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10 Years Later: Reflecting on HACCP, Part II
By Ralph Stafko
Despite initial concerns, and some painful experiences along the way, the Hazard Analysis Critical Control
Point (HACCP) system has proven to be a regulatory model that works. Operators now have assumed control
of and responsibility for their own processes, and FSIS' shift in how it does inspection has given it a
legitimate claim to the title of USDA's public health agency. In last month's issue of Small Plant News,
the first part of this special two-part series on HACCP featured reflections from four key stakeholders:
William "Bill" Smith, FSIS' Assistant Administrator for Program Evaluation, Enforcement and Review;
Rosemary Mucklow, Director emeritus, National Meat Association (NMA); Dr. Kerri Harris, President and CEO,
International HACCP Alliance; and Carol L. Tucker Foreman, Distinguished Fellow, Consumer Federation of
America's Food Policy Institute. The following is the second part of this special report.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) began the
first phase of implementation with the hope that the large plants would blaze the path for the smaller
plants to follow, along with the agency helping in the information transfer. The large plants were,
for the most part, justifiably confident in their ability to develop good HACCP plans with little help
from FSIS. However, as it turns out, the agency sometimes disagreed with the content of their plans.
One commonly contested issue was the identification of hazards "reasonably likely to occur" that
must, therefore, be included in the plan. Who should have the final say?
According to Smith, agency objections to some plants' efforts to unduly minimize the scope of their
HACCP plans led to court cases which generally upheld the agency's authority. In addition, a series of
high-profile recalls by large plants added support to the agency's ability to pass judgment on the content
of HACCP plans.
Says Smith, "HACCP today provides the foundation for most of what we are doing to reduce pathogens.
Our pathogen reduction strategies for Listeria, E. coli O157:H7, and Salmonella are
all based on interventions for them being built into plants' HACCP systems."
As for FSIS' workforce being prepared for HACCP, in many cases, its personnel were not adequately trained
or supported sufficiently to go one-on-one with the plant over the content of a HACCP plan. The agency
early on recognized it needed to make a much greater effort to train its field force and to communicate
better with the regulated industry. But it took some time before it recognized how key, and interrelated,
those two areas are.
"One lesson I learned was the importance of training," said Smith. "'Just in time' training
on HACCP-based inspection proved very difficult. In retrospect, I would've had the agency do much more, earlier,
on training and staffing. It proved to be much more complicated than we originally thought."
Fortunately, the agency has made great strides since. Among other things, it now has a cadre of
inspection personnel trained and dedicated to assessing HACCP systems, including 175 Enforcement Investigation
and Analysis Officers and 400 Public Health Veterinarians.
The improvements in agency technical capabilities have fostered confidence among agency personnel that
in turn supports improved communications with industry. "The agency now recognizes that it cannot apply
a single template to all plants just because they have similarities, and views good communications as
fundamental to HACCP implementation," said Mucklow.
"Both sides agree that reasonable people can—and do—differ on what is needed for a validated
HACCP plan. Questions now are more likely to evoke discussions than ultimatums," added Mucklow. She
praised the agency for its willingness to innovate in that area, noting the agency's recent use of a
third-party mediator to resolve a technical dispute with one of NMA's members.
Smith recalled that another problem initially faced by the agency was a lack of enforcement mechanisms.
The agency's Rules of Practice followed the HACCP Rule by many months, and it then took time to fine-tune
their application. After a rocky start, according to Smith, enforcement procedures now are "well established
and widely understood."
Overall, Harris, Mucklow, Smith, and Tucker Foreman stated that the agency has done a remarkable job
implementing HACCP, certainly better than most observers thought likely when the rule was promulgated.
However, all also agree that the transition has been difficult, and that, as stated by Harris, "it is
still a work in progress."
What Next?
According to Harris, "there are people in both industry and the agency who are still having difficulty
with the transition. Some plant owners still want the agency to 'just tell them what to do,' and some
inspectors still are inclined to oblige. The key to continued progress is continued emphasis on training
and communications."
Mucklow concurs on the need for continued work in those areas. "There needs to be more uniformity
among inspection personnel. I would like to see some kind of HACCP credential for inspectors." She
added, "The biggest remaining challenge is to complete the change in mindsets among all concerned away
from command and control."
Tucker Foreman, while endorsing agency efforts at improving its employee training, outreach, and
communications with plant operators, thinks that the agency goes too far in helping some plants.
"In effect, the agency devotes a disproportionate amount of its limited inspection program resources
to companies that have chronic problems complying with the law."
She suggests that, in keeping with its public health focus, the agency should consider some sort of triage
system that culls the worst plants out from the inspection program. "At a minimum," she asserts,
"the agency should pursue its idea of charging 'compliance fees' to recover some of the public resources
devoted to allowing extremely weak operators to continue in business."
Another challenge noted by Tucker Foreman is the need to better distinguish between processing plants,
where there is a "kill step" that assures destruction of pathogens, and slaughter facilities producing
raw products, where pathogens are not destroyed. The latter poses the much greater public health risk and the
much greater challenge in designing—and inspectors' verifying—a HACCP plan.
Tucker Foreman argues more broadly that in order for the HACCP rule to achieve its early promise, the
agency needs two things: better data and data systems, and better enforcement tools. She maintains that in
order for the agency to achieve its public health goals, it must have a better way to measure the public
health outcomes of agency policies.
"The agency has made progress on this, but still doesn't have a way to link specific illnesses to
specific categories of foods. We need to be able to determine the public health impacts of the agency's
regulatory efforts before we will be able to build a credible public health-based inspection program,"
said Tucker Foreman. She contends that more powerful enforcement mechanisms also are needed. "Ideally,
the agency would get the statutory authority it needs to impose pathogen performance standards that plants
must meet in order to operate."
The next frontier for the agency in meat and poultry food safety may be outside inspected establishments.
Smith feels FSIS has largely succeeded in getting inspected operators under HACCP systems. He sees the next
big development as extending HACCP-like controls over hazards to which meat and poultry are exposed during
transport, storage, and at retail. "The original concept was that HACCP would deal with food safety
hazards farm-to-table," said Smith. "We have a ways to go on that."
The reflections of these four stakeholders support the observation that implementation of the HACCP Rule
10 years ago launched a revolution in meat and poultry inspection. However, they also make clear that
inspection in the era of HACCP continues to evolve. It is still "a work in progress."
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Designing Your HACCP Plan, Looking at the First Three Principles
By Ellyn Blumberg
In the June issue of Small Plant News, we featured the first
of a four-part series on Designing Your Own HACCP Plan. This month, we focus on the first three principles of HACCP.
Say what you do, do what you say, and prove it. That's HACCP. HACCP regulations require meat and poultry
plants to have a plan—a written plan—to identify and prevent hazards before they occur, and to
be able to correct problems if they are detected. Plants design their plan around the seven basic HACCP Principles.
HACCP Principle 1
The first principle is to conduct a hazard analysis by addressing these two questions. What are your food
safety hazards? Are they reasonably likely to occur? In this stage of designing a HACCP plan, your HACCP team,
or point of contact, should prepare a list of the steps in the production process that are reasonably likely
to cause injury or illness and the preventative measures the plant uses to control them.
First, look over the product or process description and look for information that could affect public health.
You could ask yourself the following questions. Does the product need to be refrigerated or frozen during transit?
Will the amount of acidic ingredients affect the growth and survival of bacteria? Or, have additives been added
to kill bacteria? Also look at the product ingredients and packaging materials. Ask yourself questions such as:
could these ingredients or packaging materials contain any harmful bacteria, dangerous chemicals, or injurious
physical objects?
While conducting a hazard analysis, it's best to determine if any food safety hazards exist for each processing
step listed in your process flow diagram. You could ask yourself—could contaminants reach the product
during this processing step? Or could bacteria multiply during this process step?
At the same time you're identifying hazards, think of possible preventative measures. Sometimes it's the
case that more than one preventative measure may be required to control a specific hazard, or that more than
one hazard may be controlled by one preventative measure. As you go through the hazard analysis, you may
recognize preventative measures already in place in your production process. The key to a successful hazard
analysis is to link these measures to the food safety hazards you have just identified and document your
decisionmaking.
HACCP Principle 2
The second HACCP principle is to identify critical control points. Where can controls be applied in your
process to prevent, eliminate, or reduce a food safety hazard? The step at which the critical control
point is located does not necessarily have to be at the point where the hazard is introduced into the system.
For instance, harmful bacteria introduced into the process on raw meat may be controlled by a cooking step
later in the process.
Common critical control points include chilling or freezing to a specified temperature to prevent bacteria
from growing, or cooking that must occur for a specific time and temperature in order to destroy bacteria.
Another common critical control point is prevention of cross contamination between raw and cooked product.
Different plants, preparing the same food, can identify different food safety hazards and different
critical control points. Usually no two plants have the same floor plan, equipment, or ingredients, so the
critical control points you identify will reflect the uniqueness of your processing plant.
HACCP Principle 3
The third principle is to establish critical limits. Critical limits are measurable or observable values that
can be used to judge whether specific food safety standards have been met. In a nutshell, if a process can
meet specific food safety standards, then the resulting product will also meet an acceptable food safety level.
Each critical control point will have at least one (possibly more) preventative measures that need to be
controlled to assure prevention, elimination, or reduction of food safety hazards. So, at each critical control
point, you must identify corresponding critical limits.
Critical limits can come from a variety of sources. They may be based on FSIS regulations or guidelines,
FDA tolerances and action levels, scientific and technical literature, surveys, experimental studies or the
recommendations of recognized experts in the industry, academia, trade associations or processing authorities.
Most often, critical limits are parameters such as temperature, time, pH, physical dimensions, or the absence of
target bacteria. To be effective, each critical limit must be actual values that can be measured and based on
factual information.
When determining your critical limits, you should consider the type of equipment, the volume of product
being produced, how the critical limit will be monitored, and frequency of the monitoring. In all cases, you
must be able to provide a basis for how you selected and developed your critical limits, and the
supporting documentation must be available for the inspector to review.
By designing and following an effective HACCP plan, you'll certainly do your part to protect public health.
It makes good business sense as well. For additional information on the first three principles of a HACCP plan,
visit FSIS' Web site at www.fsis.usda.gov or call (202) 690-6520. In the August issue of Small Plant News,
we'll explore HACCP principles four through seven when designing your plan.
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Briefs
By Sheila Johnson
Podcasting
FSIS recently launched a series of educational podcasts to address food safety and education issues for consumers
and other stakeholders.
As a part of the agency's outreach to small and very small establishments, FSIS is providing small and very
small plant owners, operators, and employees with information via podcasts. Current podcasts cover a
variety of topics relevant to small plants, ranging from food safety resources to preventing recalls.
To listen to individual podcasts or sign up for a free subscription, visit www.fsis.usda.gov. For
assistance or details concerning FSIS podcasts, send an e-mail to podcast@fsis.usda.gov
or call (202) 690-6520.
FSIS Releases FY 2008-2013 Strategic Plan
FSIS recently released The FSIS FY 2008-2013 Strategic Plan,
which will guide the agency's activities over the next 5 years. The plan includes FSIS' public health mission,
vision, goals, and the means and strategies for meeting those goals.
In the "Letter from the Administrator" section of the plan, FSIS Administrator Al Almanza states
that the plan is the "foundation document for both the long range and day-to-day operations of the agency."
For more information visit www.fsis.usda.gov or call (202) 690-6520.
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Obtain Products from FSIS' Cooperative Agreements
By Jeff Tarrant, U.S. Public Health Service
FSIS occasionally funds cooperative agreements with State or local agencies, universities, or nonprofit
organizations for projects to benefit the public as well as support FSIS' mission. In accordance with the
Freedom of Information Act, FSIS makes the work products of such projects available to the public as they are
completed. Products from the following cooperative agreements are now available:
Since the work products produced in cooperation with FSIS are in the public domain, they are the property of the
cooperators and do not necessarily reflect USDA policy. To access the work products, go to:
www.fsis.usda.gov/ About_FSIS/Cooperative_Agreements/index.asp.
For personal assistance, contact Ralph Stafko at (202) 690-6592 or Kathleen Barrett at (202) 690-6644.
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Small Plant NEWS
Editor: Keith Payne
Production: Sally Fernandez
Design: Rowena M. Becknel
Contact: Small Plant News, USDA/FSIS, Aerospace Building,
3rd Floor-Room 405, 14th and Independence Ave., SW, Washington,
DC 20250. (202) 690-6520
E-mail: SmallPlantNews@fsis.usda.gov |