Food Standards Agency
Safer food better business banner
AZ-Directory
14 July 2010 14 July 2010 05 October 2010 What's NewRSS
What is RSS?Listen
Listen to this siteWednesday 14 July 2010
The approach to be taken in Agency guidance on how food businesses should control the risk of cross-contamination by E. coli O157 and how those delivering official controls can gain assurance that food business controls are adequate and effective.
Lauren Lindsay
Safety, Policy and Regulation Development Branch
Food Standards Agency in Scotland
6th Floor, St. Magnus House,
25 Guild Street
Aberdeen
AB11 6NJ
Tel:
01224 285118
Fax:
01224 285168
E-mail:
lauren.lindsay@foodstandards.gsi.gov.uk
Responses are requested by: 5 October 2010
PDF Document
(pdf 143KB)
Who will this consultation be of most interest to?
All food businesses handling both raw and ready to eat (RTE) foods
Officials delivering official controls in food businesses
What is the subject of this consultation?
The approach to be taken in Agency guidance on how food businesses should control the risk of cross-contamination by
E. coli O157
and how those delivering official controls can gain assurance that food business controls are adequate and effective.
What is the purpose of this consultation?
To invite stakeholder views on the principles to be applied in controlling the risk of cross-contamination by
E. coli O157
in order to produce clear guidance for use by all relevant food businesses and enforcers. Information about the effectiveness, practicality and appropriateness of the measures, for food businesses and enforcers will help shape the form and content of the guidance which is under development.
The Report of the Public Inquiry into the 2005 E. coli O157 outbreak in Wales (see paragraph 5 for details) was published in 2009 and made a number of recommendations, to which the Agency is responding on a UK-basis. In relation to this consultation, the following are the most significant:
E. coli O157 is a particularly dangerous organism due to:
Young children, the elderly and immune-compromised individuals are particularly at risk. While not exclusively meat-borne, the fatalities in Scotland (1996) and Wales (2005) were due to cross-contamination of food by E.coli O157 from raw meat in a butcher’s premises.
Key proposals:
This consultation invites your comments on the principles that should inform the Agency’s guidance under development. Work thus far to develop the guidance has involved a review of the published material. It has been supplemented by discussion with the following external contacts:
The guidance produced as a result of the comments we receive on the principles, will be subject to further consultation with interested stakeholders, focussing on the users of the proposed guidance.
Questions asked in this consultation:
Questions taken from the Impact Assessment:
The Agency would welcome views on:
We welcome comments from all stakeholders on this consultation. We are particularly keen to hear from small and medium food businesses to better understand how they would be affected by complying with the need for separation to the highest degree physically possible, including dedicated (single purpose) use of complex equipment. We would also welcome comments from those undertaking official controls in food businesses on whether guidance embodying the principles described above would enable them to (a) offer clear advice to food businesses to help them to comply; and (b) be clear about what constitutes non-compliance and the actions to be taken as a result. Please send responses either by email or in hardcopy to the contact shown at the top of this consultation.
Responses are required by close 5 October 2010. Please state, in your response, whether you are responding as a private individual or on behalf of an organisation/company (including details of any stakeholders your organisation represents).
This consultation has been prepared in accordance with the (External) HM Government Code of Practice on Consultation , which states that a consultation must follow better regulation best practice, including carrying out an Impact Assessment (Regulatory Impact Assessment in Scotland). The assessment is included in the consultation documents.
We are interested in what you thought of this consultation and would therefore welcome your general feedback on both the consultation package and overall consultation process. If you would like to assist us to improve the quality of future consultations, please feel free to share your thoughts with us by using the consultation feedback questionnaire.
Download word Consultation feedback questionnaire (Word)
Download pdf Consultation feedback questionnaire (pdf)
In accordance with the FSA principle of openness our Information Centre at Aviation House will hold a copy of the completed consultation. The FSA will publish a summary of responses, which may include personal data, such as your full name. Disclosure of any other personal data would be made only upon request for the full consultation responses. If you do not want this information to be released, please complete and return the Publication of Personal Data Form. Return of this form does not mean that we will treat your response to the consultation as confidential, just your personal data.
Download word Data protection form (Word)
Download pdf Data protection form (pdf)
Within three months of a consultation ending we aim to publish a summary of responses received and provide a link to it from this page.
If, after three months, the summary is still not showing, please contact the person who was responsible for the original consultation. Alternatively, you can contact the FSA Consultation Co-ordinator by email: consultationcoordinator@foodstandards.gsi.gov.uk
Download pdf
(pdf 738KB) (External) Get Adobe Acrobat reader You may need the free Acrobat Reader to view a pdfFind out about our different types of content