A new USDA law requires country of origin labeling information to appear on certain meat, poultry and produce items that are produced or packaged after September 30, 2008. This law is in addition to current requirements for raw wild or farm raised seafood.
What foods need a label? The law applies only to whole or ground beef, pork, lamb, chicken (not turkey), goat meat, fresh and frozen fruits and vegetables, pecans, peanuts, macadamia nuts, and ginseng. The law doesn’t apply to processed foods. USDA defines processed foods as foods that are "cooked, smoked, cured, roasted or combined with other foods." Examples of exempt processed foods in our stores would include rotisserie chickens, smoked pork, cube steaks, kabobs and fruit and vegetable salads.
Although the interim final ruling for the law began on September 30, retailers have six months to implement systems that comply with the law while the USDA continues to develop their final COOL regulations. Our merchandising group and our IT group have been working diligently to develop country of origin labeling in our scale labeling system to make it as easy as possible to identify source countries for covered produce and meat commodities. The produce group is also working with suppliers to provide PLU stickers with country of origin labeling on products at point of purchase. Both produce and meat departments are working with our marketing group to provide signs or stickers with countries of origin for those items where PLU stickers may not work or for bulk areas such as meat service cases. Our stores will soon be seeing all of these means of identity for covered commodities as we work toward compliance with this new law.
http://www.waldbaums.com/becool.asp