The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has suspended key milk quality testing programs due to internal workforce reductions tied to federal budget constraints. These tests, crucial for detecting antibiotic residues and ensuring food safety, were part of a longstanding quality control framework under the FDA’s Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition. The move has raised concerns among consumer groups and dairy safety advocates, especially as demand for dairy and exports remains high. The pause affects inspections under the Pasteurized Milk Ordinance (PMO), relied upon by both state and federal agencies to maintain milk safety across the U.S.
Industry groups have expressed worry about the regulatory vacuum this creates, potentially compromising consumer trust in milk safety standards. State-level regulators and dairy processors are now expected to shoulder more responsibility in maintaining quality assurance through independent testing. The FDA has emphasized that this suspension is temporary, but no timeline has been offered for reinstatement.
The development could have ripple effects on international dairy trade, particularly with countries that demand rigorous safety documentation, and it may influence import requirements for U.S. dairy products in global markets.
Industry Insight:
For global dairy stakeholders, this marks a critical moment to watch. Any perception of weakened U.S. regulatory oversight could shift sourcing patterns, impact trade agreements, and give an edge to countries with more consistent testing protocols.
Later it was clarified as follows :
Roberta Wagner, senior vice president of regulatory and scientific affairs at the International Dairy Foods Association (IDFA), issued the following statement today clarifying a pause in the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) lab proficiency testing program.
“The suspension of FDA’s Grade ‘A’ proficiency testing program does not reduce the types or frequency of milk quality tests for Grade ‘A’ milk or finished dairy products as it makes its way from farms to stores across the country. All Grade ‘A’ milk continues to be subject to stringent testing and oversight throughout the supply chain—on the farm, before transportation, and multiple times at processing facilities—by both state and federal regulators, as outlined in the Pasteurized Milk Ordinance. Milk and dairy product safety remains a top priority in the United States, and consumers can continue to trust that the dairy products they purchase at retail are safe to consume. The FDA is actively evaluating alternative approaches for its annual evaluation of laboratories that test required Grade A milk samples, which is the purpose of proficiency testing and evaluation programs. FDA will keep all participating laboratories informed as new information becomes available.”
Background
The paused program was a proficiency check for laboratories, not a test of the milk or dairy products themselves. It served as an internal evaluation tool to ensure FDA-affiliated labs could accurately analyze milk samples. Many of these labs are also evaluated by third-party programs to ensure proficiency. Under the proficiency program, labs are asked to test milk samples spiked by FDA with microbiological, animal drug and chemical contaminants. The labs are evaluated on whether their results concur with those of FDA reference labs for each sample. FDA spikes the samples, analyzes them, and then allocates them into appropriate shipping containers and sends them to labs for analysis. The results need to match closely the results of FDA plus or minus a small percentage. FDA has stated they are committed to finding alternative methods to maintain the lab performance monitoring and will share those alternatives when identified.