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Taylor Farms warehouse in Colorado Springs open, operating

California-based supplier Taylor Farms’ processing and distribution facility in Colorado Springs was open and operating Friday morning following news that the company may be linked to the cyclosporiasis outbreak that has sickened thousands of people across the U.S.

Semitrailers moved to and from the Colorado Springs warehouse at 890 Newport Road. A Gazette journalist observed a couple of employees moving about the premises.

Shredded iceberg lettuce supplied to Taco Bell restaurants by Taylor Farms has been ​identified by investigators as a potential source of contamination in the cyclosporiasis outbreak.

The Washington Post was first to ​report the Taylor Farms connection on Thursday, citing two individuals familiar with the investigation.

An employee at the Colorado Springs facility, who declined to provide her name, said Friday morning the company had no comment.

In 2024, Food and Drug Administration inspectors found dozens of violations at the Taylor Farms facility in Colorado Springs that supplied McDonald’s with slivered onions linked to an E. coli outbreak.

The FDA found the tainted slivered onions from Taylor Farms led to one death and more than 100 infections for people who ate the McDonald’s Quarter Pounder.

A Colorado Springs mother and her 10-year-old child sued McDonald’s and Taylor Farms after each of them ate a Double Quarter Pounder hamburger and were exposed to E. coli.

Thursday’s report did not specify which Taylor Farms distribution center supplied the lettuce to Taco Bell. Taylor Farms is based in Salinas, Calif., and has several supply facilities across the U.S.

Its 83,162-square-foot Colorado Springs warehouse was established in 2005 and has 250 employees, according to the company’s online profile on job site search engine Indeed. Online reviews show the facility sells produce to restaurants. It provides value-added produce, like pre-washed salad mixes and repackaged tomatoes to distributors throughout the central U.S., according to its Indeed profile.

While the U.S. has experienced outbreaks of the parasitic intestinal infection before, the scale and geographic spread of this year’s ⁠outbreak are significantly larger, prompting concern among health officials, Reuters reported.

The outbreak started May 1 and has been concentrated in Michigan, with Ohio and New York also reporting a large number of infections. Michigan health officials on Thursday reported 4,312 cases of the parasitic illness.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said this week that between May 1 and July 15 it received reports of 1,645 confirmed domestic cases of cyclosporiasis. The agency said it’s aware of more than 5,100 additional cases requiring further analysis.

The CDC also said it had identified ⁠a likely link among cases reported in Michigan, Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky, suggesting many of the infections may stem from a common source, ‌according to the report.

Taco Bell said earlier this week it had removed a ​limited number ​of ingredients from some restaurants as a precautionary measure, ‌but stressed that U.S. health authorities had not linked the outbreak to the chain, any specific food item or a supplier.

Yum ‌Brands and Taylor Farms did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for comment. 

The Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Separately, Bloomberg News reported that the U.S. FDA is expected ​to soon advise consumers to avoid shredded lettuce at Taco Bell restaurants in Michigan, Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky and Indiana.

Cyclosporiasis can be contracted by consuming food, typically raw fruits and vegetables or water contaminated with feces, ​and causes diarrhea, nausea and other gastrointestinal symptoms, Reuters reported.

The Gazette’s Breeanna Jent contributed to this report.



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