Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBathsheba Annabel Bryant Modified over 9 years ago
1
U.S. Department of Agriculture Office of Food Safety Food Safety and Inspection Service Winston Felton, D.V.M. Dearborn Circuit Supervisor Madison District Office, Field Operations, FSIS January 26, 2001
2
Food Safety and Inspection Service How are We Changing? n Same Mission n Same Laws n Ensure safety, wholesomeness, & correct labeling & packaging of meat, poultry, & egg products. n Federal Meat Inspection Act n Federal Poultry Inspection Act n Egg Products Inspection Act
3
What has Changed? Old FSIS vs New FSIS n Different regulatory requirements for red meat products & plants from poultry products & plants n Limited flexibility for innovations n Limited Scientific basis for regulatory requirements n Same Sanitation standard operating procedures (SSOP) & Pathogen Reduction/HACCP regulations for all plants (based on risk- prevention and science) n Combine/eliminate regulations/requirement
4
What has changed? Old FSIS vsNew FSIS n “Command & Control” -- Do what inspector says and how inspector says to do it n Prior approval required for new equipment, blueprints, products, processes, etc., etc. n Redefine Responsibilities u Inspector role: oversight & verification of regulatory compliance u Plant role: choose best ways to regulatory compliance (PR/HACCP & SSOP & others) & food safety r Scientifically-based Performance Standards (set requirement, not how to get there, e.g., 7 log decrease)
5
What has Changed? Old FSIS vs New FSIS n Primary Past Focus: Provide Inspection Services for the meat, poultry and egg products industries n Primary Present & Future Focus: Provide Prevention- & Scientifically-based Int’l. Public Health Services & Leadership to Reduce the Incidence of Food Borne Illnesses Attributable to Meat, Poultry, and Egg Products using Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point Systems (HACCP)
6
What Does FSIS 2001 Do? 1. Mandatory & Voluntary Inspection Services n FY 1999, FSIS inspected over 8.3 billion poultry, 155 million head of livestock, and 3.4 billion pounds of egg products (domestic industry growth expected at 3- 5%/yr) n Inspection services are provided by 7500 Inspectors (1100 Veterinarians & 6400 Food Inspectors) to more than 6000 meat, poultry, and egg processing plants in the U.S. & territories
7
Food Safety & Inspection Service FY 1999 Inspections n Cattle Slaughtered: 43,891,921 n Swine Slaughtered: 105,755,405 n Other Livestock Slaughtered: 5,420,077 n Poultry Slaughtered: 8,365,372,345 n Egg Products: 3,400,000,000 pounds n Processed Product Types: > 250,000 n Imported Products: > 3 Billion pounds
8
Inspection’s Food Safety Activities
9
2. FSIS Farm to Table Activities -- Animal Production n Voluntary Industry On-Farm Programs to minimize preventable farm- related food safety risks, e.g., Pork Quality Assurance, farm bio-security n Voluntary State Educational Programs for Producers, Veterinarians, & Others, e.g., residue avoidance n National Conference on Animal Production Food Safety, Sept 2000
10
3. FSIS Farm-to-Table Activities -- In Distribution n Voluntary In- distribution Programs to minimize preventable transportation, storage, and other food safety risks, e.g., guidelines for temperature controls n Monitoring by Compliance of In- Distribution points for controls n Pilot Program for increasing monitoring activities by FSIS
11
4. FSIS Consumer Education Activities n USDA Meat and Poultry Hotline (1-800-535-4555) n Consumer publications, e.g. Food Safety Educator n Fight Bac! Campaign n Thermy! Campaign n Mail Order Food Safety Campaign n Educational Partnerships with States and Others, e.g., EdNet for food safety educators n Consumer research & focus group tests, n “Changing Behaviors, Changing Strategies”
12
5. FSIS Public Health Activities n USDA/FDA/CDC expand Foodnet from 5 to 8 sites, covering 10% of the U.S. population, with a foodborne disease surveillance to provide better data on the incidence of foodborne illness. n USDA/FDA/CDC Foodborne Outbreak Response Coordinating Group—FORCE-G to assist States during outbreaks. n USDA/FDA/CDC PulseNet to link public health labs that perform DNA fingerprinting on foodborne bacteria.
13
5. FSIS Public Health Activities n USDA/FDA risk assessments, e.g., Salmonella enteriditis and Listeria monocytogenes to provide better data on which to base regulatory decisions. n Codex Alimentarius international risk assessments n Joint Institute for Food Safety Research participation to ensure food safety research needs are being met for all government agencies. n Animal feed regulations/controls n USDA food safety research for FSIS by ARS
14
6. FSIS Other Activities n Customer Service, e.g., OPM Employee Survey, Listening Sessions, Public Meetings n Internal Controls, e.g., budget, LMR, communication, training, EEO/CR, prevent workplace violence n Workforce of the Future Initiatives to make best use of human resources and improve workplace, e.g., Training and Education 2001 to determine future training needs for employees n Performance Goals and Strategic Planning
15
Food Safety and Inspection Service -- What’s Next ?? n Public Health Agency goals: to improve public health thru food safety, from producer’s farm to consumer’s table n Customer Services goals: to provide Inspection and other services to all customers n Regulatory Agency goals: to provide all customers guidance and support to ensure compliance with the Pathogen Reduction/ Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point (PR/HACCP) regulations, that are based on science and prevention of risks
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.