The Politics of Food Safety – Part Two

Hi everyone. Keeping with the theme of politics, our blog postings for the month of November are about food safety regulations. In the first blog, we provided background on agencies and their oversight for different foods. In this blog, we are covering elements of the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) that was signed into law January of 2011.

FSMA was heralded as significant food safety legislation as it enhanced and expanded regulatory oversight. FSMA consists of Seven Rules: Preventative Controls for Human and Animal Foods; Produce Safety Rule; Foreign Supplier Verification Programs; Accreditation of Third-Party Auditors/Certification Bodies; Sanitary Transportation of Human and Animal Food; and Prevention of Intentional Contamination/Adulteration.

Most of these Rules affected production, processing, and transportation links of the food chain. While foodservices were not directly involved, you may have noted an uptick in fees or additional charges as implementation steps occurred for your suppliers.

However, for foodservices purchasing direct from local food producers, the Preventative Controls for Human Food (PC) and the Produce Safety Rule (PSR) may be familiar! The PC for Human Food requires facilities to be registered and a representative to attend an approved training program. This is similar for producers that must comply with the PSR. There are lists of approved trainings available from cooperative extension offices, state agriculture agencies, and FDA’s Regional Centers for FSMA (disclosure: I was involved with the North Central Regional [NCR] Center for FSMA compliance during the later years of my career at Iowa State University).

The PSR was significant because it was the first ever, mandatory federal standard for growing, harvesting, packing, and holding of fresh produce. The Rule established science-based minimum standards for the safe growing, harvesting, packing, and holding of covered fruits and vegetables grown for human consumption on a “farm”. Establishing the definition of what is a farm was quite a contentious process: “A primary production farm is an operation under one management in one general (but not necessarily contiguous) physical location devoted to the growing of crops, the harvesting of crops, the raising of animals (including seafood), or any combination of these activities”. So a produce grower who has a few acres of fruits and vegetables along with several hundred acres of corn or soybeans that will end up in food production, must comply with the PSR as the threshold of annual revenue from “the farm” is higher than the minimum for exemption.

The PSR established metrics for good agricultural practices (GAPs). The metrics include required testing for water (although details are still in flux) and documentation that controls to prevent risk from biological soil amendments, animals and wildlife, poor worker practices, and equipment and facilities are maintained. In general, the focus is on the environmental and human potential risks for contamination of produce, necessary because fresh produce doesn’t receive a kill step (cooking) before the food is served. The PSR identified a list of produce items rarely consumed raw; producers of these crops, such as sweet corn, are exempt from compliance with the Rule.

The PSR also allows exemption if average annual food sales to ‘qualified end users’ are below the threshold. A flow chart to determine whether the grower must comply with the PSR is available from FDA and from the NCR.

What struck me as I qualified as a Lead Trainer for the PSR curriculum, was that many of the new requirements formalized GAPs. Even if a grower is exempt from meeting the PSR, a buyer should be asking questions related to safety of the water used to irrigate and wash produce as well as practices to control from worker contamination of fruits and vegetables due to illness or poor hygiene practices. In foodservices, we know people shouldn’t work around food if they have certain symptoms or illnesses, but what about on the farm? A checklist to use when purchasing from local growers should be used if there is no regulatory oversight as this demonstrates the foodservice’s due diligence in ensuring the food is safe when it arrives at the operation. Direct purchasing can be a win-win as it supports local growers and allows the foodservice to showcase regional foods.

Effective procurement of food for retail operations depends on asking the right questions to ensure the right product is delivered at the right time for the right price. Knowing some of the regulations that form the first chapters in the story of food served in your operation can be helpful. The public trusts that most foods sold receive some level of oversight. That oversight may come from federal or state sources, or it may come from the foodservice. The goal is to protect the public’s health and the reputation of your foodservice. Risk Nothing!

If you have any questions or comments about food safety, please email our food safety experts at foodsafety@foodhandler.com

Handling Leafy Green Salad

We have had several produce outbreaks of foodborne disease from our lettuce, spinach, and other greens in the last several years that have been devastating to the produce growers and distributors, retail grocery stores, restaurants, and consumers.

Food Packaging Safety in a Vacuum

Extending the shelf life of fresh foods has come a long way in the food industry since curing meats with salt and sugar or canning vegetables with heat processing. The food service and consumer markets needed some better visual packages to draw the eye to the freshness factor and the technology of food packaging has filled our dinner plate. Vacuum packaging and modified atmosphere packaging, shortened to “MAP”, are the terms used for the method of food packaging used every time we choose convenience over more complex scratch meal preparation. According to industry statistics, billions of packages of vacuum and MAP-packaged foods flood the marketplace today. In both modified-atmosphere and vacuum packaging, food is packaged in a pouch made of barrier film.

The Eleven Commandments of Food Safety at Your Restaurant

Lists help us remember all kinds of information. Given the list of recent national foodborne outbreaks in the news, keep repeating this list to your food service team. They are kind of like “commandments”. As a professional in a food service facility we should think of the very basic food safety concepts that every crew member should aspire to learn, even though this list may have different priorities based on your menu. The first 3 apply to anyone who serves food, from a bag of popcorn to a full course meal. As chefs or managers, if we can “set the example” by repeating good food safety practices visibly to the crew, it will help them understand how important it is to the success of your facility. Thou shalt:

The Worst Customer Complaint: Foodborne Illness

Food service managers and crew try to follow the rules of food protection.  Yet, occasionally a complaint may arise and these calls take priority over all other daily crises.  If you have been in the food service industry long enough, you may have gotten one of these.  A customer may claim, "I think your food made me ill." These words inflict instant anxiety. If it happens, here are some next steps to think about in advance of such a claim: