 According to the latest published national retail meat report, more than 80% of retail chicken breasts sold in the United States are contaminated with fecal matter, up from about 70% seven years before. 80% fecal contamination, and that's completely legal. But there are a few bugs for which there is zero tolerance. That does not make the meat industry happy. As the president of the Seafood Importers and Processors Association wrote in their article Beyond Zero Tolerance, a new approach to food safety, they propose a risk-based approach instead of a precautionary approach. From a recent article about raw poultry, instead of zero tolerance, alternative terminology should be used such as acceptable or tolerable risk. Instead of zero tolerance policies on potentially deadly bacteria on chicken, they propose ALOP, an appropriate level of protection, an acceptable risk. A certain number of cases per 100,000 population per year, associated with a specific hazard and a particular food commodity. Given the nature of the poultry industry, controls that are currently applied will not guarantee the absence of salmonella from raw poultry. It's just the way we raise chickens. Therefore, using terms such as zero tolerance or absence of a microbe in relation to raw poultry should therefore be avoided.