The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Food Safety and Inspection
Service (FSIS) issued today a best practices guideline to help the meat
and poultry industry respond to customer complaints that are determined
to be associated with adulterated or misbranded meat and poultry
products.
“FSIS
has placed renewed emphasis on industry responding to customer
complaints of foreign materials in meat and poultry and, as required,
reporting those incidents to the agency within 24 hours once the
determination has been made that the product is adulterated, We will continue to work with industry
and offer guidance to assist them in complying with agency
regulations.” said FSIS
Administrator Carmen Rottenberg. “
FSIS welcomes public comments on
the guideline.
FSIS Issues Guidance to Industry for Responding to Customer Complaints
Contact:
FSIS Office of Congressional and Public Affairs
(202) 720-9113
FSIS Office of Congressional and Public Affairs
(202) 720-9113
WASHINGTON, March 8, 2019 –
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Food Safety and Inspection
Service (FSIS) issued today a best practices guideline to help the meat
and poultry industry respond to customer complaints that are determined
to be associated with adulterated or misbranded meat and poultry
products.
“FSIS
has placed renewed emphasis on industry responding to customer
complaints of foreign materials in meat and poultry and, as required,
reporting those incidents to the agency within 24 hours once the
determination has been made that the product is adulterated,” said FSIS
Administrator Carmen Rottenberg. “We will continue to work with industry
and offer guidance to assist them in complying with agency
regulations.”
In
2012, FSIS announced a regulation requiring all establishments to
report to the agency within 24 hours when they have shipped or received
an adulterated product and that product is in commerce. While this
requirement has been in effect for several years, recalls associated
with foreign materials in product increased in recent years. FSIS
intensified efforts and made presentations in 2018 to industry
explaining that product containing foreign materials is adulterated even
when a physical food safety hazard is not present. Additionally, the
agency hosted two industry meetings to discuss an industry-drafted
document of best practices for responding to foreign material customer
complaints, which was published in August 2018.
FSIS
began working on the guideline announced today in mid-2018 to provide
reference material on best practices and recommendations on how to
receive, investigate and process customer complaints. While FSIS
specifically developed this document to address foreign material
customer complaints, establishments can apply the information to other
customer complaints of adulterated or misbranded products in commerce.
When an establishment needs to recall adulterated product from commerce,
the establishment must identify the cause of the product adulteration
and take steps to prevent recurrence in its Hazard Analysis and Critical
Control Point (HACCP) plan, which federal inspectors review.
The
guideline reflects the agency’s current position, and FSIS encourages
the industry to begin using it now. FSIS welcomes public comments on
the guideline. The agency will accept comments for 60 days and will then
update the document in response to suggestions, if necessary. Comments
may be submitted via the federal eRulemaking portal at: http://www.regulations.gov;
by mail including CD-ROMs sent to Docket Clerk, U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Food Safety and Inspection Service, 1400 Independence
Avenue S.W., Mailstop 3758, Room 6065, Washington, D.C., 20250-3700 or
by hand-or courier-delivery to 1400 Independence Avenue S.W., Room 6065,
Washington, D.C., 20250-3700. All items submitted by mail or electronic
mail must include the agency name and docket number FSIS-2018-0034
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