems, and needs of persons with disabilities. The staff of the Governor’s Committee supports and manages the work of the Committee. The Committee’s enabling statute is in the Human Resources Code, Chapter 115.

Texas Governor’s Committee on People with Disabilities
P.O. Box 12428  Austin, TX 78711
512-463-5739 (voice),
512-463-5746 (TTY)
Dial 711 or your relay provider of choice
This document is available in alternate formats on request.
http://governor.state.tx.us/disabilities/
November 30, 2009

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Shell Out the Warnings – State Keeps Close Watch Over Local Shellfish Industry

December 06, 2009 01:04:00 PM
MATT DIXON / News Herald Writer

PANAMA CITY — Since 2005, companies that process shellfish in Bay, Franklin and Gulf counties have been sent nearly 80 letters from the state warning that they were in violation of various industry standards.

The three are the only area counties with processors licensed by the state.

Warning letters are sent after state officials identify a range of “deficiencies” during quarterly inspections. Problems found at area processors over the last three years included shellfish being kept in refrigerators that could not maintain temperatures below 45 degrees, fly tape hung over work tables, and shellfish lying directly on the floor where people walk, according to hundreds of pages of inspection documents reviewed by The News Herald.

The number of warning letters sent to the 29 processors in Bay, Gulf and Franklin counties varied, with some processors receiving none, and one receiving 11 within the last three-year period.

Warning letters are broken into two categories, “critical” deficiencies, which must be fixed before operation can continue, and “key” deficiencies, which must be fixed prior to follow-up inspections. The letters, however, are not enforcement actions. If deficiencies are not remedied by a certain date, fines are levied.

The most common critical deficiency found in the records reviewed by The News Herald was for bags of shellfish that did not have tags indicating they came from a licensed dealer.

Officials stressed that most processors will get a warning letter at some point, and they don’t always mean a poor operation.

“It is a pretty comprehensive inspection. If we see one piece of spider web in a corner, we write that up as a violation,” said Alan Peirce, bureau chief for the Division of Aquaculture.

Because the inspections are conducted quarterly, however, companies continue to process and sell shellfish for months before state inspectors have the opportunity to document both critical and key deficiencies.

For instance, Barber’s Seafood in Eastpoint has received 11 warning letters since 2005, the most of any area processor. In 2007 alone, Barber’s received three letters and 55 total deficiencies. Each deficiency found in 2007 eventually was remedied, but because of the quarterly inspection schedules, untold numbers of shellfish were processed and sold before state investigators were aware of any problems.

Barber’s owner, David Barber, said inspectors can write up a processor for almost anything.

“Sometimes I think if they don’t write you up for something, they don’t think they are doing their jobs,” he said. “If someone leaves a Coke bottle out, or see a fly flying around they can write you up.”

In an Aug. 25, 2006, inspection, state officials found 40 deficiencies at Barber’s, including condensation dripping on shellfish, “rodents, insects, or other vermin, or evidence of their activity (droppings or runs) in the facility,” and shucked shellfish sitting out while workers were on break.

Barber said he does not remember that visit.

In Bay County, Hunt’s Oyster Bar leads the county’s four processors with five warning letters issued since 2005. Hunt’s owner Randy Hunt did not return calls seeking comment.

David Heil, who has been with the Division of Aquaculture for 30 years, said it is difficult to term the number of warning letters received by a processor excessive because there are several factors that come into play.

“It’s important to understand each violation and the severity of each violation, as well as the type of shellfish processing firm,” he wrote in an e-mail.

He did say some companies do a better job than others avoiding warning letters.

“It is a fact that some processing firms do a better job of complying with rules compared with other processing firms,” he wrote.

The Department of Agriculture offers training and education to help companies that receive warnings, he said.

Prevent outbreaks

The Department of Agriculture’s strict inspection guidelines are intended to prevent outbreaks of shellfish-related illnesses.

“That has been the focus,” said Peirce. “We want to prevent instances where you have 10,000 all get sick at once because oysters were tainted.”

Of greatest concern is Vibrio vulnificus, a pathogen found in raw shellfish that is destroyed when they are cooked. Vibrio, a bacterium from the same family as cholera, can cause illness and even death among people who have chronic illnesses and eat raw shellfish.

“Vv is supposed to be in the water, it is there all the time, but it’s in higher concentration during summer months,” Peirce explained.

In 2008, a man Bay County medical examiners said was infected with Vibrio vulnificus died at Bay Medical Center. Doctors said he had a deficient liver, making him vulnerable. His family told The News Herald he had eaten contaminated oysters.

In July, it struck a 40-year-old who was in Panama City Beach for his wedding. He ate raw oysters a few days before the ceremony and awoke from a coma two weeks later. Both of his legs were amputated. He has since returned to his home in Lebanon, Ohio.

The Food and Drug Administration recently floated a ban on the sale of oysters from the Gulf of Mexico during warm months to prevent people from contracting Vibrio-related illnesses, but dropped the proposal after stiff backlash from the industry.

Each year, about 15 people die from consuming oysters, according to the FDA.

Peirce said his department can’t prevent all illness caused from Vibrio.

“If there is a single illness, it was not because of a failure of our program. It is not designed to stop natural occurring illnesses,” he said. “It will stop people

from getting sick from sewage treatment plants leaking or something like that.”

Emergency Preparedness Information in ASL, Braille and Large Print


WEBSITE: http://www.accessibleemergencyinfo.com

THe Northeast Texas Public Health District in cooperation with the Department of State Health Services have translated 18 Emergency Preparedness Topics into Videos with ASL translators, downloadable braille and large print documents, and pdf file downloadable documents.

Please visit http://www.accessibleemergencyinfo.com for more information and become better prepared for emergencies in your area.  Surveys are requested to verify how well the information is serving your population, please take a moment to complette the survey before and after viewing the video information.

CONTACT PERSON NAME: Stephanie Walker
CONTACT EMAIL ADDRESS: accessibleemergencyinfo@gmail.com
CONTACT TELEPHONE #: (903) 729-7780

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