Laws and Regulations Committee Update 3/4 – 3/5, 2019
Federal Register
Agricultural Marketing Service
Notices
Meetings:
2018 Farm Bill Implementation Listening Session on Hemp
Filed on: 03/04/2019 at 8:45 am Scheduled Pub. Date: 03/05/2019
FR Document: 2019-03912 PDF 3 Pages (161 KB) Permalink
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
Notices
Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposals, Submissions, and Approvals:
Importation of Fresh Andean Blackberry and Raspberry Fruit from Ecuador Into the Continental United States
Filed on: 03/04/2019 at 8:45 am Scheduled Pub. Date: 03/05/2019
FR Document: 2019-03859 PDF 4 Pages (174 KB) Permalink
International Trade Administration
Notices
Antidumping or Countervailing Duty Investigations, Orders, or Reviews:
Fresh Tomatoes from Mexico
Filed on: 03/04/2019 at 8:45 am Scheduled Pub. Date: 03/05/2019
FR Document: 2019-03928 PDF 11 Pages (164 KB) Permalink
FDA
Recalls
Date | Brand | Product Description | Reason/Problem | Company |
03/01/2019 | Sunstone Organics | White Vein Kratom and Maeng Da Kratom | Potential for Salmonella | Sunstone Organics |
02/25/2019 | Golean Detox | Dietary Supplement for Weight Loss | Undeclared Sibutramine | Golean Detox USA |
02/22/2019 | Nova Salted Biscuit | Nova Salted Biscuit | Undeclared Milk | Asia Foods Distributor Inc. |
FSIS
Mar 01, 2019 | PDF
- FSIS Announces Resources to Help Prevent Illness from Undercooked Chicken Liver
- FSIS Posts List of Approved Import Inspection Establishments as APHIS Rapid Defrost Facilities
Recalls
Product Recalled | Date of Recall | Retail Distribution List |
024-2019 Washington Beef, LLC Recalls Ground Beef Products due to Possible Foreign Matter Contamination | Mar 02, 2019 | |
018-2019 TV Food LLC. Recalls Siluriformes Products Produced Without Benefit of Inspection | Feb 22, 2019 | Mar 01, 2019 |
Notices
Number | Title | Date Issued | Expiration Date |
05-19 | Instructions for Kidney Dispositions in Poultry Carcasses | Mar 01, 2019 | Mar 01, 2020 |
AMS
USDA Announces Appointments to the U.S. Highbush Blueberry Council
USDA Files Action Against CKF Produce Corp. in New York for Alleged PACA Violations
USDA Continues Suspension of Supervision Fee Assessment under the United States Grain Standards Act
APHIS
APHIS Proposes To Allow Public Comment on Protocols for Deregulating Fields Previously Infested with Pale Cyst Nematode
FTC
National Consumer Protection Week 2019 Kicks off Sunday, March 3
@SGottliebFDA
- As Americans we count on having a diverse selection of fresh and affordable food in all seasons. That means we must rely in part on imported food. In today’s #FDA #SundayTweetorial I’ll talk about what FDA is doing to ensure the safety of food from abroad https://go.usa.gov/xEVpT .
- You might be surprised by how much of what you eat comes from beyond our borders. About 15% of the nation’s overall food supply is imported from more than 200 countries or territories representing about 125,000 food facilities plus farms.
- And the volume of imported food just keeps rising. In 2012, other countries supplied 21% of our fresh vegetables; 49% of our fresh fruit; and at least 85 % of our seafood. By 2017, imports accounted for 32% of our fresh vegetables; 55% of our fresh fruit; and 94% of our seafood.
- There are other facets of globalization. We see complex supply chains and increased specialization, where a single manufacturer may be responsible for a single ingredient which could find its way into many different finished products https://go.usa.gov/xEdFD .
- Despite these trends, food safety hasn’t waned thanks to important roles played by FDA, the food industry, the states and our global regulatory counterparts. Implementation of the FDA Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) https://go.usa.gov/xEVp4 has been a big factor.
- FSMA marked a fundamental shift in our approach from responding to contamination to preventing it. FSMA gave us additional authority over importers and food producers and provided assurance that food would meet the same safety standard, whether from a foreign or domestic supplier
- To optimize FSMA’s new tools and better integrate them with our other longstanding tools and authorities, we’ve developed a new comprehensive strategy for ensuring imported food safety. https://go.usa.gov/xEdFq . It lays out 4 food safety goals.
- 1. Preventing food safety problems in the foreign supply chain prior to entry; 2. Detecting and refusing entry of unsafe foods at the border; 3. Quickly responding when unsafe imported food is detected; and 4. Developing and publishing metrics to monitor our progress.
- First, onsite foreign inspections are an obvious way to prevent food safety problems in the supply chain. But given the number of facilities, we must prioritize based on risk, which we achieve with the help of data and info from other oversight activities and partners.
- One source of data flows from our Foreign Supplier Verification Programs (FSVP) rule https://go.usa.gov/xEdpV . It requires that importer conduct hazard analyses, evaluate food and supplier risk and verify that their suppliers meet U.S. food safety standards.
- FDA’s Accredited 3rd-Party Certification program https://go.usa.gov/xEdyF provides a framework for recognized groups to conduct audits verifying that foreign food facilities comply w/ U.S. food safety standards. It supplements FDA oversight and provides us with vital data.
- Importers can use accredited 3rd-party audits to help establish their eligibility under our fee-based Voluntary Qualified Importer Program (VQIP). Participants get expedited review and entry of their food shipments at our borders https://go.usa.gov/xEdyz .
- Finally, we rely on information from reliable regulatory counterparts to inform our work planning and to allocate resources based on risk https://go.usa.gov/xEVVa . We currently recognize Canada, New Zealand and Australia.
- So, what are we doing at the border to detect and refuse unsafe products? Importers are required to provide FDA with prior notification before food is offered for import into the United States. It helps us prepare https://go.usa.gov/xEdHW .
- We ID riskier shipments using PREDICT, an automated import screening tool that uses data mining, pattern discovery, and automated queries of FDA database. https://go.usa.gov/xEVVK . We intend to optimize this tool by using new data from – VQIP, FSVP and accredited 3rd-party audits.
- Sampling and testing food at the border is an effective way to detect contamination, but it’s labor-intensive and costly. We’re using data from multiple sources to target riskier products for these tasks. And we’re also expanding our analytical test methods.
- FDA scientists use 100s of established, validated tests and screening methods to detect pathogens or contaminants in different types of food. When a test doesn’t exist, we work to develop and validate new ones, as we did for cyclospora https://go.usa.gov/xEd3c .
- If unsafe food products do enter domestic channels, our 3rd goal is responding quickly to unsafe imported food. That means marshalling our sampling and testing strategies; our recall authority and import alerts; and info sharing with the states and other partners.
- FDA’s Coordinated Outbreak Response and Evaluation network https://go.usa.gov/xEVVt is essential in outbreaks. It analyzes internal and external information to identify foodborne illness and injury trends and evaluate potential illness clusters, then coordinates our response.
- Finally, to ensure that our import program is effective and efficient we’ll be developing an improved global inventory of food facilities and farms to help optimize our oversight activities as well as new performance metrics to help us measure how well we’re doing.
@US_FDA
- Under an Act of March 1, 1899, FDA (then the @USDA Div of Chemistry) investigated imported food for adulteration. Violative products were refused entry. Several import labs were set up around the country, and the function was folded into 1906 Food and Drugs Act. #FDAHistory
@FDAanimalhealth
“CVM is an organization that nurtures creativity and innovation.” – Virginia, PhD https://go.usa.gov/xNkaa #IAmHHS #FDA #CVMCareers #CVMCarreras @FDAJobs
March 5, 2019
Federal Register
Rules
Food Additives Permitted in Feed and Drinking Water of Animals; Selenomethionine Hydroxy Analogue
Filed on: 03/05/2019 at 8:45 am Scheduled Pub. Date: 03/06/2019
FR Document: 2019-03909 PDF 9 Pages (112 KB) Permalink
Notices
Guidance:
Mitigation Strategies to Protect Food Against Intentional Adulteration
Filed on: 03/05/2019 at 8:45 am Scheduled Pub. Date: 03/06/2019
FR Document: 2019-04060 PDF 6 Pages (105 KB) Permalink
International Trade Administration
Notices
Antidumping or Countervailing Duty Investigations, Orders, or Reviews:
Certain Frozen Warmwater Shrimp from the Socialist Republic of Vietnam
Filed on: 03/05/2019 at 8:45 am Scheduled Pub. Date: 03/06/2019
FR Document: 2019-04045 PDF 9 Pages (164 KB) Permalink
AMS
USDA Names Importer Member to the Cotton Board
@FrankYiannasFDA
- With new & emerging technologies, the one step-up & one step-back, paper-based paradigm of food traceability is becoming outdated. #smarterfoodsafety #traceability https://iegpolicy.agribusinessintelligence.informa.com/PL219465/FDAs-Yiannas-says-improved-traceability-vital-for-smarter-food-safety