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Hilary Neathey
Food Standards Agency Wales
Dietary Health and Consumer Choice
11th Floor, Southgate House
Wood Street
Cardiff CF10 1EW
Tel:
029 2067 8911
Fax:
029 2067 8919
E-mail:
hilary.neathey@foodstandards.gsi.gov.uk
Responses are requested by: 3 March 2010
PDF Document
(pdf 317KB)
Who will this consultation be of most interest to?
Industry (i.e. manufacturers, retailers, butchers), consumers and enforcement authorities.
What is the subject of this consultation?
Proposals for reducing the administrative burden when applying Regulation 5 of the Meat Products (Wales) Regulations 2004 (MPRs)
What is the purpose of this consultation?
To obtain comments and views on the proposals and, where possible, any further supporting evidence on the four options set out for reducing administrative burdens.
Please note that Annexe E is available in Word format, via the link below, and should be completed and emailed to the address above.
The Food Standards Agency is seeking views and comments on the proposal to reduce the administrative burden associated with the application of Regulation 5 of the Meat Products (Wales) Regulations 2004 (MPRs) (as amended).
Administrative Burdens Measurement Exercise
In 2005 the Agency took part in the cross-Government Administrative Burdens Measurement Exercise (ABME), which measure the administrative burden to business of complying with information obligations (i.e. form filling, record keeping, notifying activities, requesting authorisation, providing information to third parties for example labelling, etc.) required under the legislation in England. This estimated that the information obligation of Regulation 5 of the MPRs costs business in England around £11.2 million annually. Further details of costs for England and the derived costs for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland are provided in the draft Impact Assessment (IA) at Annexe D.
The FSA has been considering ways to reduce the administrative burden while maintaining the current level of information provided to consumers. In doing this we have had the following policy aims:
We are consulting on four options which are summarised below:
These options, along with a brief summary of what they achieve, are as follows:
1. Do nothing
2. Remove all of Regulation 5 and Schedule 3
3. Amend current MPRs retaining the key provisions of Regulation 5
4. Guidance with step by step flow diagrams (Regulation 5 unchanged)
The details of each of these options, together with the costs and benefits of each, are set out in the Impact Assessment (IA) at Annexe D.
Stakeholders are asked to provide comments regarding the impacts of all the options set out in the IA. To facilitate this, we recommend stakeholders give particular attention to the contents of Annexe E – the step by step flow diagram guidance for option 4 – Annexe F regarding the current situation and Annexe G, the proposed SI for England for option 3 (if required, separate but parallel legislation will be drafted for Wales).
The IA (Annexe D) asks a number of questions on specific issues on which stakeholders’ responses would be welcome, as well as a request for information in relation to costs and assumptions behind the calculations.
1
On-going industry cost of option 1 (£0.86m) less industry on-going cost of option 2 (£0m) – see pg.33 of IA
2
On-going industry cost of option 1 (£0.86m) less industry on-going cost of option 3 (£0.43m) – see pg.33 of IA
3
On-going industry cost of option 1 (£0.86m) less industry on-going cost of option 4 (£0.11m) – see pg.33 of IA
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
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