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Draft guide to food safety and other regulations for the meat industry

Monday 9 May 2005

The guide has been produced for UK meat plant operators whose premises require approval, and in some cases veterinary control, under the EU Food Hygiene Regulations. This consultation is therefore intended to cover the UK.

All comments and views should be sent to:

Sylvia Ankrah

Red Meat and Strategy Branch
Food Standards Agency
Room 315C, Aviation House
125 Kingsway
London
WC2B 6NH

Tel: 020 7276 8353
Fax: 020 7276 8362
E-mail: sylvia.ankrah@foodstandards.gsi.gov.uk

Responses are requested by: 5 August 2005

Summary of responses is now available

PDF Document (pdf 52KB)

Consultation details

New Food Hygiene Regulations will apply in all Member States from 1 January 2006. They replace 17 directives, including eight relating specifically to meat. These regulations are:

Best practice for the implementation of new legislation requires that Government Departments issue guidance before the application of that legislation. The Agency has produced summary guidance on the application of the new food hygiene legislation, but it has been agreed with key stakeholders that officials and stakeholders would find it beneficial to have more detailed guidance for the meat sector. The Food Standards Agency has, therefore, been working with UK meat industry representatives and other stakeholders to develop a specific guide for the meat sector.

The draft Guide sets out the legal obligations that apply to food business operators in the meat sector. It provides advice on how these obligations can be met. The use of the Guide is voluntary and other ways of achieving compliance may be equally valid. The draft Guide also refers to the obligation placed on enforcement officials to carry out audits of HACCP and good hygiene practices to verify that food business operators apply procedures continuously and properly. Enforcement officers may refer to it when auditing operator's compliance with food hygiene and the other legislation that it covers, but they should always refer back to the legislation itself. The Guide is not an authoritative interpretation of the law as only the Courts have this power.

Regulation on Implementing and Transitional Measures
Please note that the European Commission is preparing a draft Regulation on Implementing and Transitional Measures in respect of Regulations (EC) 853/2004, 854/2004 and 882/2004, which we will need to take into account when reviewing the content of this Guide. The latest version of this document is itself subject to a separate consultation

Details of this Consultation
The draft Guide is expected to have five parts. However, this consultation covers only Part One (Contents and general issues), Part Two (11 chapters concerning hygiene requirements) and Part Five: Definitions, as these contain the information about the new food hygiene legislation.

As shown in the annotated contents page, one chapter of Part Two has not been circulated previously to the industry editorial panel while a number are being completed and will be sent to them shortly.

Part Three : It is proposed to include two sections at Part Three of the Guide. The first would cover the requirement for the application of HACCP principles and would be based on existing guidance produced for the Meat (HACCP) Regulations 2002, and be informed by Commission guidance currently in draft. The second section would be on the forthcoming Microbiological Criteria Regulation, which will itself be the subject of a separate consultation.

Part Four : It is envisaged that the Guide could include operators' obligations on other existing public health, animal health and welfare legislation.

OPOA : Separate guidance has been prepared concerning the production of rendered animal fat and greaves; treated stomachs, bladders and intestines; gelatine; and collagen. That document is subject to a separate consultation.

Publication and Review : We intend to issue this Guide as a working draft to meat plants operators in October, ahead of the application of the Regulations on 1 January 2006. This is to enable us to assess the Guide after say, three months' use in practice before its final publication in 2006 in a loose leaf bound A5 format. The Guide will then be revised if there are major changes to policy, legislation or guidance from the European Commission, following consultation with a panel of stakeholders.

Food Chain Information : The new requirement in Regulation 853/2004 for slaughterhouse operators to request and then evaluate food chain information from animal producers is covered at Part Two Chapter 8 and Annex.

Other questions
We invite your views on the following questions:

Part One
i) Is the purpose and background clearly set out in the Introduction?

General – presentation
ii) Can you suggest improvements to:

Part Two
iii) Are the legal obligations of operators clearly set out in each chapter?
iv) Can you suggest improvements to the advisory information in each chapter?
v) Is any of the advisory information likely to be difficult to follow in practice, especially in smaller premises?

General – contents
vi) Do you disagree with any information provided, if so what and why?
vii) Have you noticed any errors or omissions, if so where?
viii) Can you suggest additional material that might be included:

Further information

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)

Publication of personal data and confidentiality of responses

In accordance with the FSA principle of openness our Information Centre at Aviation House will hold a copy of the completed consultation. Responses will be open to public access upon request. The FSA will also publish a summary of responses, which may include personal data, such as your full name and contact address details. 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)

Publication of response summary

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 Judith Taylor, the FSA Consultation Co-ordinator, on 020 7276 8633.
Email: judith.taylor@foodstandards.gsi.gov.uk

Related links

Draft guide to food safety and other regulations for the meat industry Contents page with links to chapters

Download pdf  (pdf 20KB) Draft guide to food safety and other regulations for the meat industry Partial Regulatory Impact Assessment

Download pdf  (pdf 15KB) (External) Get Adobe Acrobat reader You may need the free Acrobat Reader to view a pdf

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