The Food and Drug Administration's Discretion to Approve Methods of Detection and to Define the Term \"No Residue\" Pursuant to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act ( 1995 )


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  •    The Food and Drug Administration’s Discretion to Approve
    Methods of Detection and to Define the Term “ No Residue”
    Pursuant to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
    The Food and Drug Administration has the discretionary authority under the DES proviso to the
    Delaney Clause of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act to prohibit the use of an additive
    in animal feed if the FDA concludes that there is no method that can “ reliably measure and
    confirm” whether the additive contains residues o f carcinogenic concern at or above the “ no res­
    idue” level.
    Where the FDA has already approved a method for detecting the presence o f residues of carcinogenic
    concern, the DES proviso does not require the FDA to revise its regulations to adopt the “ best
    available” such method.
    The FDA lacks the discretion to determine that an edible tissue contains “ no residue” when a method
    of detection reveals the presence of residues of carcinogenic concern that is below the “ no signifi­
    cant risk” level.
    October 13, 1995
    M e m o r a n d u m O p in io n   fo r th e   A s s is t a n t A d m in is t r a t o r   and   G en era l C oun sel
    E n v ir o n m e n t a l P r o t e c t io n A g e n c y
    and the
    G en era l C oun sel
    D epa rtm en t        of   H ealth    and    H u m a n S e r v ic e s
    This memorandum responds to the Environmental Protection Agency’s
    (“ EPA” ) and the Food and Drug Administration’s (“ FDA” ) request for our
    opinion regarding the FDA’s regulations implementing what is known as the
    “ DES proviso” to the Delaney Clause of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic
    Act, 
    21 U.S.C. §§301-393
     (the “ Act” ) . 1 Both agencies have certain responsibil­
    ities under the Act, which establishes federal regulatory authority over the safety
    of food additives, human and animal drugs, certain pesticides, and cosmetics.
    I. Background
    The Act requires that a food additive (including additives to animal feed) be
    found to be “ safe” before the FDA authorizes its use. The Delaney Clause pro­
    hibits such a finding of safety with respect to a substance found to induce cancer
    in man or animal. The DES proviso carves out an exception to the Delaney Clause,
    allowing cancer-inducing agents to be added to animal feed if the FDA finds that
    the additive will not harm the animals, and that no residue of the additive will
    1 Letter for W alter Dellinger, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel, from Jean C. Nelson, General
    Counsel, Environmental Protection Agency, and Harriet S. Rabb, General Counsel, Department o f Health and Human
    Services (Dec. 8, 1994).
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    Opinions o f the Office o f Legal Counsel in Volume 19
    be found in any edible portion of the animal after slaughter or in any food from
    the animal. The presence of residue is to be determined by “ methods of examina­
    tion prescribed or approved by the Secretary by regulations.” 
    Id.
     § 348(c).2
    The proviso was enacted in 1962 to allow substances such as the animal drug
    diethylstilbestrol, abbreviated as DES, to be used in appropriate situations. Pub.
    L. No. 87-781, § 104(f), 
    76 Stat. 780
    , 785 (1962). Under the Delaney Clause
    without the proviso, new applications for the use of drugs like DES, a carcinogen,
    would ordinarily have been kept from the market. However, because drugs like
    DES, when used properly, pass quickly out of the treated animal’s system, may
    leave no detectable residue in edible tissue, and do not harm the animal, Congress
    permitted the use of such substances. See Hess & Clark, Div. o f Rhodia, Inc.
    v. FDA, 
    495 F.2d 975
    , 979 (D.C. Cir. 1974).
    Over the years since the DES proviso was enacted, the FDA has implemented
    its terms through a series of regulatory decisions. Its current regulations, which
    embody the sensitivity of method (“ SOM” ) approach, contain several discrete
    elements. The central feature of the regulations is the FDA’s operational defmition
    of the statutory term “ no residue.” Under the definition, the FDA determines
    a level of residue for any given food additive that will be considered to satisfy
    the “ no residue” finding required under the proviso. This “ no residue” level
    is calculated in several steps. See 
    21 C.F.R. § 500.84
    (c) (1995). First, the FDA
    determines a maximum level o f concentration of any “ residue of carcinogenic
    concern” from the additive in question that poses no significant increase in the
    risk of cancer to people (the “ no significant risk” level). 
    Id.
     § 500.84(c)(1). Next,
    the FDA evaluates the different foods through which a human might consume
    some of the additive and estimates the amount of such foods that are consumed
    in the human diet. Based on these estimates of food intake, the FDA then des­
    2 The Delaney Clause with the DES proviso states:
    (1) The Secretary shall —
    (A ) by order establish a regulation . . . prescribing, with respect to one or more proposed uses of the
    food additive involved, the conditions un d er which such additive may be safely used. . . .
    (3) No such regulation shall issue if a fair evaluation o f the data before the Secretary —
    (A)    fails to establish that the proposed use o f the food additive, under the conditions o f use to be specified
    in the regulation, will be safe: Provided, That no additive shall be deem ed to be safe if it is found to
    induce cancer when ingested by man o r animal, o r if it is found, after tests which are appropriate for
    the evaluation o f the safety o f food additives, to induce cancer in m an or animal, except that this proviso
    shall not apply with respect to the use o f a substance as an ingredient o f feed for animals which are
    raised for food production, if the Secretary finds (i) that, under the conditions o f use and feeding specified
    in proposed labeling and reasonably certain to be followed in practice, such additive will not adversely
    affect the animals for which such feed is intended, and (ii) that no residue o f the additive will be found
    (by methods o f exam ination prescribed o r approved by the Secretary by regulations, which regulations
    shall not be subject to subsections (f) an d (g) o f this section) in any edible portion o f such animal after
    slaughter o r in any food yielded by or derived from the living a ni mal ; . . . .
    
    21 U.S.C. § 348
    (c). The Delaney Clause w ith the DES proviso quoted above is similar to the provisions in 
    21 U.S.C. § 3
     6 0 b (d )(l)(I), which governs the approval o f new animal drugs, and 21 U.S.C. § 379e(b)(5)(B), which gov­
    erns the approval o f color additives.
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    The Food and Drug Administration's Discretion to Approve Methods o f Detection and to Define the
    Term "No Residue” Pursuant to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic A ct
    ignates a level of concentration for each edible tissue in which the additive might
    be found such that the “ no significant risk” level for the total diet is not exceeded.
    Id. § 500.84(c)(2). So long as concentrations in an edible tissue are below the
    maximum level of concentration for that tissue, the FDA considers the edible
    tissue to contain “ no residue.” Id . 3
    The FDA requires the sponsor of any additive seeking relief under the DES
    proviso to submit a “ regulatory method” of detection that can “ reliably measure
    and confirm” the presence of any residue of carcinogenic concern equal to or
    above the “ no residue” level for that compound. Id. §§500.86, 500.88. However,
    the FDA does not necessarily require a sponsor to employ the most sensitive
    detection method available.
    The EPA and the FDA (collectively “ the agencies” ) have posed three separate
    questions with respect to the FDA’s current approach to implementing the DES
    proviso. The first two raise issues concerning the FDA’s discretion to approve
    a method of detection, the results of which will be accepted by the FDA for
    purposes of the proviso. The third question concerns the FDA’s discretion to
    define “ no residue” as set forth above. Specifically, we address the following
    questions: (1) whether the FDA has the discretion to refuse to permit the use
    of an additive in animal feed if it finds that there is no method that can “ reliably
    measure and confirm” the presence of residues of carcinogenic concern at and
    above the “ no residue” level for such residues; (2) whether the FDA must revise
    its regulations to adopt more sensitive methods when they become available once
    it has approved a method of detection; and (3) whether the FDA has the discretion
    to determine that an edible tissue contains “ no residue” when a method of detec­
    tion reveals the presence of residues of carcinogenic concern that is below the
    “ no significant risk” level. We discuss our answers to each of these questions
    below.
    II. The FDA’s Discretion to Approve Methods of Detection
    A. Must the FDA Approve a Method of Detection?
    The DES proviso authorizes the use of a cancer-inducing additive in animal
    feed if the FDA finds “ that no residue of the additive will be found (by methods
    of examination prescribed or approved by the [FDA] by regulations . . .) in any
    edible portion of such animal.” 
    21 U.S.C. §348
    (c)(3)(A)(ii). The agencies have
    3 As explained by the FDA:
    CTlhe [SOM] procedures provide for a quantitative estimation o f the risk o f cancer presented by the residues
    of a carcinogenic compound proposed for use in food-producing animals. “ No residue" remains in food
    products when conditions o f use, including any required preslaughter withdrawal period or m ilk discard
    time, ensure that the concentration o f the residue o f carcinogenic concern in the total diet o f people will
    not exceed the concentration that has been determined to present an insignificant risk.
    
    52 Fed. Reg. 49
    .572 (1987). Thus, the SOM regulations base a “ no residue” finding on a determ ination that the
    additive creates " n o significant risk.”
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    Opinions o f the Office o f Legal Counsel in Volume 19
    asked whether the FDA may use a method’s inability to detect residues at the
    FDA’s “ no significant risk” level (that is, the method’s sensitivity) as a basis
    for not approving that method, where the approval of at least one method is nec­
    essary in order for an additive itself to be approved. This phrasing of the issue
    suggests two questions that can usefully be separated.
    The first is whether the proviso contemplates that at least one method of detec­
    tion be approved by the FDA; in other words, whether the FDA lacks the discre­
    tion to decide that at present no satisfactory method exists with respect to a spe­
    cific additive. If the proviso were read to require the approval of at least one
    method, notwithstanding its lack of sufficient sensitivity, this would be equivalent
    to reading the proviso as imposing a nondiscretionary duty on the FDA to approve
    some method.4 The proviso contains no language explicitly imposing such a duty
    on the FDA. Finding one would require inferring it from elsewhere in the statute,
    either because of express language found elsewhere or because of the structure
    of the statute as a whole. In fact, however, far from undermining the initial view
    that the FDA is under no such duty, the rest of the statutory scheme reinforces
    this conclusion.
    The Delaney Clause and its DES proviso are subparts of the comprehensive
    statutory scheme under which the FDA approves proposed uses of food additives.
    See 
    21 U.S.C. § 348
    (c)(3). Under this scheme the FDA may not issue a regulation
    approving the use of any food additive if “ a fair evaluation of the data before
    the [FDA] fails to establish that the proposed use of the food additive . . . will
    be safe.” 
    21 U.S.C. § 348
    (c)(3). The statute, in other words, requires that safety
    is not to be presumed, but rather must rest on an affirmative showing of the predi­
    cate facts necessary to support such a conclusion.5
    Before the sponsor of a cancer-inducing additive is even put to the task of
    proving safety, however, that additive must satisfy the DES proviso, because if
    it does not satisfy the proviso, the Delaney Clause will apply to it, and the Delaney
    Clause imposes a required finding of “ not safe” with respect to cancer-inducing
    additives. As a necessary condition for satisfying the proviso, the FDA has stated
    that a food additive must not be present in an edible tissue in concentrations above
    the “ no significant risk” level for that tissue. See 
    21 C.F.R. §500.84
    . This means
    4 O n occasion, the FDA will withdraw its marketing approval o f anim al drugs, which are also governed by the
    Delaney C lause and the DES proviso, because, among other reasons, there is no approved method o f detection
    and, hence, no m eans to demonstrate that the proviso is satisfied. In the sole instance we found o f this position
    being raised in litigation, the couit affirmed the FD A ’s action without reaching the propriety o f the FD A ’s basing
    its determ ination on the absence of any approved method o f detection. See Rhone-Poulenc, Inc. v. FDA , 
    636 F.2d 7
     5 0 ,7 5 2 n.2 (D.C. Cir. 1980).
    5 That the statute generally requires an affirmative showing o f safety— the absence o f evidence of risk o f harm
    is insufficient to satisfy the statute— is reinforced by placing the burden o f proving safety on the sponsor. As one
    court sum m arized the m atter “ (I]f the substance is deem ed a food additive, it is presumed to be unsafe . . .
    United States v. Two Plastic Drums, More or Less o f an Article o f Food, Labeled in Part: Viponte Ltd. Black
    Currant Oil Batch No. BOOSF 039, 
    984 F.2d 814
    , 816 (7th Cir. 1993). “ The thmst o f the [Food Additives A mend­
    ment A ct o f 1958] was to put upon processors rather than the government the burden of proving that a newly
    discovered substance added to food is safe if used within specified quantities.” 
    Id. at 819
    .
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    The Food and Drug Administration s Discretion to Approve Methods o f Detection and to Define the
    Term "No R esidue" Pursuant to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
    that a finding of “ no significant risk” is also a necessary predicate to FDA’s
    potential ultimate conclusion that the additive is “ safe.”
    It would be odd for Congress to have written a statute whose basic requirement
    is that the predicate facts for a finding of safety must be affirmatively established
    by the sponsor of any additive, and subsequently to have amended that statute
    by inserting a new subpart in which the requirement of an affirmative showing
    was eliminated, without any indication in the text that such a fundamental change
    was intended. Yet, just such an odd outcome would result here if the FDA were
    compelled to approve an insufficiently sensitive method. The requirement that
    safety be proven, not presumed, was at the very heart of the legislative changes
    codified in the Food Additives Amendment Act of 1958, of which § 348(c)(3)
    is a key provision. See, e.g.. Two Plastic Drums, More or Less, 
    984 F.2d at
    816-
    19. However, if the FDA were required to apply the proviso based solely on
    results from a method inadequate to confirm “ no significant risk,” the FDA would
    be in the position of presuming a predicate fact — the absence of significant risk —
    that it considered necessary to its ultimate safety determination. There is
    absolutely no evidence in either the statutory text or the legislative history that
    such a reversal was intended, and by far the more natural reading of the statute
    is that the same requirement of an affirmative showing applies throughout.
    In sum, the DES proviso does not impose an obligation on the FDA to approve
    at least one method. To the contrary, the FDA has discretion to refuse to permit
    the use of unsatisfactory detection methods.
    The analysis to this point has assumed that it is within the FDA’s discretion
    to use levels of risk as one determinant in implementing the method selection
    portion of the DES proviso. This issue presents the second question we must
    explicitly examine: acknowledging that the FDA has discretion to reject a detec­
    tion method for some reason, is the method’s inability to detect no significant
    risk levels one of the permissible reasons for the exercise of that discretion? This
    question arises because an agency’s exercise of discretion will not be sustained
    if the agency considers factors that are either impermissible or irrelevant under
    the statute under which the agency is acting. Motor Vehicle Mfrs. A ss’n v. State
    Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    463 U.S. 29
    , 43 (1983) (“ Normally, an agency rule
    would be arbitrary and capricious if the agency has relied on factors which Con­
    gress has not intended it to consider . . . .” ); Citizens to Preserve Overton Park,
    Inc. v. Volpe, 
    401 U.S. 402
    , 416 (1971) (The question is “ whether the decision
    was based on a consideration of the relevant factors.” ).
    As an initial matter, a method’s ability to detect the “ no significant risk” level
    seems to be a permissible reason for exercising discretion under a statute that
    requires an affirmative showing of safety, because a finding that an additive does
    not pose a significant risk is directly relevant to a determination of safety. See,
    e.g.. Industrial Union Dep’t v. American Petroleum Inst., 
    448 U.S. 607
    , 642
    (1980) (“ ‘[S]afe’ is not the equivalent of ‘risk free.’. . . [A] workplace can
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    Opinions o f the Office o f Legal Counsel in Volume 19
    hardly be considered ‘unsafe’ unless it threatens the workers with a significant
    risk of harm.” ). As plausible as this conclusion appears, two court of appeals
    decisions interpreting the Delaney Clause may cast doubt on it and cause us to
    consider a possible counter argument. See Les v. Reilly, 
    968 F.2d 985
     (9th Cir.
    1992), cert, denied, 
    507 U.S. 950
     (1993); Public Citizen v. Young, 
    831 F.2d 1108
    (D.C. Cir. 1987), cert, denied, 
    485 U.S. 1006
     (1988). Both Public Citizen and
    Les hold that the fact that an additive produces extremely low levels of risk (de
    minimis levels) does not provide the FDA or the EPA with a basis for refusing
    to ban a cancer-inducing additive under the Delaney Clause. The courts reach
    this result by concluding that Congress precluded taking risk levels into account
    in reaching that decision under the Delaney Clause. Les, 968 F.2d at 989 (“ Thus,
    the legislative history supports the conclusion that Congress intended to ban all
    carcinogenic food additives, regardless of amount or significance of risk, as the
    only safe alternative.” ); accord Public Citizen, 
    831 F.2d at 1122
    .
    In Public Citizen, the court did not conclude that the FDA completely lacked
    discretion in implementing the Delaney Clause. Specifically, it confirmed that the
    FDA did indeed have discretion to determine whether a color additive was cancer-
    inducing in the first place. 
    831 F.2d at 1112
    . The government sought to use the
    existence of this discretion to support its argument that the FDA had discretion
    to approve carcinogens that posed merely a de minimis risk by claiming that the
    FDA’s decision could be justified as an exercise of the FDA’s admitted discretion
    to make that prior determination. The court rejected that argument, concluding
    that there was nothing in the record that could support the exercise of such discre­
    tion in this instance, where studies done under accepted agency protocols had
    produced results that the agency had routinely found supported a finding of
    carcinogenicity. 
    Id. at 1122
    . In particular, the court held that the FDA could not
    use the fact that risk was de minimis as the basis for a finding that the substance
    does not induce cancer.
    Congress did not intend the FDA to be able to take a finding that
    a substance causes only trivial risk in humans and work back from
    that to a finding that the substance does not “ induce cancer in . . .
    animals.” This is simply the basic question— is the operation of
    the clause automatic once the FDA makes a finding of carcino­
    genicity in animals?— in a new guise.
    
    Id. at 1121
     (alteration in original).
    A broad reading of Public Citizen might suggest that levels of risk associated
    with a substance may not inform any discretionary judgments made under the
    Delaney Clause, because Congress did not intend the FDA to be able to take
    a finding about the relative risk of a substance and “ work back” from that to
    answer any question under the Clause where it could admittedly exercise discre­
    252
    The Food and Drug Administration's Discretion to Approve Methods o f Detection and to Define the
    Term ' 'No Residue" Pursuant to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
    tion. We believe this reasoning is unsound as applied to the FDA’s using risk
    as a factor in selecting detection methods under the DES proviso, on two grounds.
    First, both Public Citizen and Les were concerned with situations in which the
    agencies sought to approve the use of substances by escaping from the categorical
    ban on the Delaney Clause, even though the necessary conditions for triggering
    the Clause had been found to be present. Once those conditions have been found,
    both courts held, the operation of the Clause is automatic. Using a “ no significant
    risk” benchmark as a basis for rejecting detection methods does not present such
    a situation, because the absence of a detection method does not provide an escape
    hatch to the Clause. Rather, it presents the opposite situation: if the DES proviso
    does not apply, then the Delaney Clause will. Thus, the FDA is not “ working
    back” from a finding of “ no significant risk” to a discretionary judgment that
    stops the automatic bar of the Delaney Clause from taking effect. Instead, accept
    the results of a detection method means that the automatic ban of the Delaney
    Clause will apply. As a consequence, the logic of Public Citizen’s limitation on
    the use of risk as a factor upon which to base a discretionary judgment does
    not apply to this particular situation.
    The second reason we believe the no-discretion argument based on Public Cit­
    izen and Les is unsound is more fundamental. The DES proviso and the Delaney
    Clause are separate provisions, and there is no a priori reason to believe that
    the limitations on factors permitted to influence the exercise of specific discre­
    tionary authority under the Clause should also govern the exercise of discretion
    under the proviso. In fact, the respective legislative histories of the two provisions
    exhibit significant differences that tend to reinforce the conclusion that the FDA
    can take the sensitivity of a method into account in deciding whether to approve
    that method.6
    The text of the DES proviso and the structure of the statute support the conclu­
    sion that the FDA has discretion to employ a method’s sensitivity as a criterion
    in method selection. The statute supports that view by granting the FDA the
    discretion to prescribe and approve methods of detection. 
    21 U.S.C. § 348
    (c)(3)(A). However, it is completely silent on explicit criteria the FDA may
    employ in the exercise of this discretion. When Congress has failed to speak
    directly to the precise question at issue, the implementing agency’s interpretation
    6   Before highlighting those differences, we note that our methodology is the same as that used by the court in
    Public Citizen. Like that court, we begin with the statutory text and structure, and then look to the legislative history
    to see whether it supports or undermines our preliminary conclusion. In Public Citizen's case, the court first concluded
    (hat the best reading o f the Delaney Clause was that the Clause did not permit a de minimis exception to its otherwise
    categorical, or automatic, ban on cancer-inducing additives. Public Citizen, 
    831 F.2d at 1113
    . This result, seemingly
    so contrary to common sense in the case o f trivial risks, might have been resisted by the court were it not for
    the very strong and consistent legislative history o f the Delaney Clause, which supported the view that Congress
    indeed intended the “ zero tolerance" result for carcinogenic compounds that the Clause announces on its face.
    In discussing the color additives version o f the Delaney Clause, Judge W illiams concluded that “ (t]he House com ­
    mittee gave considerable attention to the degree o f discretion permitted under the provision. The discussion points
    powerfully against any de minimis exception, and is not contradicted either by consideration on the House floor
    or by a post-enactment colloquy in the S enate." Id.; accord Les, 968 F.2d at 989. “ [T)his is perhaps as strong
    as [legislative history] is likely to g et.” Public Citizen, 
    831 F.2d at 1117
    .
    253
    Opinions o f the Office o f Legal Counsel in Volume 19
    will be sustained as long as it is reasonable. See Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural
    Resources Defense Council, 
    467 U.S. 837
    , 842-44 (1984). We believe that the
    use of significant risk levels as a criterion for exercising that discretion is reason­
    able in light of the statute’s basic requirement of an affirmative showing of
    “ safety.” See discussion supra pp. 250-51. Accordingly, the FDA’s use of levels
    of risk as a screening criteria for method approval should be sustained as a
    “ reasonable interpretation” o f the statute.
    The statute's silence on this issue means that the Congress has not spoken in
    statutory language to this question. That Congress intended to leave this issue
    to the discretion of the FDA is reinforced by an examination of the pertinent
    legislative history. The history of the DES proviso displays considerable equivo­
    cation on the criteria the FDA should employ in implementing the discretionary
    portions of the statute. On the one hand, some of the legislative history asserts
    that the “ basic principle” of the Delaney Clause itself— its zero tolerance posi­
    tion with respect to carcinogens— would be unaffected by the passage of the pro­
    viso. A principal piece of evidence of this view is a letter from Secretary Ribicoff
    to the chairman of the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce
    in 1962, the year the food additives version of the proviso was enacted.7 The
    Secretary’s section-by-section analysis of the proviso stated:
    Section 302(a) would correct a needless and unintentional inequity
    in the application of the food-additive anticancer proviso[8] (sec.
    409(c)(3) of the basic act) to additives for animal feed, while pre­
    serving in its full vigor the consumer protection now afforded by
    that provision. The basic principle of the anticancer provision,
    which would remain unimpaired, is that no tolerance for the addi­
    tion of carcinogenic chemicals to food shall be granted in any
    amount . . . .
    Letter for Hon. Oren Harris, Chairman, Committee on Interstate and Foreign Com­
    merce, from Abe Ribicoff, Secretary, Department of Health, Education, and Wel­
    fare (July 21, 1962), reprinted in Drug Industry A ct o f 1962: Hearings on H.R.
    11581 Before the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, 87th
    Cong. 49 (1962), reprinted in 21 Leg. Hist, at 227.
    7 The DES proviso was first suggested by the Department o f Health, Education and W elfare ( “ HEW ” ) in 1960.
    H EW drafted the pertinent provisions o f th e language that were eventually enacted in 1962, and transmitted its
    proposal to this same House Committee via another letter from then Secretary Flemming to the chairman, expressing
    H E W ’s views on how the proviso would operate. Letter for Hon. Oren Harris, Chairman, Committee on Interstate
    and Foreign Com m erce, from Arthur S. Flem m ing, Secretary, Department o f Health, Education, and Welfare (May
    13, I960) ( “ Flemming L etter” ), reprinted in H.R. Rep. No. 86-1761, at 88-89 (I960), reprinted in 16 Legislative
    H istory o f the Federal Food, Drug, and C osm etic Act and Its Amendments at 757-58 (1979) ( “ Leg. Hist.” ). Under
    these circumstances, the views o f the executive branch with respect to language it requested and initially drafted
    are significant sources o f statutory meaning.
    8 Secretary R ibicoff refers to the ‘‘Delaney proviso” or the “ anticancer proviso” where subsequent usage refers
    to the “ Delaney C lause.” Secretary Flemming, R ib ico ff s predecessor, employs the same terminology.
    254
    The Food and Drug Administration’s Discretion to Approve Methods o f Detection and to Define the
    Term ‘ 'No R esidue'' Pursuant to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic A ct
    On the other hand, the proviso has an operational structure that is undeniably
    different from that of the Clause, such that it would be impossible for the zero
    tolerance principle of the Clause to be completely unaffected, and some elements
    of the legislative history reflect an awareness of that fact. A long-time student
    and expert on the Act and the Delaney Clause, Professor Richard Merrill, has
    succinctly stated the difference: “ By contrast with the Delaney Clause itself, the
    DES proviso makes the detection of residues in edible animal tissues, rather than
    the addition of the compound to animals or their feed, the critical inquiry.”
    Richard A. Merrill, Regulating Carcinogens in Food: A Legislator’s Guide to the
    Food Safety Provisions o f the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 
    77 Mich. L. Rev. 171
    , 233 (1978). In other words, the proviso contemplates that a com­
    pound will be approved as long as an approved method detects no residue, even
    though this does not affirmatively mean that no residue was present at all. In
    fact, there might be a residue remaining, one at a level of concentration below
    the sensitivity of the approved method. Consequently, because the operation of
    the proviso is linked to detection, and because methods of detection are limited
    in their sensitivity, the inclusion of the proviso could not literally leave the “ basic
    principle” of the Clause unimpaired.
    Elements of the legislative history demonstrate an awareness that the operation
    of the proviso would not guarantee that a zero tolerance policy would be carried
    out with full vigor. A principal piece of evidence plainly pointing out the
    inconsistency between the proviso and the Delaney Clause is Representative
    Leonor Sullivan’s floor statement when the proviso was being considered in 1962,
    shortly before actual passage. Representative Sullivan, who introduced another bill
    on food and drug safety, H.R. 1235, conveyed her doubts about any weakening
    of the Delaney Clause whatsoever based on her belief that new testing methods
    would disclose residues that could not be detected in 1962:
    However, I have strong doubts, I must admit, over the retreat on
    the Delaney anticancer clause on feed additives, as contained in
    H.R. 11582, particularly in view of the Government’s experience
    several years ago with hormone-treated chickens. It cost us $10 mil­
    lion to remove from the market the fowl treated with a drug consid­
    ered safe for the purpose — after it was learned that there were resi­
    dues of the cancer-inducing substance in the skin of the chickens.
    Too often for complacency, new testing methods disclose the exist­
    ence of harmful residues which had not shown up in earlier tests,
    but by then the damage is done.
    Drug Industry Act o f 1962: Hearings on H.R. 11581 Before the House Committee
    on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, 87th Cong. 98 (1962) (Statement of Rep.
    Sullivan), reprinted in 21 Leg. Hist, at 276. In order to forestall such weakening,
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    Opinions o f the Office o f Legal Counsel in Volume 19
    Representative Sullivan introduced an amendment to eliminate the DES proviso,
    so as to protect consumers from undetectable levels of carcinogenic residues. 108
    Cong. Rec. 21,077 (1962) (Statement of Rep. Sullivan), reprinted in 23 Leg. Hist,
    at 29. Her amendment was defeated.9
    Representative Sullivan’s statement recounts an actual historical example of sub­
    sequent improvements in testing sensitivity that revealed a residue where none
    had been detected earlier. No member of Congress disputed the factual accuracy
    of her description of the proviso’s operation, although several rose to comment
    on her statement. See 108 Cong. Rec. at 21,079-83, reprinted in 23 Leg. Hist,
    at 31-35. This sequence reveals very clearly the tension between the proviso and
    the original Delaney Clause: in all likelihood the proviso would permit the pres­
    ence of physical residues of carcinogenic compounds, because testing methods
    would not be sensitive enough to detect them, while the Clause advocates a zero
    tolerance approach to the presence of any residue.
    Finally, the tension between the idea that the proviso would preserve the ‘‘basic
    principle” of the Clause and the idea that detection methods would most likely
    become more sensitive over time, so that a failure to detect residue with any
    given method could not be taken to show the complete absence of the compound,
    is evident in the major statement of the administration’s understanding of the pro­
    viso, Secretary Flemming’s letter of May 13, 1960, which transmitted the language
    of the proviso to the House committee considering the Color Additives Amend­
    ments.
    There is, however, one respect in which the anticancer proviso
    has proved to be needlessly stringent as applied to the use of addi­
    tives in animal feed. For example, in the case of various animals
    raised for food production, certain drugs are used in animal feed
    which will leave no residue in the animal after slaughter or in any
    food product (such as milk or eggs) obtained from the living
    animal, and which are therefore perfectly safe for man. If this is
    demonstrated with respect to any particular additive intended for
    animal feed, and the additive will not adversely affect the animal
    itself during its expected or intended life cycle, we can see no rea­
    son for not permitting such a use of an additive which could be
    highly useful and beneficial in the raising of animals for food. . . .
    We therefore have included in the enclosed draft bill an amend­
    ment to permit use of an additive animal feed under the above-
    mentioned conditions.
    It may aid public understanding of the Delaney proviso and allay
    unnecessary apprehension regarding it, to touch here on the pro-
    9 The am endm ent failed by voice vote. 108 Cong. Rec. at 21,081, reprinted in 23 Leg. Hist, at 33. Her amendment
    to elim inate the DES proviso permitting carcinogenic color additives in animal feed was also rejected. 
    Id. at 21,083
    ,
    reprinted in 23 Leg. Hist, at 35.
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    Term "N o R esidue" Pursuant to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic A ct
    viso’s operation where its application, under present law and the
    proposed modification, depends on whether a residue of the chem­
    ical additive involved is left in the edible tissue or other food prod­
    ucts of an animal. This question may arise in two types of case.
    In the first, a veterinary drug is directly administered — by injec­
    tion, implantation, or otherwise — to the animal, instead of being
    mixed with its feed. In that event, the Delaney proviso can have
    application only if a residue of the added drug occurs in food prod­
    ucts (such as milk or eggs) of the living animal or in some edible
    portion or product of the animal after slaughter. In the second type
    of case, the drug is mixed with feed consumed by the animal. In
    that event, it is necessarily a food additive (since animal feed is
    food within the meaning of the act), but it will nevertheless be taken
    out of the Delaney proviso’s application by the above-proposed
    amendment even if it is cancer inciting (at particular feeding levels)
    in test animals, provided that it satisfies the above-mentioned
    requirements as to the absence of adverse effect on the animals
    for which the feed is intended and as to the absence of any residue
    in the food products or edible portions of the animal.
    In both these instances, where the question of the possibility of
    a residue is crucial, it is desirable that industry laboratory techni­
    cians, and enforcement officers have a common understanding with
    the Food and Drug Administration as to the methods of assay that
    will be recognized by us, and on which we want to rely, in
    resolving the question of residue. We have, therefore, in the pro­
    posed amendment to the Delaney proviso (and likewise in the pro­
    posed modification of the anticancer clause of H.R. 7624) provided
    that, under the amendment, the assay methods applicable in deter­
    mining whether there will be a residue shall be those prescribed
    or approved by us by regulations. This will give reasonable cer­
    tainty in that regard, although, of course, such regulations may from
    time to time be changed as new scientific developments dem­
    onstrate a need for change. It should be clearly understood that the
    industry still would have the responsibility of developing adequate
    analytical methods for detecting residues and furnishing them to
    the Government with a petition for approval of an additive.
    During the hearings on color additives legislation, some wit­
    nesses expressed a concern because of their fear that the Depart­
    ment intends to press a never-ending search for more and more
    delicate methods of analysis, so that it may, without regard to sci­
    entific reason, rescind permissions granted earlier for use of various
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    Opinions o f the Office o f Legal Counsel in Volume 19
    additives judged to leave no residues in food. This fear is not justi­
    fied.
    The Department applies sound scientific judgment and the rule
    of reason in determining the sensitivity and precision required in
    an analytical procedure used to detect residues of added chemi­
    cals— even before an additive is approved. And when it has been
    determined that a given degree of sensitivity and precision is appro­
    priate, based upon sound scientific facts, it has no intention of
    requiring change in the analytical procedure until new scientific
    developments clearly demonstrate the need.
    Flemming Letter, reprinted in H.R. Rep. No. 86-1761, at 88-89, reprinted in
    16 Leg. Hist, at 757-58.
    Secretary Flemming’s letter contains some passages that point in the same direc­
    tion as the section-by-section analysis of Secretary Ribicoff quoted above, namely
    toward the idea that the proviso is entirely consistent with the Clause. Its claim,
    for instance, that the proviso would apply to chemicals that leave “ no residue”
    in edible tissue, might be read to adopt the zero tolerance position of the Clause,
    as might the claim that the Clause is “ needlessly” stringent in case to which
    the proviso would apply. However, in the last three paragraphs quoted above,
    the Secretary also acknowledges that the application of the proviso would depend
    upon sensitivity of the method. The portions responding to concerns expressed
    in the hearing make this point clear.
    The sole basis upon which “ a never-ending search for more and more delicate
    methods of analysis, so that [the FDA] may, without regard to scientific reason,
    rescind permissions granted earlier for use of various additives judged to leave
    no residues in food,” Flemming Letter, reprinted in H.R. Rep. No. 86-1761, at
    89, reprinted in 16 Leg. Hist, at 758, could be a concern to the industry is if
    it were possible to grant permissions on the basis of methods not sensitive enough
    to guarantee literally no residue, such that it was then conceivable that more sen­
    sitive methods might later be developed that could detect a residue. That is pre­
    cisely the scenario painted later on the House floor by Representative Sullivan,
    in the passage quoted earlier. See supra p. 255. As was also the case with respect
    to Representative Sullivan’s concerns, the Secretary’s response is not that this
    scenario is strictly impossible — which it would be if the proviso only operated
    in situations where literally no residue remained. Instead, he assures the Com­
    mittee that the FDA will exercise “ sound scientific judgment and the rule of rea­
    son in determining the sensitivity and precision required in an analytical procedure
    used to detect residues of added chemicals — even before an additive is approved.
    And when it has been determined that a given degree of sensitivity and precision
    is appropriate, based upon sound scientific facts, [the FDA] has no intention of
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    The Food and Drug Administration's Discretion to Approve Methods o f Detection and to Define the
    Term “No Residue" Pursuant to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
    requiring change in the analytical procedure until new scientific developments
    clearly demonstrate the need.” Id.
    In sum, by permitting approvals to be based on detection methods that cannot
    confirm that no additions of the compound to edible tissue will occur, the proviso
    articulates a different principle from the one animating the Delaney Clause.
    Significant pieces of legislative history confirm an awareness by Congress that
    the proviso would operate in a manner significantly different from the Clause,
    although other pieces of that history suggest the opposite. The amendments offered
    by Representative Sullivan to prevent the weakening of the Clause seem to have
    put the choice of continuing a strict zero tolerance approach or not squarely to
    the Congress, and Congress voted to adopt the proviso in the form proposed by
    the administration.10
    The court in Public Citizen based its conclusion that risk could not enter into
    the FDA’s determination of whether a compound “ induces cancer” on its concern
    that to do so would permit the consideration of a factor that the Delaney Clause
    prohibits the FDA from taking into account in the ultimate decision whether to
    ban the substance. For the most part, it based its conclusion that risk could not
    be taken into account in that ultimate decision on a consistent and strong legisla­
    tive history rejecting the use of risk as a factor. The court’s concern that risk
    might work its way back into the agency’s judgment so as to undermine
    Congress’s prohibition does not apply here, because rejecting methods on the basis
    of risk does not have that effect. See discussion supra p. 253. Even if this decision
    did have that effect, the legislative history of the proviso fails to support the
    conclusion that Congress meant the same zero tolerance policy of the Clause to
    be fully applicable in implementing the proviso. As a whole, the legislative history
    amply confirms what the statute suggests on its face: Congress has not clearly
    spoken to the question whether the FDA could take risk into account in selecting
    methods of detection, thus permitting the FDA to adopt a reasonable interpretation
    of the relevant criteria.11
    In retrospect, it is not possible to conclude with confidence why Congress failed
    to specify the precise criteria that the FDA ought to employ in selecting detection
    methods. Chevron identifies a number of possible reasons that an agency may
    be given discretion to interpret a statute:
    10 See supra note 9.
    11 To the extent the legislative history speaks at all to what might cabin the exercise o f discretion in selecting
    methods of testing, it is only suggestive. Secretary Flem m ing's letter speaks o f using “ sound scientific judgment
    and the rule of reason in determining the sensitivity and precision required.” H.R. Rep. No. 86-1761, at 89, reprinted
    in 16 Leg. Hist, at 758. These concepts are nowhere further defined in the subsequent discussions o f the proviso,
    which are not numerous in a legislative history dominated by more contentious issues. If anything, they suggest
    that levels o f risk might well be a consideration in the decision to require more sensitive methods, because the
    need for greater sensitivity, which might be indicated by the significance o f the risks involved, would seem to
    be one o f the most obvious factors triggering a “ rule o f reason” decision to seek more sensitive methods, if not
    the most obvious factor.
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    Opinions o f the Office o f Legal Counsel in Volume 19
    Congress [may have] intended to accommodate [competing]
    interests, but did not do so itself on the level of specificity [nec­
    essary to resolve the precise question being litigated]. Perhaps that
    body consciously desired the Administrator to strike the balance
    at this level, thinking that those with great expertise and charged
    with responsibility for administering the provision would be in a
    better position to do so; perhaps it simply did not consider the ques­
    tion at this level; and perhaps Congress was unable to forge a coali­
    tion on either side of the question, and those on each side decided
    to take their chances with the scheme devised by the agency.
    Chevron, 
    467 U.S. at 865
    . In light of the language of the statute, the structure
    of the statute, and the legislative history of the proviso, we conclude that one
    of these three conditions obtained here— probably the first or the second, although
    “ for judicial purposes, it matters not which of these occurred.” 
    Id.
     Whatever the
    reason may have been, the result is that the FDA’s “ reasonable interpretation”
    of its authority — that method sensitivity down to the level of significant risk can
    be used as a criterion in method selection — is within its discretion to adopt.
    B. M ust the FDA Adopt the M ost Sensitive M ethod of Detection?
    The agencies’ second question is whether the FDA must revise its regulations
    to adopt more sensitive methods when they become available once it has adopted
    a method that detects the residue. Essentially, this question asks whether the pro­
    viso requires the FDA to revise its regulations to adopt the “ best available” detec­
    tion methods for a compound, or whether it has discretion to continue to accept
    results from less sensitive methods. At one time in the FDA’s implementation
    of the proviso, the agency did take the position that it generally should adopt
    the best available detection m ethods.12 While that interpretation may be one
    permissible interpretation of the proviso, the narrow question we must resolve
    is whether the statute compels that course of action. We conclude the answer
    to this question is also no.
    The proviso itself is completely silent with respect to what criteria the FDA
    must employ in deciding whether to approve a method of detection. It is also
    completely silent as to any affirmative obligation on the FDA to revisit or revise
    approved methods. Any case in favor of a “ best available” obligation, therefore,
    must rely heavily on the zero tolerance principle for carcinogens under the
    Delaney Clause itself, coupled with those portions of the legislative history of
    the proviso that assert that the proviso maintains this “ basic principle” of the
    12For a history o f the FD A ’s approach to implementing the proviso up to that time, see Chemical Compounds
    in Food-Producing Animals, Criteria and Procedures for Evaluating Assays for Carcinogenic Residues in Edible
    Products o f A nimals, 
    42 Fed. Reg. 10,412
     (1977).
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    The F ood and Drug Administration’s Discretion to Approve M ethods o f Detection and to Define the
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    Clause. Under this theory, if the method of detection approved by the FDA could
    not detect residues at levels achievable by the best available methods, and such
    levels were in fact detected by a more sensitive method, then failing to adopt
    the best available method as the required method under the proviso seems tanta­
    mount to approving a tolerance for the compound.13 Flemming Letter, reprinted
    in H.R. Rep. No. 86-1761, at 89, reprinted in 16 Leg. Hist, at 758.
    As we have already discussed, however, the proviso itself does not contain any
    language from which an affirmative obligation to use best available methods could
    be derived. The plain language of the proviso stands in tension with the basic
    principle of the Clause, and the legislative history of the proviso in several places
    reflects an awareness that the proviso depends upon detection in its operation.
    In fact, some of the legislative history suggests the FDA intended from the begin­
    ning not to adopt best available methods, at least under some circumstances, and
    that Congress acquiesced in that understanding. First, the history acknowledges
    that an approach depending on detection will most likely result in approved uses
    of compounds where in fact residues are present in food. See, e.g.. Representative
    Sullivan’s statement, supra p. 255. Second, Secretary Flemming’s influential May
    13, 1960 letter seeks explicitly to quell industry concerns that the FDA will engage
    in a “ never-ending search” for more sensitive methods, without regard to sci­
    entific reason. The Secretary’s rejoinder that HEW will not engage in such a
    search plainly argues against a requirement to always adopt best available detec­
    tion methods. To repeat, Secretary Hemming wrote:
    The Department applies sound scientific judgment and the rule of
    reason in determining the sensitivity and precision required in an
    analytical procedure used to detect residues of added chemicals —
    even before an additive is approved. And when it has been deter­
    mined that a given degree of sensitivity and precision is appropriate,
    based upon sound scientific facts, it has no intention of requiring
    13 The House Committee that first received Secretary Flemming’s request for enacting the DES proviso reported
    the Secretary’s views on whether the Delaney Clause itself permitted the FDA to establish tolerances for carcinogens.
    The committee report quotes him as stating:
    W henever a sound scientific basis is developed for the establishment o f tolerances for carcinogens, we
    will request the Congress to give us that authority. We believe, however, that the issue is so important
    that the elected representatives o f the people should have the opportunity o f examining the evidence and
    determining whether o r not the authority should be granted.
    This, I believe, is as far as our discretion should go in the light o f present scientific knowledge. W e
    have no basis for asking Congress to give us discretion to establish a safe tolerance for a substance which
    definitely has been shown to produce cancer when added to the diet o f test animals. W e simply have
    no basis on which such discretion could be exercised because no one can tell us with any assurance at
    all how to establish a safe dose o f any cancer-producing substance.
    H.R. Rep. No. 86-1761, at 12-13, (quoting Statement by Hon. Arthur S. Flemming, Secretary of HEW , before
    the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, January 26, 1960), reprinted in 16 Leg. Hist, at 68 1 -
    82.
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    Opinions o f the Office o f Legal Counsel in Volume 19
    change in the analytical procedure until new scientific develop­
    ments clearly demonstrate the need.
    Flemming Letter, reprinted in H.R. Rep. No. 86-1761, at 89, reprinted in 16
    Leg. Hist, at 758. In the last sentence of this quotation, the Secretary contemplates
    a situation in which a more sensitive method is available, but not needed, by
    acknowledging as possible a situation in which the agency could change to more
    sensitive methods and yet refrains from doing so. Such a situation is possible
    only if a superior method were available. This passage, in short, suggests that
    the FDA must have some discretion to decline to adopt the best available method.
    Once again, however, the statute itself provides no guidance at all on what fac­
    tors the FDA may consider in exercising such discretion, and the legislative history
    provides only suggestive guidance. While “ sound scientific judgment and the rule
    of reason” is not further defined, the level of risk already capable of being
    detected is certainly one plausible factor that might bear on the FDA’s assessment
    of whether “ new scientific developments clearly demonstrate the need.” This is
    because, as just discussed, the Secretary’s letter contemplates the case in which
    a more sensitive method is available, yet determined by the agency not to be
    needed. Of all the considerations that might support a conclusion that a better
    test is not “ needed,” as opposed, say, to being too expensive, or too time-con-
    suming, the consideration that current tests are adequate to detect significant risk
    is perhaps the most straightforward and appropriate. This interpretation, thus, ties
    the FDA’s discretion in method selection directly to some appraisal of the need
    to detect low levels of risk, and the significant risk level is certainly a reasonable
    benchmark for assessing adequacy.
    Thus, the Secretary’s letter defines two points that are important for our pur­
    poses. As the FDA contemplated the operation of the proviso, it would (1) some­
    times refrain from requiring the best available detection method; and (2) base
    its decision on method approval on undefined “ sound scientific judgment and
    the rule of reason,” which might well incorporate considerations of the risks asso­
    ciated with the compound. While turning these points into statutory commands
    probably makes too much of Secretary Flemming’s letter, it and the other pieces
    of legislative history acknowledging that the proviso’s operation is linked to detec­
    tion do refute arguments that such a reading is precluded by the statute. The his­
    tory is simply too contradictory to support that result.
    In this section of our opinion, however, the narrow question under review is
    whether the statute compels the FDA to push beyond currently approved methods
    to require more sensitive methods when they become available. As to this ques­
    tion, we are confident the answer is no.
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    III. Definition of “ No Residue”
    Under the SOM regulations, the FDA accepts a finding of some residue as satis­
    fying the statutory requirement of “ no residue,” if the level of residue detected
    poses no significant risk of increased cancer to people. In other words, it considers
    the detected presence of small amounts of residue as satisfying the statutory
    requirement of no residue. The final question the agencies have presented is
    whether this construction is permissible under the statute. While the first two ques­
    tions dealt with the FDA’s discretion to approve methods of detection, this one
    deals with the FDA’s possible discretion in interpreting the statutory requirement
    that the FDA find “ no residue” by means of whatever methods of detection the
    FDA has chosen. The question of what action may be taken when the method
    prescribed or approved by the Secretary by regulations detects a residue demands
    a different answer.
    Once again, we start with the statute. If Congress has “ directly spoken to the
    precise question at issue” in the statute, that instruction must be followed.
    Chevron, 461 U.S. at 842-44; see also Connecticut Nat’l Bank v. Germain, 
    503 U.S. 249
    , 254 (1992) (“ When the words of a statute are unambiguous, then, the
    first canon of construction is also' the last: ‘judicial inquiry is complete.’ ” )
    (quoting Rubin v. United States, 
    449 U.S. 424
    , 430 (1981)). In this instance, Con­
    gress has clearly spoken. The DES proviso states that the Delaney Clause will
    not apply “ if the Secretary finds . . . that no residue of the additive will be
    found (under methods of examination prescribed or approved by the Secretary
    by regulations).” 
    21 U.S.C. § 348
    (c)(3)(A). The interpretation of this language
    seems straightforward and unambiguous. Giving “ no residue” its ordinary
    meaning, the detected presence of any residue by an approved method would be
    incompatible with a finding of “ no residue,” and thus would preclude a finding
    that the proviso applies.
    Investigation of the legislative history substantiates this reading of the statute.
    Previous inquiries into the legislative history of the proviso supported the conclu­
    sion that the FDA enjoys considerable discretion to select methods of detection.
    That conclusion was initially based on a reading of the statute itself, and subse­
    quently reinforced by the findings that Congress’s deliberations reflected no single
    clear view either on precisely how the proviso was consistent with the zero toler­
    ance principle of the Delaney Clause or on the criteria the FDA should use in
    selecting such methods of detection. As to the question at issue here, the legisla­
    tive history also reinforces the initial reading of the statute, but this time by
    revealing a consistent record. There is nothing in that record to suggest that a
    finding of “ no residue” could be based upon the detected presence of residue,
    however insignificant, and the most pertinent items in the record on this issue
    in fact support the plain reading of the statute.
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    Opinions o f the Office o f Legal Counsel in Volume 19
    Consider first Secretary Flemming’s May 13, 1960 letter initially proposing the
    proviso’s language, which states in part:
    There is, however, one respect in which the anticancer proviso has
    proved to be needlessly stringent as applied to the use of additives
    in animal feed. For example, in the case of various animals raised
    for food production, certain drugs are used in animal feed which
    will leave no residue in the animal after slaughter or in any food
    product (such as milk or eggs) obtained from the living animal,
    and which are therefore perfectly safe for man.
    Flemming Letter, reprinted in H.R. Rep. No. 86-1761, at 88, reprinted in 16
    Leg. Hist, at 757. It is impossible to read the Secretary’s reference to “ no residue”
    as implying that the administration was proposing a statutory revision that would
    knowingly permit some residue to remain in food products. This is the same letter,
    after all, that endorses the Delaney Clause’s standard of zero tolerance as the
    only acceptable public health policy with respect to carcinogens.14 The letter only
    proposes a proviso that would operate when the Clause was “ needlessly strin­
    gent” ; that is, the proviso will apply in situations where a compound had been
    added to animal feed— and came within the scope of the food additive statute’s
    Delaney Clause for that reason— but left “ no residue” in food to be composed
    by humans. The operating supposition of the Delaney Clause, endorsed by Sec­
    retary Flemming, is that no exposure, no matter how small, to a known carcinogen
    was then considered “ safe.” On that supposition, the only residue that could be
    considered “ perfectly safe” for humans, where the Clause’s application would
    be “ needlessly stringent,” would be zero residue.
    That this was Secretary’s Flemming’s view, and Congress’s understanding of
    it, is reinforced by the Secretary’s earlier statement:
    We have no basis for asking Congress to give us discretion to estab­
    lish a safe tolerance for a substance which definitely has been
    shown to produce cancer when added to the diet of test animals.
    We simply have no basis on which such discretion could be exer­
    cised because no one can tell us with any assurance at all how
    to establish a safe dose o f any cancer-producing substance.
    H.R. Rep. No. 86-1761, at 13 (quoting Statement by Hon. Arthur S. Flemming,
    Secretary of HEW, before the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce,
    Jan. 26, 1960), reprinted in 16 Leg. Hist, at 682. Having proof of the presence
    of a residue but nonetheless exempting a compound from the Delaney Clause’s
    14Id. ( “ [T]he principle o f the [Delaney C lause] reflects, basically, the current state o f scientific knowledge, and
    w e w ould therefore, except [as applied to situations governed by the proposed DES proviso] feel constrained to
    apply the same principle even in the absence o f [the Delaney C lause].’’).
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    prohibition, as the SOM’s construction of “ no residue” does, seems indistinguish­
    able from treating that level of residue as a safe tolerance — precisely the result
    that Secretary Flemming denies in his statement to the Committee. Likewise, Sec­
    retary Ribicoff’s assertion that “ no tolerance for the addition of carcinogenic
    chemicals to food shall be granted in any amount,” seems to require the conclu­
    sion that permitting a detected residue of a carcinogenic chemical to be present
    in food to be consumed by humans would not be permitted. Letter for Hon. Oren
    Harris, Chairman, Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, from Abe
    Ribicoff, Secretary, Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (July 21,
    1962), reprinted in Drug Industry Act of 1962: Hearings on H.R. 11581 Before
    the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, 87th Cong. 49 (1962),
    reprinted in 21 Leg. Hist, at 227.
    There is nothing in the legislative history to suggest that Congress meant to
    authorize carcinogenic residue to be detected by the FDA and yet to have the
    proviso operate to exempt that compound from the Delaney Clause’s prohibition.
    We believe that the statutory language of “ no residue . . . will be found (under
    methods of examination prescribed or approved by the Secretary by regulations),”
    
    21 U.S.C. § 348
    (c)(3)(A), means that whatever approved method of detection is
    used must return a negative finding in order for the proviso to operate. Congress
    may not have been of one mind in realizing that reliance on detection could well
    result in actual, but undetected, residues in cancer-inducing additives being
    approved, but the case of actual, undetected, residues is quite distinguishable from
    the case of actual, detected ones. The legislative history consistently supports the
    conclusion that Congress did not intend for any additive for which a residue was
    actually detected to have the benefit of the DES proviso. The statute being clear,
    the FDA has no discretion to deviate from it.
    It may be argued that the meaning of “ no residue” is not clear, because the
    clearest literal meaning of “ no residue” would preclude the FDA from ever
    employing the proviso once one acknowledges the considered scientific view that
    one can never be sure that not even a single molecule of a compound remains
    in edible tissue. Because it is doubtful that Congress meant “ no residue” to be
    given a meaning that would render the proviso nugatory, the argument would
    run, what Congress meant by the term is ambiguous, and hence the door is open
    for the FDA to exercise a reasonable discretion in interpreting it.
    As already discussed, we agree that the legislative history displays equivocation
    on how the proviso was meant to operate, that there are inconsistences in state­
    ments concerning its ultimate effect, and that the FDA enjoys some interpretive
    discretion as a result. In determining the scope of that discretion, however, one
    must keep in mind the particular discretionary judgment at issue. Here the “ pre­
    cise question at issue” is whether the FDA may treat a detected presence of res­
    idue as “ no residue” within the meaning of the proviso. As to that precise ques­
    tion, the foregoing argument does not change the analysis. Had Congress insisted
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    Opinions o f the Office o f Legal Counsel in Volume 19
    upon an affirmative showing of “ no residue,” the current scientific understanding
    would indeed render the proviso a dead letter. That, however, is not the proviso
    Congress drafted. Instead, the proviso relies upon an affirmative showing that an
    approved method o f detection finds “ no residue,” and that finding can still be
    made consistent with the belief that a yet more sensitive method might show a
    physical residue where the approved method does not.
    In this regard, our analysis finds the proviso to be structurally similar to the
    Delaney Clause as interpreted by Judge Williams in Public Citizen. Both provi­
    sions contain some administrative discretion, but they also both contain some
    “ automatic” elements. To paraphrase Judge Williams, our conclusion is that the
    proviso requires that if A [an approved method of detection detects the presence
    of any residue], then B [the proviso is not applicable]. See Public Citizen, 
    831 F.2d at 1112
    . There is language permitting administrative discretion, but it relates
    only to the selection of detection methods.15 Once any residue is detected by
    an approved method, the compound cannot be listed, because the proviso does
    not apply, and hence the Delaney Clause itself does.
    IV. Conclusion
    Under the DES proviso, the FDA may choose to disapprove methods of detec­
    tion because they are not sufficiently sensitive to detect the presence of an additive
    at the “ no significant risk” level. Further, the FDA need not revise its regulatory
    approval of a method simply because a more sensitive method of detection may
    be available. However, it is a necessary condition to the application of the DES
    proviso that an FDA approved method of detection return a finding that no residue
    has been detected. The FDA may not accept a finding that residue is present,
    but below the “ no significant risk” level, as satisfying the statutory requirement
    of “ no residue.”
    CHRISTOPHER SCHROEDER
    Deputy Assistant Attorney General
    Office of Legal Counsel
    15 O f course, the exercise o f the FDA’s discretion in selecting a method o f detection might result in an approved
    m ethod failing to detect residues that more sensitive methods could detect. The practical consequences o f a finding
    o f no residue by such a less sensitive method might well be indistinguishable from the consequences o f following
    the F D A ’s current SOM approach, if the less sensitive method were sensitive down to the level of no significant
    risk, but no further. Indeed, by giving the Secretary discretion in method selection, Congress may well have con­
    tem plated that the risk associated with a com pound might be a factor in the Secretary’s exercise of that discretion.
    See discussion supra pp. 2 61-62. Insofar as the FDA’s approach takes no significant risk levels into account, it
    can be seen as one plausible methodology fo r accomplishing the purposes o f the DES proviso, at least on one
    possible reading o f those purposes.
    N evertheless, the Supreme Court has been quite clear in recent years that where Congress’s statutory command
    is unam biguous as to the precise question at issue. Chevron , 
    467 U.S. at 842
    , that command must be followed.
    E.g., Connecticut Nat’l Bank, 
    503 U.S. at 254
    . The proviso structures the FD A ’s decision making in a particular
    way, and the fact that an alternative decision making structure might produce a similar ultimate decision does not
    justify failing to follow the proviso’s instructions.
    266