Proposed Text
The following words and terms when used in this chapter shall have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
"Accredited program" means a food protection manager certification program that has been evaluated and listed by an accrediting agency as conforming to national standards for organizations that certify individuals. "Accredited program" refers to the certification process and is a designation based upon an independent evaluation of factors such as the sponsor's mission; organizational structure; staff resources; revenue sources; policies; public information regarding program scope, eligibility requirements, recertification, discipline, and grievance procedures; and test development and administration. "Accredited program" does not refer to training functions or educational programs.
"Additive" means either a (i) "food additive" having the meaning stated in the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 21 USC § 321(s) and 21 CFR 170.3(e)(1) or (ii) "color additive" having the meaning stated in the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 21 USC § 321(t) and 21 CFR 70.3(f).
"Adulterated" has the meaning stated in the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 21 USC § 342.
"Approved" means acceptable to the department based on a determination of conformity with principles, practices, and generally recognized standards that protect public health.
"Approved water system" means a permitted waterworks constructed, maintained, and operated pursuant to 12VAC5-590 or a private well constructed, maintained, and operated pursuant to 12VAC5-630.
"Asymptomatic" means without obvious symptoms; not showing or producing indications of a disease or other medical condition, such as an individual infected with a pathogen but not exhibiting or producing any signs or symptoms of vomiting, diarrhea, or jaundice. "Asymptomatic" includes not showing symptoms because symptoms have resolved or subsided, or because symptoms never manifested.
"Aw" means water activity that is a measure of the free moisture in a food, is the quotient of the water vapor pressure of the substance divided by the vapor pressure of pure water at the same temperature, and is indicated by the symbol Aw.
"Balut" means an embryo inside a fertile egg that has been incubated for a period sufficient for the embryo to reach a specific stage of development after which it is removed from incubation before hatching.
"Beverage" means a liquid for drinking, including water.
"Bottled drinking water" means water that is sealed in bottles, packages, or other containers and offered for sale for human consumption, including bottled mineral water.
"Casing" means a tubular container for sausage products made of either natural or artificial (synthetic) material.
"Certification number" means a the unique combination of letters and numbers assigned identification number issued by a shellfish control authority to a molluscan shellfish dealer according to the provisions of the National Shellfish Sanitation Program each dealer for each location. Each certification number shall consist of a one-digit to five-digit Arabic numeral preceded by the two-letter state abbreviation and followed by a two-letter abbreviation for each type of activity the dealer is qualified to perform in accordance with the provisions of the National Shellfish Sanitation Program using the terms in Tables A and B:
Table A. Certifications |
|
Acronym |
Term |
SP |
Shucker-packer |
RP |
Repacker |
SS |
Shellstock shipper |
RS |
Reshipper |
DP |
Depuration processor |
Table B. Permits |
|
Acronym |
Term |
PHP |
Post-harvest processing |
AQ |
Aquaculture |
WS |
Wet storage |
"CFR" means Code of Federal Regulations. Citations in this chapter to the CFR refer sequentially to the title, part, and section numbers. For example, 40 CFR 180.194 refers to Title 40, Part 180, Section 194.
"CIP" means cleaned in place by the circulation or flowing by mechanical means through a piping system of a detergent solution, water rinse, and sanitizing solution onto or over equipment surfaces that require cleaning, such as the method used, in part, to clean and sanitize a frozen dessert machine. "CIP" does not include the cleaning of equipment such as band saws, slicers, or mixers that are subjected to in-place manual cleaning without the use of a CIP system.
"Commingle" means: 1. To combine shellstock harvested on different days or from different growing areas as identified on the tag or label; or 2. To combine shucked shellfish from containers with different container codes or different shucking dates the act of combining different lots of shellfish.
"Comminuted" means reduced in size by methods including chopping, flaking, grinding, or mincing. "Comminuted" includes (i) fish or meat products that are reduced in size and restructured or reformulated such as gefilte fish, gyros, ground beef, and sausage and (ii) a mixture of two or more types of meat that have been reduced in size and combined, such as sausages made from two or more meats.
"Commissioner" means the Commissioner of Agriculture and Consumer Services, his duly designated officer, or his agent.
"Conditional employee" means a potential food employee to whom a job offer is made, conditional on responses to subsequent medical questions or examinations designed to identify potential food employees who may be suffering from a disease that can be transmitted through food and done in compliance with Title 1 of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990.
"Confirmed disease outbreak" means a foodborne disease outbreak in which laboratory analysis of appropriate specimens identifies a causative agent and epidemiological analysis implicates the food as the source of the illness.
"Consumer" means a person who is a member of the public, takes possession of food, is not functioning in the capacity of an operator of a food establishment a permit holder or an operator of a food processing plant, and does not offer the food for resale.
"Core item" means a provision in this chapter that is not designated as a priority item or a priority foundation item. "Core item" includes an item that usually relates to general sanitation, operational controls, sanitation standard operating procedures (SSOPs), facilities or structures, equipment design, or general maintenance.
"Corrosion-resistant materials" means a material that maintains acceptable surface cleanability characteristics under prolonged influence of the food to be contacted, the normal use of cleaning compounds and sanitizing solutions, and other conditions of the use environment.
"Counter-mounted equipment" means equipment that is not portable and is designed to be mounted off the floor on a table, counter, or shelf.
"Critical control point" means a point or procedure in a specific food system where loss of control may result in an unacceptable health risk.
"Critical limit" means the maximum or minimum value to which a physical, biological, or chemical parameter must be controlled at a critical control point to minimize the risk that the identified food safety hazard may occur.
"Cut leafy greens" means fresh leafy greens whose leaves have been cut, shredded, sliced, chopped, or torn. The term "leafy greens" includes iceberg lettuce, romaine lettuce, leaf lettuce, butter lettuce, baby leaf lettuce (i.e., immature lettuce or leafy greens), escarole, endive, spring mix, spinach, cabbage, kale, arugula, and chard. The term "leafy greens" does not include herbs such as cilantro or parsley.
"Dealer" means a person who is authorized by a shellfish control authority for the activities of a shellstock shipper, shucker-packer, repacker, reshipper, or depuration processor of molluscan shellfish according to the provisions of the National Shellfish Sanitation Program.
"Department" means the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.
"Disclosure" means a written statement that clearly identifies the animal-derived foods that are, or can be ordered, raw, undercooked, or without otherwise being processed to eliminate pathogens, or items that contain an ingredient that is raw, undercooked, or without otherwise being processed to eliminate pathogens.
"Dry storage area" means a room or area designated for the storage of packaged or containerized bulk food that is not time/temperature control for safety food and dry goods such as single-service items.
"Easily cleanable" means a characteristic of a surface that:
1. Allows effective removal of soil by normal cleaning methods;
2. Is dependent on the material, design, construction, and installation of the surface; and
3. Varies with the likelihood of the surface's role in introducing pathogenic or toxigenic agents or other contaminants into food based on the surface's approved placement, purpose, and use.
"Easily cleanable" includes a tiered application of the criteria that qualify the surface as easily cleanable as specified above in this definition to different situations in which varying degrees of cleanability are required, such as:
1. The appropriateness of stainless steel for a food preparation surface as opposed to the lack of need for stainless steel to be used for floors or for tables used for consumer dining; or
2. The need for a different degree of cleanability for a utilitarian attachment or accessory in the kitchen as opposed to a decorative attachment or accessory in the consumer dining area.
"Easily movable" means:
1. Portable; mounted on casters, gliders, or rollers; or provided with a mechanical means to safely tilt a unit of equipment for cleaning; and
2. Having no utility connection, a utility connection that disconnects quickly, or a flexible utility connection line of sufficient length to allow the equipment to be moved for cleaning of the equipment and adjacent area.
"Egg" means the shell egg of avian species, such as chicken, duck, goose, guinea, quail, ratites, or turkey. "Egg" does not include a balut, egg of the reptile species such as alligator, or an egg product.
"Egg product" means all, or a portion of, the contents found inside eggs separated from the shell and pasteurized in a food processing plant, with or without added ingredients, intended for human consumption, such as dried, frozen, or liquid eggs. "Egg product" does not include food that contains eggs only in a relatively small proportion, such as cake mixes.
"Employee" means the operator permit holder, person in charge, food employee, person having supervisory or management duties, person on the payroll, family member, volunteer, person performing work under contractual agreement, or other person working in a food establishment.
"EPA" means the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
"Equipment" means an article that is used in the operation of a food establishment, such as a freezer, grinder, hood, ice maker, meat block, mixer, oven, reach-in refrigerator, scale, sink, slicer, stove, table, temperature measuring device for ambient air, vending machine, or warewashing machine. "Equipment" does not include apparatuses used for handling or storing large quantities of packaged foods that are received from a supplier in a cased or overwrapped lot, such as hand trucks, forklifts, dollies, pallets, racks, and skids.
"Exclude" means to prevent a person from working as an employee in a food establishment or entering a food establishment as an employee.
"FDA" means the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
"Fish" means fresh or saltwater finfish, crustaceans, other forms of aquatic life (including alligator, frog, aquatic turtle, jellyfish, sea cucumber, and sea urchin and the roe of such animals) other than birds or mammals, and all mollusks, if such animal life is intended for human consumption; and includes an edible human food product derived in whole or in part from fish, including fish that has been processed in any manner.
"Food" means (i) a raw, cooked, or processed edible substance, ice, beverage, or ingredient used or intended for use or for sale in whole or in part for human consumption or (ii) chewing gum.
"Foodborne disease outbreak" means the occurrence of two or more cases of a similar illness resulting from the ingestion of a common food.
"Food-contact surface" means a surface of equipment or a utensil with which food normally comes into contact, or a surface of equipment or a utensil from which food may drain, drip, or splash into a food, or onto a surface normally in contact with food.
"Food employee" means an individual working with unpackaged food, food equipment or utensils, or food-contact surfaces.
"Food establishment" means an operation that (i) stores, prepares, packages, serves, vends food directly to the consumer, or otherwise provides food for human consumption such as a market, restaurant, satellite or catered feeding location, catering operation if the operation provides food directly to a consumer or to a conveyance used to transport people, vending location, conveyance used to transport people, institution, or food bank and (ii) relinquishes possession of a food to a consumer directly, or indirectly through a delivery service such as home delivery of grocery orders or restaurant takeout orders, or delivery service that is provided by common carriers.
"Food establishment" includes (i) an element of the operation such as a transportation vehicle or a central preparation facility that supplies a vending location or satellite feeding location unless the vending or satellite feeding location is inspected by the regulatory authority and (ii) an operation that is conducted in a mobile, stationary, temporary, or permanent facility or location where consumption is on or off the premises.
"Food establishment" does not include:
1. An establishment that offers only prepackaged foods that are not time/temperature control for safety foods;
2. A produce stand that only offers whole, uncut fresh fruits and vegetables;
3. A food processing plant, including those that are located on the premises of a food establishment;
4. A food warehouse;
5. A kitchen in a private home; or
6. A private home that receives catered or home delivered food.
"Food processing plant" means a commercial operation that manufactures, packages, labels, or stores food for human consumption and provides food for sale or distribution to other business entities such as food processing plants or food establishments. "Food processing plant" does not include a "food establishment."
"Game animal" means an animal, the products of which are food, that is not classified as (i) livestock, sheep, swine, goat, horse, mule, or other equine in 9 CFR 301.2; (ii) poultry; or (iii) fish. "Game animal" includes mammals such as reindeer, elk, deer, antelope, water buffalo, bison, rabbit, squirrel, opossum, raccoon, nutria, or muskrat, and nonaquatic reptiles such as land snakes. "Game animal" does not include ratites.
"General use pesticide" means a pesticide that is not classified by EPA for restricted use as specified in 40 CFR 152.175.
"Grade A standards" means the requirements of the Grade "A" Pasteurized Milk Ordinance, 2017 Revision, (U.S. Food and Drug Administration) with which certain fluid and dry milk and milk products comply.
"HACCP plan" means a written document that delineates the formal procedures for following the Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point principles developed by the National Advisory Committee on Microbiological Criteria for Foods.
"Handwashing sink" means a lavatory, a basin or vessel for washing, a wash basin, or a plumbing fixture especially placed for use in personal hygiene and designed for the washing of hands. "Handwashing sink" includes an automatic handwashing facility.
"Hazard" means a biological, chemical, or physical property that may cause an unacceptable consumer health risk.
"Health practitioner" means a physician licensed to practice medicine, or if allowed by law, a nurse practitioner, physician assistant, or similar medical professional.
"Hermetically sealed container" means a container that is designed and intended to be secure against the entry of microorganisms and, in the case of low acid canned foods, to maintain the commercial sterility of its contents after processing.
"Highly susceptible population" means persons who are more likely than other people in the general population to experience foodborne disease because they are (i) immunocompromised; preschool age children, or older adults; and (ii) obtaining food at a facility that provides services such as custodial care, health care, or assisted living, such as a child or adult day care center, kidney dialysis center, hospital or nursing home, or nutritional or socialization services such as a senior center.
"Imminent health hazard" means a significant threat or danger to health that is considered to exist when there is evidence sufficient to show that a product, practice, circumstance, or event creates a situation that requires immediate correction or cessation of operation to prevent injury based on the number of potential injuries, and the nature, severity, and duration of the anticipated injury.
"Injected" means manipulating meat to which a solution has been introduced into its interior by processes that are referred to as "injecting," "pump marinating," or "stitch pumping."
"In-shell product" means nonliving, processed shellfish with one or both shells present.
"Intact meat" means a cut of whole muscle meat that has not undergone comminution, vacuum tumbling with solutions, mechanical tenderization, or reconstruction, cubing, or pounding.
"Juice" means the aqueous liquid expressed or extracted from one or more fruits or vegetables, purées of the edible portions of one or more fruits or vegetables, or any concentrate of such liquid or purée. "Juice" does not include, for purposes of HACCP, liquids, purées, or concentrates that are not used as beverages or ingredients of beverages.
"Kitchenware" means food preparation and storage utensils.
"Law" means applicable local, state, and federal statutes, regulations, and ordinances.
"Linens" means fabric items such as cloth hampers, cloth napkins, table cloths, wiping cloths, and work garments, including cloth gloves.
"Major food allergen" means milk, egg, fish (such as bass, flounder, cod, and including crustacean shellfish such as crab, lobster, or shrimp), tree nuts (such as almonds, pecans, or walnuts), wheat, peanuts, and soybeans, and sesame; or a food ingredient that contains protein derived from one of these foods. "Major food allergen" does not include (i) any highly refined oil derived from a major food allergen in this definition and any ingredient derived from such highly refined oil or (ii) any ingredient that is exempt under the petition or notification process specified in the Food Allergen Labeling and Consumer Protection Act of 2004 (P.L. 108-282).
"Meat" means the flesh of animals used as food including the dressed flesh of cattle, swine, sheep, or goats and other edible animals, except fish, poultry, and wild game animals as specified under 2VAC5-585-330 A 2 and 3.
"Mechanically tenderized" means manipulating meat by piercing with a set of needles, pins, blades, or any mechanical device that breaks up muscle fiber and tough connective tissue to increase tenderness. This includes injection, scoring, and processes that may be referred to as "blade tenderizing," "jaccarding," "pinning," or "needling."
"mg/L" means milligrams per liter, which is the metric equivalent of parts per million (ppm).
"Mobile food establishment" means a food establishment mounted on wheels, excluding boats in the water, that is readily movable from place to place at all times during operation and includes pushcarts, trailers, trucks, or vans. The unit, all operations, and all equipment must be integral to and be within or attached to the unit.
"Molluscan shellfish" means any edible species of fresh or frozen oysters, clams, mussels, and scallops or edible portions thereof, except when the scallop product consists only of the shucked adductor muscle. Molluscan shellfish includes shellstock, shucked shellfish, and in-shell products.
"Noncontinuous cooking" means the cooking of food in a food establishment using a process in which the initial heating of the food is intentionally halted so that it may be cooled and held for complete cooking at a later time prior to sale or service. "Noncontinuous cooking" does not include cooking procedures that only involve temporarily interrupting or slowing an otherwise continuous cooking process.
"Operator" means the entity that is legally responsible for the operation of the food establishment such as the owner, the owner's agent, or other person.
"Packaged" means bottled, canned, cartoned, bagged, or wrapped, whether packaged in a food establishment or a food processing plant. "Packaged" does not include wrapped or placed in a carry-out container to protect the food during service or delivery to the consumer, by a food employee, upon consumer request.
"Permit" means the document issued by the department that authorizes a person to operate a food establishment.
"Permit holder" means the entity that:
1. Is legally responsible for the operation of the food establishment, such as the owner, the owner's agent, or other person; and
2. Possesses a valid permit to operate a food establishment.
"Person" means an association, a corporation, individual, partnership, other legal entity, government, or governmental subdivision or agency.
"Person in charge" means the individual present at a food establishment who is responsible for the operation at the time of inspection.
"Personal care items" means items or substances that may be poisonous, toxic, or a source of contamination and are used to maintain or enhance a person's health, hygiene, or appearance. "Personal care items" include items such as medicines, first aid supplies, and other items such as cosmetics and toiletries such as toothpaste and mouthwash.
"pH" means the symbol for the negative logarithm of the hydrogen ion concentration, which is a measure of the degree of acidity or alkalinity of a solution. Values between 0 and 7.0 indicate acidity and values between 7.0 and 14 indicate alkalinity. The value for pure distilled water is 7.0, which is considered neutral.
"Physical facilities" means the structure and interior surfaces of a food establishment including accessories such as soap and towel dispensers and attachments such as light fixtures and heating or air conditioning system vents.
"Plumbing fixture" means a receptacle or device that is permanently or temporarily connected to the water distribution system of the premises and demands a supply of water from the system or discharges used water, waste materials, or sewage directly or indirectly to the drainage system of the premises.
"Plumbing system" means the water supply and distribution pipes; plumbing fixtures and traps; soil, waste, and vent pipes; sanitary and storm sewers and building drains, including their respective connections, devices, and appurtenances within the premises; and water-treating equipment.
"Poisonous or toxic materials" means substances that are not intended for ingestion and are included in four five categories:
1. Cleaners and sanitizers, which include cleaning and sanitizing agents and agents such as caustics, acids, drying agents, polishes, and other chemicals;
2. Pesticides, except sanitizers, which include substances such as insecticides and rodenticides;
3. Substances necessary for the operation and maintenance of the establishment such as nonfood grade lubricants and personal care items that may be deleterious to health; and
4. Substances that are not necessary for the operation and maintenance of the establishment and are on the premises for retail sale, such as petroleum products and paints; and
5. Restricted-use pesticides.
"Potable water" means water fit for human consumption that is obtained from an approved water supply and that is (i) sanitary and normally free of minerals, organic substances, and toxic agents in excess of reasonable amounts and (ii) adequate in quantity and quality for the minimum health requirements of the person served. Potable water is traditionally known as drinking water and excludes such nonpotable forms as boiler water, mop water, rainwater, wastewater, and nondrinking water.
"Poultry" means any domesticated bird (chickens, turkeys, ducks, geese, guineas, ratites, or squabs), whether live or dead, as defined in 9 CFR 381.1 and any migratory waterfowl, game bird, pheasant, partridge, quail, grouse, or pigeon, whether live or dead, as defined in 9 CFR 362.1.
"Premises" means the physical facility, its contents, and the contiguous land or property under the control of the operator permit holder or the physical facility, its contents, and the land or property not described above if its facilities and contents are under the control of the operator permit holder and may impact food establishment personnel, facilities, or operations, and a food establishment is only one component of a larger operation.
"Primal cut" means a basic major cut into which carcasses and sides of meat are separated, such as a beef round, pork loin, lamb flank, or veal breast.
"Priority foundation item" means a provision in this chapter whose application supports, facilitates, or enables one or more priority items. "Priority foundation item" includes an item that requires the purposeful incorporation of specific actions, equipment, or procedures by industry management to attain control of risk factors that contribute to foodborne illness or injury such as personnel training, infrastructure or necessary equipment, HACCP plans, documentation or recordkeeping, and labeling and is denoted in this chapter with a superscript "Pf," which looks like this: Pf.
"Priority item" means a provision in this chapter whose application contributes directly to the elimination, prevention, or reduction to an acceptable level of hazards associated with foodborne illness or injury and there is no other provision that more directly controls the hazard. "Priority item" includes items with a quantifiable measure to show control of hazards such as cooking, reheating, cooling, and handwashing and is denoted in this chapter with a superscript "P," which looks like this: P.
"Private well" means any water well constructed for a person on land that is owned or leased by that person and is usually intended for household, groundwater source heat pump, agricultural use, industrial use, or other nonpublic water well.
"Pure water" means potable water fit for human consumption that is (i) sanitary and normally free of minerals, organic substances, and toxic agents in excess of reasonable amounts and (ii) adequate in quantity and quality for the minimum health requirements of the persons served.
"Ratite" means a flightless bird such as an emu, ostrich, or rhea.
"Ready-to-eat food" means food that:
1. (i) Is in a form that is edible without additional preparation to achieve food safety, as specified under 2VAC5-585-700 A, B, and C; 2VAC5-585-710; or 2VAC5-585-730; (ii) is a raw or partially cooked animal food and the consumer is advised as specified under 2VAC5-585-700 D 1 and D 3; or (iii) is prepared in accordance with a variance that is granted as specified under 2VAC5-585-700 D 4; and
2. May receive additional preparation for palatability or aesthetic, epicurean, gastronomic, or culinary purposes.
"Ready-to-eat food" includes:
1. Raw animal food that is cooked as specified under 2VAC5-585-700 or 2VAC5-585-710, or frozen as specified under 2VAC5-585-730;
2. Raw fruits and vegetables that are washed as specified under 2VAC5-585-510;
3. Plant food that is cooked for hot holding as specified under 2VAC5-585-720;
4. All time/temperature control for safety food that is cooked to the temperature and time required for the specific food under Article 4 (2VAC5-585-700 et seq.) of Part III of this chapter and cooled as specified in 2VAC5-585-800;
5. Plant food for which further washing, cooking, or other processing is not required for food safety, and from which rinds, peels, husks, or shells, if naturally present, are removed;
6. Substances derived from plants such as spices, seasonings, and sugar;
7. A bakery item such as bread, cakes, pies, fillings, or icing for which further cooking is not required for food safety;
8. The following products that are produced in accordance with USDA guidelines and that have received a lethality treatment for pathogens: dry, fermented sausages, such as dry salami or pepperoni; salt-cured meat and poultry products, such as prosciutto ham, country cured ham, and Parma ham; and dried meat and poultry products, such as jerky or beef sticks; and
9. Food manufactured as specified in 21 CFR Part 113.
"Ready-to-eat food" does not include:
1. Commercially packaged food that bears a manufacturer's cooking instructions; or
2. Food for which the manufacturer has provided information that the food has not been processed to control for pathogens.
"Reduced oxygen packaging" means (i) the reduction of the amount of oxygen in a package by removing oxygen; displacing oxygen and replacing it with another gas or combination of gases; or otherwise controlling the oxygen content to a level below that normally found in the atmosphere (approximately 21% at sea level); and (ii) a process as specified in clause (i) of this definition that involves a food for which the hazards Clostridium botulinum or Listeria monocytogenes require control in the final packaged form.
"Reduced oxygen packaging" includes:
1. Vacuum packaging, in which air is removed from a package of food and the package is hermetically sealed so that a vacuum remains inside the package;
2. Modified atmosphere packaging, in which the atmosphere of a package of food is modified so that its composition is different from air, but the atmosphere may change over time due to the permeability of the packaging material or the respiration of the food. Modified atmosphere packaging includes reduction in the proportion of oxygen, total replacement of oxygen, or an increase in the proportion of other gases such as carbon dioxide or nitrogen;
3. Controlled atmosphere packaging, in which the atmosphere of a package of food is modified so that until the package is opened, its composition is different from air, and continuous control of that atmosphere is maintained, such as by using oxygen scavengers or a combination of total replacement of oxygen, nonrespiring food, and impermeable packaging material;
4. Cook chill packaging, in which cooked food is hot filled into impermeable bags that have the air expelled and are then sealed or crimped closed. The bagged food is rapidly chilled and refrigerated at temperatures that inhibit the growth of psychotrophic psychrotrophic pathogens; or
5. Sous vide packaging, in which raw or partially cooked food is vacuum packaged in an impermeable bag, cooked in the bag, rapidly chilled, and refrigerated at temperatures that inhibit the growth of psychotrophic psychrotrophic pathogens.
"Refuse" means solid waste not carried by water through the sewage system.
"Regulatory authority" means local, state, or federal enforcement body or their authorized representative having jurisdiction over the food establishment.
"Reminder" means a written statement concerning the health risk of consuming animal foods raw, undercooked, or without otherwise being processed to eliminate pathogens.
"Reservice" means the transfer of food that is unused and returned by a consumer after being served or sold and in the possession of the consumer, to another person.
"Restrict" means to limit the activities of a food employee so that there is no risk of transmitting a disease that is transmissible through food and the food employee does not work with exposed food, clean equipment, utensils, linens, or unwrapped single-service or single-use articles.
"Restricted egg" means any check, dirty egg, incubator reject, inedible, leaker, or loss as defined in 9 CFR Part 590.
"Restricted use pesticide" means a pesticide product that contains the active ingredients specified in 40 CFR 152.175 and that is limited to use by or under the direct supervision of a certified applicator.
"Risk" means the likelihood that an adverse health effect will occur within a population as a result of a hazard in a food.
"Safe material" means an article manufactured from or composed of materials that may not reasonably be expected to result, directly or indirectly, in their becoming a component or otherwise affecting the characteristics of any food; an additive that is used as specified in § 409 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 USC § 348); or other materials that are not additives and that are used in conformity with applicable regulations of the Food and Drug Administration.
"Sanitization" means the application of cumulative heat or chemicals on cleaned food-contact surfaces that, when evaluated for efficacy, is sufficient to yield a 5-log reduction, which is equal to a 99.999% reduction, of representative disease microorganisms of public health importance.
"Sealed" means free of cracks or other openings that allow the entry or passage of moisture.
"Service animal" means an animal such as a guide dog, signal dog, or other animal individually trained to provide assistance to an individual with a disability.
"Servicing area" means an operating base location to which a mobile food establishment or transportation vehicle returns regularly for such things as vehicle and equipment cleaning, discharging liquid or solid wastes, refilling water tanks and ice bins, and boarding food.
"Sewage" means liquid waste containing animal or vegetable matter in suspension or solution and may include liquids containing chemicals in solution. "Sewage" includes water-carried and non-water-carried human excrement or kitchen, laundry, shower, bath, or lavatory waste separately or together with such underground surface, storm, or other water and liquid industrial wastes as may be present from residences, buildings, vehicles, industrial establishments, or other places.
"Shellfish control authority" means a state, federal, foreign, tribal, or other government entity legally responsible for administering a program that includes certification of molluscan shellfish harvesters and dealers for interstate commerce.
"Shellstock" means raw, in-shell live molluscan shellfish in the shell.
"Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli" or "STEC" means any E. coli capable of producing Shiga toxins (also called verocytotoxins). STEC infections can be asymptomatic or may result in a spectrum of illness ranging from mild nonbloody diarrhea to hemorrhagic colitis (i.e., bloody diarrhea) to hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), which is a type of kidney failure. Examples of serotypes of STEC include: E. coli O157:H7, E. coli O157:NM, E. coli O26:H11, E. coli O145:NM, E. coli O103:H2, and E. coli O111:NM. STEC are sometimes referred to as VTEC (verocytotoxigenic E. coli) or as EHEC (enterohemorrhagic E. coli). EHEC are a subset of STEC that can cause hemorrhagic colitis or HUS.
"Shucked shellfish" means molluscan shellfish that have one or both shells removed.
"Single-service articles" means tableware, carry-out utensils, and other items such as bags, containers, placemats, stirrers, straws, toothpicks, and wrappers that are designed and constructed for one time, one person use after which they are intended for discard.
"Single-use articles" means utensils and bulk food containers designed and constructed to be used once and discarded. "Single-use articles" includes items such as wax paper, butcher paper, plastic wrap, formed aluminum food containers, jars, plastic tubs or buckets, bread wrappers, pickle barrels, ketchup bottles, and number 10 cans that do not meet the materials, durability, strength, and cleanability specifications under 2VAC5-585-960, 2VAC5-585-1080, and 2VAC5-585-1100 for multiuse utensils.
"Slacking" means the process of moderating the temperature of a food such as allowing a food to gradually increase from a temperature of -10°F (-23°C) to 25°F (-4°C) in preparation for deep-fat frying or to facilitate even heat penetration during the cooking of previously block-frozen food such as shrimp.
"Smooth" means a food-contact surface having a surface free of pits and inclusions with a cleanability equal to or exceeding that of (100 grit) number three stainless steel; a nonfood-contact surface of equipment having a surface equal to that of commercial grade hot-rolled steel free of visible scale; and a floor, wall, or ceiling having an even or level surface with no roughness or projections that render it difficult to clean.
"Tableware" means eating, drinking, and serving utensils for table use such as flatware including forks, knives, and spoons; hollowware including bowls, cups, serving dishes, and tumblers; and plates.
"Temperature measuring device" means a thermometer, thermocouple, thermistor, or other device that indicates the temperature of food, air, or water.
"Temporary food establishment" means a food establishment that operates for a period of no more than 14 consecutive days in conjunction with a single event or celebration.
"Time/temperature control for safety food" or "TCS" (formerly "potentially hazardous food") means a food that requires time/temperature control for safety to limit pathogenic microorganism growth or toxin formation:
1. "Time/temperature control for safety food" includes an animal food that is raw or heat treated; a plant food that is heat treated or consists of raw seed sprouts, cut melons, cut leafy greens, cut tomatoes or mixtures of cut tomatoes that are not modified in a way so that they are unable to support pathogenic microorganism growth or toxin formation, or garlic-in-oil mixtures that are not modified in a way so that they are unable to support pathogenic microorganism growth or toxin formation; and except as specified in subdivision 2 d of this definition, a food that because of the interaction of its Aw and pH values is designated as product assessment required (PA) in Table A or B of this definition:
Table A. Interaction of pH and Aw for control of spores in food heat treated to destroy vegetative cells and subsequently packaged. |
|||
Aw values |
pH values |
||
4.6 or less |
>4.6 - 5.6 |
>5.6 |
|
≤0.92 |
non-TCS food* |
non-TCS food |
non-TCS food |
>0.92 - 0.95 |
non-TCS food |
non-TCS food |
PA** |
>0.95 |
non-TCS food |
PA |
PA |
*TCS means time/temperature control for safety food **PA means product assessment required |
Table B. Interaction of pH and Aw for control of vegetative cells and spores in food not heat treated or heat treated but not packaged. |
||||
Aw values |
pH values |
|||
< 4.2 |
4.2 - 4.6 |
> 4.6 - 5.0 |
> 5.0 |
|
<0.88 |
non-TCS food* |
non-TCS food |
non-TCS food |
non-TCS food |
0.88 - 0.90 |
non-TCS food |
non-TCS food |
non-TCS food |
PA** |
>0.90 - 0.92 |
non-TCS food |
non-TCS food |
PA |
PA |
>0.92 |
non-TCS food |
PA |
PA |
PA |
*TCS means time/temperature control for safety food **PA means product assessment required |
2. "Time/temperature control for safety food" does not include:
a. An air-cooled hard-boiled egg with shell intact, or an egg with shell intact that is not hard boiled, but has been pasteurized to destroy all viable salmonellae;
b. A food in an unopened hermetically sealed container that is commercially processed to achieve and maintain commercial sterility under conditions of nonrefrigerated storage and distribution;
c. A food that because of its pH or Aw value, or interaction of Aw and pH values, is designated as a non-TCS food in Table A or B of this definition;
d. A food that is designated as PA in Table A or B of this definition and has undergone a product assessment showing that the growth or toxin formation of pathogenic microorganisms that are reasonably likely to occur in that food is precluded due to:
(1) Intrinsic factors including added or natural characteristics of the food such as preservatives, antimicrobials, humectants, acidulants, or nutrients;
(2) Extrinsic factors including environmental or operational factors that affect the food such as packaging, modified atmosphere such as reduced oxygen packaging, shelf-life and use, or temperature range of storage and use; or
(3) A combination of intrinsic and extrinsic factors; or
e. A food that does not support the growth or toxin formation of pathogenic microorganisms in accordance with one of the subdivisions 2 a through 2 d of this definition even though the food may contain a pathogenic microorganism or chemical or physical contaminant at a level sufficient to cause illness or injury.
"Tobacco product" has the meaning stated in the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 21 USC § 321(rr).
"USDA" means the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
"Utensil" means a food-contact implement or container used in the storage, preparation, transportation, dispensing, sale, or service of food, such as kitchenware or tableware that is multiuse, single service, or single use; gloves used in contact with food; temperature sensing probes of food temperature measuring devices; and probe-type price or identification tags used in contact with food.
"Variance" means a written document issued by the department that authorizes a modification or waiver of one or more requirements of this chapter if, in the opinion of the department, a health hazard or nuisance will not result from the modification or waiver.
"Vending machine" means a self-service device that, upon insertion of a coin, paper currency, token, card, key, or by electronic transaction or optional manual operation, dispenses unit servings of food in bulk or in packages without the necessity of replenishing the device between each vending operation.
"Vending machine location" means the room, enclosure, space, or area where one or more vending machines are installed and operated and includes the storage areas and areas on the premises that are used to service and maintain the vending machines.
"Warewashing" means the cleaning and sanitizing of utensils and food-contact surfaces of equipment.
"Waterworks" means a system that serves piped water for human consumption to at least 15 service connections or 25 or more individuals for at least 60 days out of the year. "Waterworks" includes all structures, equipment, and appurtenances used in the storage, collection, purification, treatment, and distribution of pure water except the piping and fixtures inside the building where such water is delivered.
"Whole-muscle, intact beef" means whole muscle beef that is not injected, mechanically tenderized, reconstructed, or scored and marinated, from which beef steaks may be cut.
A. Except as specified in subsection B or C of this section, the operator permit holder shall be the person in charge or shall designate a person in charge and shall ensure that a person in charge is present at the food establishment during all hours of operation.Pf
B. In a food establishment with two or more separately inspected permitted departments that are the legal responsibility of the same operator permit holder and that are located on the same premises, the operator permit holder may, during specific time periods when food is not being prepared, packaged, or served, designate a single person in charge who is present on the premises during all hours of operation, and who is responsible for each separately inspected permitted food establishment on the premises.Pf
C. This section does not apply to certain types of food establishments deemed by the department to pose minimal risk of causing, or contributing to, foodborne illness based on the nature of the operation and the extent of the food preparation.Pf
A. At least one employee who has supervisory and management responsibility and the authority to direct and control food preparation and service shall be a certified food protection manager who has shown proficiency of required information through passing a test that is part of an accredited program.
B. The person in charge shall be a certified food protection manager who has shown proficiency of required information through passing a test that is part of an accredited program. For purposes of enforcing this subsection, this requirement will take effect on June 24, 2023.
C. This section does not apply to certain types of food establishments deemed by the department to pose minimal risk of causing, or contributing to, foodborne illness based on the nature of the operation and extent of food preparation.
A. A person in charge who demonstrates knowledge by being a food protection manager who is certified by a food protection manager certification program that is evaluated and listed by a Conference for Food Protection-recognized accrediting agency as conforming to the Conference for Food Protection Standards for Accreditation of Food Protection Manager Certification Programs, April 2018 2023, (Conference for Food Protection) is deemed to comply with subdivision 2 of 2VAC5-585-60.
B. A food establishment that has a person in charge who is certified by a food protection manager certification program that is evaluated and listed by a Conference for Food Protection-recognized accrediting agency as conforming to the Conference for Food Protection Standards for Accreditation of Food Protection Manager Certification Programs, April 2018 2023, (Conference for Food Protection) is deemed to comply with 2VAC5-585-65.
The person in charge shall ensure that:
1. Food establishment operations are not conducted in a private home or in a room used as living or sleeping quarters as specified under 2VAC5-585-2990;Pf
2. Persons unnecessary to the food establishment operation are not allowed in the food preparation, food storage, or warewashing areas, except that brief visits and tours may be authorized by the person in charge if steps are taken to ensure that exposed food; clean equipment, utensils, and linens; and unwrapped single-service and single-use articles are protected from contamination;Pf
3. Employees and other persons such as delivery and maintenance persons and pesticide applicators entering the food preparation, food storage, and warewashing areas comply with this chapter;Pf
4. Employees are effectively cleaning their hands, by routinely monitoring the employees' handwashing;Pf
5. Employees are visibly observing foods as they are received to determine that they are from approved sources, delivered at the required temperatures, protected from contamination, unadulterated, and accurately presented, by routinely monitoring the employees' observations and periodically evaluating foods upon their receipt;Pf
6. Employees are verifying that foods delivered to the food establishment during nonoperating hours are from approved sources and are placed into appropriate storage locations such that they are maintained at the required temperatures, protected from contamination, unadulterated, and accurately presented;Pf
7. Employees are properly cooking time/temperature control for safety food, being particularly careful in cooking those foods known to cause severe foodborne illness and death, such as eggs and comminuted meats, through daily oversight of the employees' routine monitoring of the cooking temperatures using appropriate temperature measuring devices properly scaled and calibrated as specified under 2VAC5-585-1180 and 2VAC5-585-1730 B;Pf
8. Employees are using proper methods to rapidly cool time/temperature control for safety foods that are not held hot or are not for consumption within four hours, through daily oversight of the employees' routine monitoring of food temperatures during cooling;Pf
9. Employees are properly maintaining the temperatures of time/temperature control for safety food during hot and cold holding through daily oversight of the employees' routine monitoring of food temperatures;Pf
10. Food employees are properly maintaining the temperature of time/temperature control for safety foods during thawing through daily oversight of the food employee's routine monitoring of food temperatures;Pf
11. Consumers who order raw or partially cooked ready-to-eat foods of animal origin are informed as specified under 2VAC5-585-930 that the food is not cooked sufficiently to ensure its safety;Pf
11. 12. Employees are properly sanitizing cleaned multiuse equipment and utensils before they are reused, through routine monitoring of solution temperature and exposure time for hot water sanitizing, and chemical concentration, pH, temperature, and exposure time for chemical sanitizing;Pf
12. 13. Consumers are notified that clean tableware is to be used when they return to self-service areas such as salad bars and buffets as specified under 2VAC5-585-590;Pf
13. 14. Except when approval is obtained from the department as specified in 2VAC5-585-450 E, employees are preventing cross-contamination of ready-to-eat food with bare hands by properly using suitable utensils such as deli tissue, spatulas, tongs, single-use gloves, or dispensing equipment;Pf
14. 15. Employees are properly trained in food safety, including food allergy awareness, as it relates to their assigned duties. Food allergy awareness includes describing foods identified as major food allergens and the symptoms that a major food allergen could cause in a sensitive individual who has an allergic reaction; Pf
15. 16. Food employees and conditional employees are informed in a verifiable manner of their responsibility to report in accordance with law, to the person in charge, information about their health and activities as they relate to diseases that are transmissible through food, as specified under 2VAC5-585-80 A;Pf and
16. 17. Written procedures and plans where specified by this chapter and as developed by the food establishment are maintained and implemented as required.Pf
A. The operator permit holder shall require food employees and conditional employees to report to the person in charge information about their health and activities as they relate to diseases that are transmissible through food. A food employee or conditional employee shall report the information in a manner that allows the person in charge to reduce the risk of foodborne disease transmission, including providing necessary additional information, such as the date of onset of symptoms and an illness, or of a diagnosis without symptoms, if the food employee or conditional employee:
1. Has any of the following symptoms:
a. Vomiting;P
b. Diarrhea;P
c. Jaundice;P
d. Sore throat with fever;P or
e. A lesion containing pus such as a boil or infected wound that is open or draining and is:
(1) On the hands or wrists, unless an impermeable cover such as a finger cot or stall protects the lesion and a single-use glove is worn over the impermeable cover;P
(2) On exposed portions of the arms, unless the lesion is protected by an impermeable cover;P or
(3) On other parts of the body, unless the lesion is covered by a dry, durable, tight-fitting bandage;P
2. Has an illness diagnosed by a health practitioner due to:
a. Norovirus;P
b. Hepatitis A virus;P
c. Shigella spp.;P
d. Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli; P
e. Typhoid fever (caused by Salmonella typhi);P or
f. Salmonella (nontyphoidal);P
3. Had typhoid fever, diagnosed by a health practitioner, within the past three months , without having received antibiotic therapy, as determined by a health practitioner;P
4. Has been exposed to, or is the suspected source of, a confirmed disease outbreak, because the food employee or conditional employee consumed or prepared food implicated in the outbreak, or consumed food at an event prepared by a person who is infected or ill with:
a. Norovirus within the past 48 hours of the last exposure;P
b. Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli, or Shigella spp. within the past three days of the last exposure;P
c. Typhoid fever within the past 14 days of the last exposure;P or
d. Hepatitis A virus within the past 30 days of the last exposure;P or
5. Has been exposed by attending or working in a setting where there is a confirmed disease outbreak, or living in the same household as, and has knowledge about an individual who works or attends a setting where there is a confirmed disease outbreak, or living in the same household as, and has knowledge about, an individual diagnosed with an illness caused by:
a. Norovirus within the past 48 hours of the last exposure;P
b. Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli or Shigella spp. within the past three days of the last exposure;P
c. Typhoid fever (caused by Salmonella typhi) within the past 14 days of the last exposure;P or
d. Hepatitis A virus within the past 30 days of the last exposure.P
B. The person in charge shall notify the department when a food employee is:
1. Jaundiced;Pf or
2. Diagnosed with an illness due to a pathogen as specified under subdivisions A 2 a through f of this section.Pf
C. The person in charge shall ensure that a conditional employee:
1. Who exhibits or reports a symptom, or who reports a diagnosed illness as specified under subdivisions A 1 through 3 of this section, is prohibited from becoming a food employee until the conditional employee meets the criteria for the specific symptoms or diagnosed illness as specified under 2VAC5-585-100;P and
2. Who will work as a food employee in a food establishment that serves a highly susceptible population and reports a history of exposure as specified under subdivisions A 4 and 5 of this section, is prohibited from becoming a food employee until the conditional employee meets the criteria specified under subdivision 10 of 2VAC5-585-100.P
D. The person in charge shall ensure that a food employee who exhibits or reports a symptom, or who reports a diagnosed illness or a history of exposure as specified under subsection A of this section is:
1. Excluded as specified under subdivisions 1 through 3 and 4 a, 5 a, 6 a, 7, or 8 a of 2VAC5-585-90 and in compliance with the provisions specified under subdivisions 1 through 8 of 2VAC5-585-100;P or
2. Restricted as specified under subdivision 4 b, 5 b, 6 b, 7, 8 b, 9, or 10 of 2VAC5-585-90 and in compliance with the provisions specified under subdivisions 4 through 10 of 2VAC5-585-100.P
E. A food employee or conditional employee shall report to the person in charge the information as specified under subsection A of this section.Pf
F. A food employee shall:
1. Comply with an exclusion as specified under subdivisions 1 through 3 and 4 a, 5 a, 6 a, 7, or 8 a of 2VAC5-585-90, and with the provisions specified under subdivisions 1 through 8 of 2VAC5-585-100;P or
2. Comply with a restriction specified under subdivision 4 b, 5 b, 6 b, 7, or 8 b of 2VAC5-585-90 or under subdivision 8, 9, or 10 of 2VAC5-585-90 and comply with the provisions specified under subdivisions 4 through 10 of 2VAC5-585-100.P
Food employees shall clean their hands and exposed portions of their arms as specified under 2VAC5-585-140 immediately before engaging in food preparation including working with exposed food, clean equipment and utensils, and unwrapped single-service and single-use articlesP and:
1. After touching bare human body parts other than clean hands and clean, exposed portions of arms;P
2. After using the toilet room;P
3. After caring for or handling service animals or aquatic animals as allowed under 2VAC5-585-250 B;P
4. Except as specified in 2VAC5-585-220 B, after coughing, sneezing, using a handkerchief or disposable tissue, using a tobacco product, eating, or drinking;P
5. After handling soiled equipment or utensils;P
6. During food preparation, as often as necessary to remove soil and contamination and to prevent cross contamination when changing tasks;P
7. When switching between working with raw food and working with ready-to-eat food;P
8. Before donning gloves to initiate a task that involves working with food;P and
9. After engaging in other activities that contaminate the hands.P
A. Except as specified in subsection B of this section, an employee shall eat, drink, or use any form of tobacco product only in designated areas where the contamination of exposed food; clean equipment, utensils, and linens; unwrapped single-service and single-use articles; or other items needing protection cannot result.
B. A food employee may drink from a closed beverage container if the container is handled to prevent contamination of:
1. The employee's hands;
2. The container; and
3. Exposed food; clean equipment, utensils, and linens; and unwrapped single-service and single-use articles.
A. Food shall be obtained from sources that comply with law.P
B. Food prepared in a private home may not be used or offered for human consumption in a food establishment unless the home kitchen is inspected and regulated by the food regulatory authority that has jurisdiction over the private home.P
C. Packaged food shall be labeled as specified in law, including 21 CFR Part 101; 9 CFR Part 317; and 9 CFR Part 381, Subpart N; and as specified under 2VAC5-585-400 and 2VAC5-585-410.Pf
D. Fish, other than those specified in 2VAC5-585-730 B, that are intended for consumption in raw or undercooked form and allowed as specified in 2VAC5-585-700 D, may be offered for sale or service if they are obtained from a supplier that freezes fish as specified under 2VAC5-585-730 A, or if they are frozen on the premises as specified under 2VAC5-585-730 A and records are retained as specified under 2VAC5-585-740.
E. Whole-muscle, intact beef steaks that are intended for consumption in an undercooked form without a consumer advisory as specified in 2VAC5-585-700 C shall be:
1. Obtained from a food processing plant that, upon request by the purchaser, packages the steaks and labels them to indicate that the steaks meet the definition of does not mechanically tenderize, vacuum tumble with solutions, reconstruct, cube, or pound those whole-muscle, intact beef steaks;Pf or
2. Deemed acceptable by the department based on other evidence, such as written buyer specifications or invoices, that indicates that the steaks meet the definition of whole-muscle, intact beef;Pf and
3. If individually cut in a food establishment:
a. Cut from whole-muscle, intact beef that is labeled by received from a food processing plant as specified in subdivision 1 of this subsection or identified as specified in subdivision 2 of this subsection;Pf P and
b. Prepared so they remain intact;.Pf and
c. If packaged for undercooking in a food establishment, labeled as specified in subdivision 1 of this subsection or identified as specified in subdivision 2 of this subsection.Pf
F. Meat and poultry that are not ready-to-eat foods and are in a packaged form when offered for sale or otherwise offered for consumption shall be labeled to include safe handling instructions as specified in law, including 9 CFR 317.2(l) and 9 CFR 381.125(b).
G. Eggs that have not been specifically treated to destroy all viable Salmonellae shall be labeled to include safe handling instructions as specified in law, including 21 CFR 101.17(h).
A. Raw shucked Molluscan shellfish shall be obtained in nonreturnable packages or containers that bear a legible tag or label that identifies the:Pf
1. Name, address, and certification number of the shucker-packer or repacker of Source and is affixed by a dealer that depurates, packs, ships, or reships the molluscan shellfish, as specified in the National Shellfish Sanitation Program Guide for Control of Molluscan Shellfish;Pf and
2. The "sell "Sell by" or "best if used by" date for shucked shellfish packages with a capacity of less than 64 fluid ounces (1.89 L) or the date shucked for packages with a capacity of 64 fluid ounces (1.89 L) or more.Pf
B. A package container of raw shucked molluscan shellfish that does not bear a tag or label or that bears a tag or label that does not contain all the information as specified under subsection A of this section shall be subject to a hold order, as allowed by law, or seizure and destruction in accordance with 21 CFR 1240.60(d).
When received by a food establishment, shellstock shall be reasonably free of mud, dead shellfish shellstock, and shellfish shellstock with broken shells. Dead shellfish or shellstock and shellstock with badly broken shells shall be discarded.
A. Except as specified in subsections B through C, D, and E of this section, molluscan shellfish may not be removed from the container in which they are received other than immediately before sale or preparation for service.
B. Molluscan shellfish from one tagged or labeled container shall not be commingled with molluscan shellfish from another container with different certification numbers, different harvest dates, or different growing areas identified on the tag or label before being ordered by the consumer.Pf
C. For display purposes, shellstock or in-shell product may be removed from the container in which they are received, displayed on drained ice, or held in a display container, and a quantity specified by a consumer may be removed from the display or display container and provided to the consumer if:
1. The source of the shellstock or in-shell product on display is identified as specified under 2VAC5-585-410 2VAC5-585-400 and recorded as specified under 2VAC5-585-440; and
2. The shellstock or in-shell product are protected from contamination.
C. D. Shucked shellfish may be removed from the container in which they were received and held in a display container from which individual servings are dispensed upon a consumer's request if:
1. The labeling information for the shellfish on display as specified under 2VAC5-585-400 is retained and correlated to the date when, or dates during which, the shellfish are sold or served; and
2. The shellfish are protected from contamination.
D. E. Shucked shellfish may be removed from the container in which they were received and repacked in consumer self-service containers where allowed by law if:
1. The labeling information for the shellfish is on each consumer self-service container as specified under 2VAC5-585-400 and 2VAC5-585-900 A and B 1 through 5;
2. The labeling information as specified under 2VAC5-585-400 is retained and correlated with the date when, or dates during which, the shellfish are sold or served;
3. The labeling information and dates specified under subdivision 2 of this subsection are maintained for 90 days; and
4. The shellfish are protected from contamination.
A. Except as specified under subdivision C 2 of this section, shellstock molluscan shellfish tags or labels shall remain attached to the container in which the shellstock are received until the container is empty.Pf
B. The date when the last shellstock molluscan shellfish from the container is sold or served shall be recorded on the tag or, label, or invoice.Pf
C. The identity of the source of shellstock molluscan shellfish that are sold or served shall be maintained by retaining shellstock product tags or, labels, or invoices for 90 calendar days from the date that is recorded on the tag or, label, or invoice as specified in subsection B of this section by:Pf
1. Using an approved recordkeeping system that keeps the tags or, labels, or invoices in chronological order correlated to the date that is recorded on the tag or, label, or invoice as specified under subsection B of this section;Pf and
2. If shellstock, shucked shellfish, or in-shell product are removed from its tagged or labeled container:
a. Preserving source identification by using a recordkeeping system as specified under subdivision 1 of this subsection;Pf and
b. Ensuring that shellstock or, shucked shellfish, or in-shell product from one tagged or labeled container are not commingled with shellstock or, shucked shellfish, or in-shell product from another container with different certification numbers; different harvest dates; or different growing areas as identified on the tag or label before being ordered by the consumer.Pf
Food stored, prepared, packaged, displayed, and labeled in accordance with the law and this chapter may be offered for donation.
A. Food employees shall wash their hands as specified under 2VAC5-585-140.
B. Except when washing fruits and vegetables as specified under 2VAC5-585-510 or as specified in subsections D and E of this section, food employees may not contact exposed, ready-to-eat food with their bare hands and shall use suitable utensils such as deli tissue, spatulas, tongs, single-use gloves, or dispensing equipment.P
C. Food employees shall minimize bare hand and arm contact with exposed food that is not in a ready-to-eat form. Pf
D. Subsection B of this section does not apply to a food employee who contacts exposed, ready-to-eat food with bare hands at the time the ready-to-eat food is being added as an ingredient to food that:
1. Contains a raw animal food and is to be cooked in the food establishment to heat all parts of the food to the minimum temperatures specified in 2VAC5-585-700 A and B or 2VAC5-585-710; or
2. Does not contain a raw animal food but is to be cooked in the food establishment to heat all parts of the food to a temperature of at least 145°F (63°C).
E. Food employees not serving a highly susceptible population may contact exposed, ready-to-eat food with their bare hands if:
1. The operator permit holder obtains prior approval from the department;
2. Written procedures are maintained in the food establishment and made available to the department upon request that include:
a. For each bare hand contact procedure, a listing of the specific ready-to-eat foods that are touched by bare hands; and
b. Diagrams and other information showing that handwashing facilities, installed, located, equipped, and maintained as specified under 2VAC5-585-2230, 2VAC5-585-2280, 2VAC5-585-2310, 2VAC5-585-3020, 2VAC5-585-3030, and 2VAC5-585-3045, are in an easily accessible location and in close proximity to the work station where the bare hand contact procedure is conducted;
3. A written employee health policy that details how the food establishment complies with 2VAC5-585-80, 2VAC5-585-90, and 2VAC5-585-100 including:
a. Documentation that the food employees and conditional employees acknowledge that they are informed to report information about their health and activities as they relate to gastrointestinal symptoms and diseases that are transmittable through food as specified under 2VAC5-585-80 A;
b. Documentation that food employees and conditional employees acknowledge their responsibilities as specified under 2VAC5-585-80 E and F; and
c. Documentation that the person in charge acknowledges the responsibilities as specified under 2VAC5-585-80 B, C, and D, 2VAC5-585-90, and 2VAC5-585-100;
4. Documentation that the food employees acknowledge that they have received training in:
a. The risks of contacting the specific ready-to-eat foods with their bare hands,
b. Proper handwashing as specified under 2VAC5-585-140,
c. When to wash their hands as specified under 2VAC5-585-160,
d. Where to wash their hands as specified under 2VAC5-585-170,
e. Proper fingernail maintenance as specified under 2VAC5-585-190,
f. Prohibition of jewelry as specified under 2VAC5-585-200, and
g. Good hygienic practices as specified under 2VAC5-585-220 and 2VAC5-585-230;
5. Documentation that hands are washed before food preparation and as necessary to prevent cross-contamination by food employees as specified under 2VAC5-585-130, 2VAC5-585-140, 2VAC5-585-160, and 2VAC5-585-170 during all hours of operation when the specific ready-to-eat foods are prepared;
6. Documentation that food employees contacting ready-to-eat food with bare hands use two or more of the following control measures to provide additional safeguards to hazards associated with bare hand contact:
a. Double handwashing,
b. Nail brushes,
c. A hand antiseptic after handwashing as specified under 2VAC5-585-180,
d. Incentive programs such as paid sick leave that assist or encourage food employees not to work when they are ill, or
e. Other control measures approved by the department; and
7. Documentation that corrective action is taken when subdivisions 1 through 6 of this subsection are not followed.
A. Except as specified in subsection B of this section and except for whole, raw fruits and vegetables that are intended for washing by the consumer before consumption, raw fruits and vegetables shall be thoroughly washed in water to remove soil and other contaminants before being cut, combined with other ingredients, cooked, served, or offered for human consumption in ready-to-eat form.
B. Fruits and vegetables may be washed by using chemicals as specified under 2VAC5-585-3390, and a test kit or other device that accurately measures the active ingredient concentration of the fruit and vegetable wash solution may be provided by the manufacturer of the wash solution.
C. Devices used for onsite generation of chemicals meeting the requirements specified in 21 CFR 173.315 for the washing of raw, whole fruits and vegetables shall be used in accordance with the manufacturer's instructions.Pf
Food may not be stored:
1. In locker rooms;
2. In toilet rooms;Pf
3. In dressing rooms;
4. In garbage rooms;
5. In mechanical rooms;
6. Under sewer lines that are not shielded to intercept potential drips;
7. Under leaking water lines, including leaking automatic fire sprinkler heads, or under lines on which water has condensed;
8. Under open stairwells; or
9. Under other sources of contamination.
A. Except as specified in subsections B, C, and D of this section, raw animal foods such as eggs, fish, meat, poultry, and foods containing these raw animal foods shall be cooked to heat all parts of the food to a temperature and for a time that complies with one of the following methods based on the food that is being cooked:
1. 145°F (63°C) or above for 15 seconds for:P
a. Raw eggs that are broken and prepared in response to a consumer's order and for immediate service;P and
b. Except as specified under subdivisions A 2 and 3 and subsections B and C of this section, fish and intact meat, including game animals commercially raised for food and under a voluntary inspection program as specified under 2VAC5-585-330 A 1;P
2. 155°F (68°C) for 17 seconds or the temperature specified in the following chart that corresponds to the holding time for ratites, mechanically tenderized, and injected meats and nonintact meats; the following if they are comminuted: fish, meat, and game animals commercially raised for food and under a voluntary inspection program as specified under 2VAC5-585-330 A 1; and raw eggs that are not prepared as specified under subdivision A 1 a of this section:P
Minimum |
|
Temperature °F (°C) |
Time |
145 (63) |
3 minutes |
150 (66) |
1 minute |
158 (70) |
<1 second (instantaneous) |
3. 165°F (74°C) or above for less than one second (instantaneous) for poultry, baluts, wild game animals as specified under 2VAC5-585-330 A 2 and 3, commercially raised rabbits as specified under 2VAC5-585-330 C, stuffed fish, stuffed meat, stuffed pasta, stuffed poultry, stuffed ratites, or stuffing containing fish, meat, poultry, or ratites.P
B. Whole meat roasts including beef, corned beef, lamb, pork, and cured pork roasts such as ham shall be cooked:
1. As specified in the following chart, to heat all parts of the food to a temperature and for the holding time that corresponds to that temperature; P and
Temperature °F (°C) |
Time1 in Minutes |
Temperature °F (°C) |
Time1 in Seconds |
130 (54.4) |
112 |
147 (63.9) |
134 |
131 (55.0) |
89 |
149 (65.0) |
85 |
133 (56.1) |
56 |
151 (66.1) |
54 |
135 (57.2) |
36 |
153 (67.2) |
34 |
136 (57.8) |
28 |
155 (68.3) |
22 |
138 (58.9) |
18 |
157 (69.4) |
14 |
140 (60.0) |
12 |
158 (70.0) |
0 |
142 (61.1) |
8 |
||
144 (62.2) |
5 |
||
145 (62.8) |
4 |
||
1Holding time may include postoven heat rise. |
2. If cooked in an oven, use an oven that is preheated to the temperature specified for the roast's weight in the following chart and that is held at that temperature;Pf
Oven Type |
Oven Temperature Based on Roast Weight |
|
Less than 10 lbs (4.5 kg) |
10 lbs (4.5 kg) or more |
|
Still Dry |
350°F (177°C) or more |
250°F (121°C) or more |
Convection |
325°F (163°C) or more |
250°F (121°C) or more |
High Humidity1 |
250°F (121°C) or less |
250°F (121°C) or less |
1Relative humidity greater than 90% for at least one hour as measured in the cooking chamber or exit of the oven; or in a moisture-impermeable bag that provides 100% humidity |
C. A raw or undercooked whole-muscle, intact beef steak may be served or offered for sale in a ready-to-eat form if:
1. The food establishment serves a population that is not a highly susceptible population;
2. The steak is labeled, as specified under 2VAC5-585-270 E, to indicate that it meets the definition of whole-muscle, intact beef prepared so that it remains intact; and
3. The steak is cooked on both the top and bottom to a surface temperature of 145°F (63°C) or above and a cooked color change is achieved on all external surfaces.
D. A raw animal food such as raw egg, raw fish, raw-marinated fish, raw molluscan shellfish, or steak tartare or a partially cooked food such as lightly cooked fish, soft cooked eggs, or rare meat other than whole-muscle, intact beef steaks as specified in subsection C of this section may be served or offered for sale upon consumer request or selection in a ready-to-eat form if:
1. As specified under subdivisions 3 a and 3 b of 2VAC5-585-950, the food establishment serves a population that is not a highly susceptible population;
2. The food, if served or offered for service by consumer selection from a children's menu, does not contain comminuted meat;Pf and
3. The consumer is informed as specified under 2VAC5-585-930 that to ensure its safety, the food should be cooked as specified under subsection A or B of this section; or
4. The department grants a variance from subsection A or B of this section as specified in 2VAC5-585-3540 based on a HACCP plan that:
a. Is submitted by the operator permit holder and approved as specified under 2VAC5-585-3541;
b. Documents scientific data or other information showing that a lesser time and temperature regimen results in a safe food; and
c. Verifies that equipment and procedures for food preparation and training of food employees at the food establishment meet the conditions of the variance.
Raw animal foods that are cooked using a noncontinuous cooking process shall be:
1. Subject to an initial heating process that is no longer than 60 minutes in duration;P
2. Immediately after initial heating, cooled according to the time and temperature parameters specified for cooked time/temperature control for safety food under 2VAC5-585-800 A;P
3. After cooling, held frozen or cold as specified for time/temperature control for safety food under 2VAC5-585-820 A 2;P
4. Prior to sale or service, cooked using a process that heats all parts of the food to a temperature and for a time as designated in 2VAC5-585-700 A through C;P
5. Cooled according to the time and temperature parameters specified for cooked time/temperature control for safety food under 2VAC5-585-800 A if not either hot held as specified under 2VAC5-585-820 A 1, served immediately, or held using time as a public health control as specified under 2VAC5-585-850 after complete cooking;P and
6. Prepared and stored according to written procedures that:
a. Have obtained prior approval from the department;Pf
b. Are maintained in the food establishment and are available to the department upon request;Pf
c. Describe how the requirements specified under subdivisions 1 through 5 of this section are to be monitored and documented by the operator permit holder and the corrective actions to be taken if the requirements are not met;Pf
d. Describe how the foods, after initial heating but prior to complete cooking, are to be marked or otherwise identified as foods that must be cooked as specified under subdivision 4 of this section prior to being offered for sale or service;Pf and
e. Describe how the foods, after initial heating but prior to cooking as specified in subdivision 4 of this section, are to be separated from ready-to-eat foods as specified under 2VAC5-585-470 A.Pf
A. Commercially packaged food that bears a manufacturer's cooking instructions shall be cooked according to those instructions before it is used in ready-to-eat foods or offered in unpackaged form for human consumption, unless the manufacturer's instructions specify that the food may be consumed without cooking.P
B. Food for which the manufacturer has provided information that the food has not been processed to control pathogens, when used in ready-to-eat foods or offered for human consumption, shall be cooked according to a time and temperature appropriate for the food.P
A. Except as specified in subdivision 4 of this subsection, time/temperature control for safety food shall be thawed:
1. Under refrigeration that maintains the food temperature at 41°F (5°C) or less;Pf
2. Completely submerged under running water:
a. At a water temperature of 70°F (21°C) or below;Pf
b. With sufficient water velocity to agitate and float off loose particles in an overflow;Pf and
c. For a period of time that does not allow thawed portions of ready-to-eat food to rise above 41°F (5°C);Pf or
d. For a period of time that does not allow thawed portions of a raw animal food requiring cooking as specified under 2VAC5-585-700 A or B to be above 41°F (5°C) for more than four hours including:
(1) The time the food is exposed to the running water and the time needed for preparation for cooking;Pf or
(2) The time it takes under refrigeration to lower the food temperature to 41°F (5°C);Pf
3. As part of a cooking process if the food that is frozen is:
a. Cooked as specified under 2VAC5-585-700 A or B or, 2VAC5-585-710, or 2VAC5-585-726;Pf or
b. Thawed in a microwave oven and immediately transferred to conventional cooking equipment, with no interruption in the process;Pf or
4. Using any procedure if a portion of frozen ready-to-eat food is thawed and prepared for immediate service in response to an individual consumer's order.
B. Reduced oxygen packaged fish that bears a label indicating that it is to be kept frozen until time of use shall be removed from the reduced oxygen environment:
1. Prior to its thawing under refrigeration as specified in subdivision A 1 of this section; or
2. Prior to, or immediately upon completion of, its thawing using procedures specified in subdivision A 2 of this section.
A. Except when packaging food using a reduced oxygen packaging method as specified under 2VAC5-585-870 and except as specified in subsections E and F of this section, refrigerated, ready-to-eat, time/temperature control for safety food prepared and held in a food establishment for more than 24 hours shall be clearly marked to indicate the date or day by which the food shall be consumed on the premises, sold, or discarded when held at a temperature of 41°F (5°C) or less for a maximum of seven days. The day of preparation shall be counted as day one.Pf
B. Except as specified in subsections E, F, and G of this section, refrigerated, ready-to-eat, time/temperature control for safety food prepared and packaged by a food processing plant shall be clearly marked, at the time the original container is opened in a food establishment and if the food is held for more than 24 hours, to indicate the date or day by which the food shall be consumed on the premises, sold, or discarded, based on the temperature and time combinations specified in subsection A of this section and:Pf
1. The day the original container is opened in the food establishment shall be counted as day one;Pf and
2. The day or date marked by the food establishment may not exceed a manufacturer's use-by date if the manufacturer determined the use-by date based on food safety.Pf
C. A refrigerated, ready-to-eat, time/temperature control for safety food ingredient or a portion of a refrigerated, ready-to-eat, time/temperature control for safety food that is subsequently combined with additional ingredients or portions of food shall retain the date marking of the earliest-prepared or first-prepared ingredient.Pf
D. A date marking system that meets the criteria stated in subsections A and B of this section may include:
1. Using a method approved by the department for refrigerated, ready-to-eat, time/temperature control for safety food that is frequently rewrapped, such as lunchmeat or a roast, or for which date marking is impractical, such as soft-serve mix or milk in a dispensing machine;
2. Marking the date or day of preparation, with a procedure to discard the food on or before the last date or day by which the food must be consumed on the premises, sold, or discarded as specified in subsection A of this section;
3. Marking the date or day the original container is opened in a food establishment, with a procedure to discard the food on or before the last date or day by which the food must be consumed on the premises, sold, or discarded as specified under subsection B of this section; or
4. Using calendar dates, days of the week, color-coded marks, or other effective marking methods, provided that the marking system is disclosed to the department upon request.
E. Subsections A and B of this section do not apply to individual meal portions served or repackaged for sale from a bulk container upon a consumer's request.
F. Subsections A and B of this section do not apply to shellstock.
G. Subsection B of this section does not apply to the following foods prepared and packaged by a food processing plant inspected by a regulatory authority:
1. Deli salads, such as ham salad, seafood salad, chicken salad, egg salad, pasta salad, potato salad, and macaroni salad, manufactured in accordance with 21 CFR Part 110 117;
2. Hard cheeses containing not more than 39% moisture as defined in 21 CFR Part 133, such as cheddar, gruyere, parmesan and reggiano, and romano;
3. Semi-soft cheese containing more than 39% moisture, but not more than 50% moisture, as defined in 21 CFR Part 133, such as blue, edam, gorgonzola, gouda, and Monterey Jack;
4. Cultured dairy products as defined in 21 CFR Part 131, such as yogurt, sour cream, and buttermilk;
5. Preserved fish products, such as pickled herring and dried or salted cod, and other acidified fish products as defined in 21 CFR Part 114;
6. Shelf stable, dry fermented sausages, such as pepperoni and Genoa; and
7. Shelf stable salt-cured products such as prosciutto and Parma (ham).
A. Except as specified under subsection D of this section, if time without temperature control is used as the public health control for a working supply of time/temperature control for safety food before cooking, or for ready-to-eat, time/temperature control for safety food that is displayed or held for sale or service, written procedures shall be prepared in advance, maintained in the food establishment, and made available to the department upon request that specify:Pf
1. Methods of compliance with subsection B or C of this section;Pf and
2. Methods of compliance with 2VAC5-585-800 for food that is prepared, cooked, and refrigerated before time is used as a public health control.Pf
B. If time without temperature control is used as the public health control up to a maximum of four hours:
1. Except as specified in subdivision B 2 of this section, the food shall have an initial temperature of 41°F (5°C) or less when removed from cold holding temperature control, 135°F (57°C) or greater when removed from hot-holding temperature control;P
2. The food may have an initial temperature of 70°F (21°C) or less if:
a. It is a ready-to-eat (i) fruit or vegetable that, upon cutting, is rendered a time/temperature control for safety food or (ii) hermetically sealed food that, upon opening, is rendered a time/temperature control for safety food;
b. The food temperature does not exceed 70°F (21°C) within a maximum time period of four hours from the time it was rendered a time/temperature control for safety food; and
c. The food is marked or otherwise identified to indicate the time that is four hours past the point in time when the food is rendered a time/temperature control for safety food as specified in subdivision B 2 a of this section.
3. The food shall be marked or otherwise identified to indicate the time that is four hours past (i) the point in time when the food is removed from temperature control or (ii) the time that the food becomes a time/temperature control for safety food;Pf
4. The food shall be cooked and served; served at any temperature, if ready-to-eat; or discarded within four hours from the point in time when the food is removed from temperature control;P and
5. The food in unmarked containers or packages or marked to exceed a four-hour limit shall be discarded.P
C. If time without temperature control is used as the public health control up to a maximum of six hours:
1. The food shall have an initial temperature of 41°F (5°C) or less when removed from temperature control and the food temperature may not exceed 70°F (21°C) within a maximum time period of six hours;P
2. The food shall be monitored to ensure the warmest portion of the food does not exceed 70°F (21°C) during the six-hour period, unless an ambient air temperature is maintained that ensures the food does not exceed 70°F (21°C) during the six-hour holding period;Pf
3. The food shall be marked or otherwise identified to indicate:Pf
a. The time when the food is removed from 41°F (5°C) or less cold holding temperature control;Pf and
b. The time that is six hours past the point in time when the food is removed from 41°F (5°C) or less cold holding temperature control;Pf
4. The food shall be:
a. Discarded if the temperature of the foods exceeds 70°F (21°C);P or
b. Cooked and served, served at any temperature if ready-to-eat, or discarded within a maximum of six hours from the point in time when the food is removed from 41°F (5°C) or less cold holding temperature control;P and
5. The food in unmarked containers or packages, or marked with a time that exceeds the six-hour limit shall be discarded.P
D. A food establishment that serves a highly susceptible population may not use time as specified under subsection A, B, or C of this section as the public health control for raw eggs.
A. Except for a food establishment that obtains a variance as specified under 2VAC5-585-860, a food establishment that packages time/temperature control for safety food using a reduced oxygen packaging method shall control the growth and toxin formation of Clostridium botulinum and the growth of Listeria monocytogenes.P
B. Except as specified in subsection E of this section, a food establishment that packages time/temperature control for safety food using a reduced oxygen packaging method shall implement a HACCP plan that contains the information specified under 2VAC5-585-3630 and that:Pf
1. Identifies the food to be packaged;Pf
2. Except as specified in subsections C and D of this section, requires that the packaged food shall be maintained at 41°F (5°C) or less and meet at least one of the following criteria:Pf
a. Has an Aw of 0.91 or less,Pf
b. Has a pH of 4.6 or less,Pf
c. Is a meat or poultry product cured at a food processing plant regulated by the USDA using substances specified in 9 CFR 424.21 and is received in an intact package,Pf
d. Is a food with a high level of competing organisms such as raw meat, raw poultry, or raw vegetables;Pf or
e. Is a cheese that is commercially manufactured in a food processing plant with no ingredients added in the food establishment and that meets the Standards of Identity as specified in 21 CFR 133.150, 21 CFR 133.169, or 21 CFR 133.187;P
3. Describes how the package shall be prominently and conspicuously labeled on the principal display panel in bold type on a contrasting background, with instruction to:Pf
a. Maintain the food at 41°F (5°C) or below;Pf and
b. Discard the food within 30 calendar days of its packaging if it is not served for on-premises consumption, or consumed if served or sold for off-premises consumption;Pf
2. 4. Limits the refrigerated shelf life to no more than 30 calendar days from packaging to consumption, except the time the product is maintained frozen, or the original manufacturer's "sell by" or "use by" date, whichever occurs first;P
3. 5. Includes operational procedures that:
a. Prohibit contacting ready-to-eat food with bare hands as specified under 2VAC5-585-450 B;Pf
b. Identify a designated work area and the method by which:Pf
(1) Physical barriers or methods of separation of raw foods and ready-to-eat foods minimize cross contamination,;Pf and
(2) Access to the processing equipment is limited to responsible trained personnel familiar with the potential hazards of the operation;Pf and
c. Delineate cleaning and sanitization procedures for food-contact surfaces;Pf and
d. Describe how the package shall be prominently and conspicuously labeled on the principal display panel in bold type on a contrasting background, with instructions to:Pf
(1) Maintain the food at 41°F (5°C) or below,Pf and
(2) Discard the food if, within 30 calendar days of its packaging, it is not served for on-premises consumption or consumed, if served or sold for off-premises consumption; Pf
4. 6. Describes the training program that ensures that the individual responsible for the reduced oxygen packaging operation understands the:Pf
a. Concepts required for safe operation;Pf
b. Equipment and facilities;Pf and
c. Procedures specified under subdivision 3 of this subsection and 2VAC5-585-3630;Pf and
5. 7. Is provided to the department prior to implementation as specified under subsection B of 2VAC5-585-3620.
C. Except for fish that is frozen before, during, and after packaging and that bears a label indicating that it is to be kept frozen until time of use, a food establishment may not package fish using a reduced oxygen packaging method.P
D. Except as specified in subsections C and E F of this section, a food establishment that packages time/temperature control for safety food using a cook-chill or sous vide process shall:
1. Provide to the department prior to implementation, a HACCP plan that contains the information as specified under 2VAC5-585-3630;Pf
2. Ensure the food is:
a. Prepared and consumed on the premises, or prepared and consumed off the premises but within the same business entity with no distribution or sale of the packaged product to another business entity or the consumer;Pf
b. Cooked to heat all parts of the food to a temperature and for a time as specified under 2VAC5-585-700 A, B, and C;P
c. Protected from contamination before and after cooking as specified in 2VAC5-585-450 through 2VAC5-585-765;P
d. Placed in a package with an oxygen barrier and sealed before cooking, or placed in a package and sealed immediately after cooking, and before reaching a temperature below 135°F (57°C);P
e. Cooled to 41°F (5°C) in the sealed package or bag as specified under 2VAC5-585-800 and P
(1) Cooled to 34°F (1°C) within 48 hours of reaching 41°F (5°C) and held at that temperature until consumed or discarded within 30 calendar days after the date of packaging;P
(2) Held at 41°F (5°C) or less for no more than seven calendar days, at which time the food must be consumed or discarded;P
(3) Cooled to 34°F (1°C) within 48 hours of reaching 41°F (5°C), removed from refrigeration equipment that maintains a 34°F (1°C) food temperature, and then held at 41°F (5°C) or less for no more than seven calendar days, not to exceed 30 calendar days from its date of packaging, at which time the food must be consumed or discarded;P or
(4) Held frozen with no shelf-life restriction while frozen until consumed or used;P
f. Held in a refrigeration unit that is equipped with an electronic system that continuously monitors time and temperature and is visually examined for proper operation twice daily;Pf
g. If transported off-site to a satellite location of the same business entity, equipped with verifiable electronic monitoring devices to ensure that times and temperatures are monitored during transportation;Pf and
h. Labeled with the product name and the date packaged;Pf and
3. Maintain the records required to confirm that cooling and cold holding refrigeration time/temperature parameters are required as part of the HACCP plan and:
a. Make such records available to the department upon request;Pf and
b. Hold such records for at least six months;Pf and
4. Implement written operational procedures as specified under subdivision B 3 of this section and a training program as specified under subdivision B 4 of this section.Pf
E. Except as specified in subsection F of this section, a food establishment that packages cheese using a reduced oxygen packaging method shall:
1. Limit the cheeses packaged to those that (i) are commercially manufactured in a food processing plant; (ii) contain no ingredients added in the food establishment; and (iii) meet the Standards of Identity as specified in 21 CFR 133.150, 21 CFR 133.169, or 21 CFR 133.187;P
2. Have a HACCP plan that contains the information specified in subdivisions 3 and 4 of 2VAC5-585-3630 and as specified in subdivisions B 1, B 3 a, B 5, and B 6 of this section;Pf
3. Label the package on the principal display panel with a "use by" date that does not exceed (i) 30 days from its packaging or (ii) the original manufacturer's "sell by" or "use by" date, whichever occurs first;Pf and
4. Discard the reduced oxygen packaged cheese if it is not sold for off-premises consumption or consumed within 30 calendar days of its packaging.Pf
F. A HACCP plan is not required when a food establishment uses a reduced oxygen packaging method to package time/temperature control for safety food that is always:
1. Labeled with the production time and date;
2. Held at 41°F (5°C) or less during refrigerated storage; and
3. Removed from its packaging in the food establishment within 48 hours after packaging.
A. Food packaged in a food establishment shall be labeled as specified in law, including 21 CFR Part 101 and 9 CFR Part 317.
B. Label information shall include:
1. The common name of the food, or absent a common name, an adequately descriptive identity statement;
2. If made from two or more ingredients, a list of ingredients and subingredients in descending order of predominance by weight, including a declaration of artificial colors, artificial flavors, and chemical preservatives, if contained in the food;
3. An accurate declaration of the net quantity of contents;
4. The name and place of business of the manufacturer, packer, or distributor;
5. The name of the food source for each major food allergen contained in the food unless the food source is already part of the common or usual name of the respective ingredient;Pf
6. Except as exempted in the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act 21 USC § 403(g)(3) through (5), nutrition labeling as specified in 21 CFR Part 101 and 9 CFR Part 317, Subpart B; and
7. For any salmonid fish containing canthaxanthin or astaxanthin as a color additive, the labeling of the bulk fish container, including a list of ingredients, displayed on the retail container or by other written means, such as a counter card, that discloses the use of canthaxanthin or astaxanthin.
C. Bulk food that is available for consumer self-dispensing shall be prominently labeled with the following information in plain view of the consumer:
1. The manufacturer's or processor's label that was provided with the food; or
2. A card, sign, or other method of notification that includes the information specified under subdivisions B 1, 2, 5, and 6 of this section.
D. Bulk, unpackaged foods such as bakery products and unpackaged foods that are portioned to consumer specification need not be labeled if:
1. A health, nutrient content, or other claim is not made;
2. There are no state or local laws requiring labeling; and
3. The food is manufactured or prepared on the premises of the food establishment or at another food establishment or a food processing plant that is owned by the same person and is regulated by the food regulatory agency that has jurisdiction.
A. If required by law, consumer warnings shall be provided.
B. Food establishment or manufacturers' dating information on foods may not be concealed or altered.
C. The permit holder shall notify consumers by written notification of the presence of major allergens as an ingredient in unpackaged food items that are served or sold to the consumer.
A. Except as specified in 2VAC5-585-700 C and 2VAC5-585-700 D 4 and under subdivision 3 of 2VAC5-585-950, if an animal food such as beef, eggs, fish, lamb, milk, pork, poultry, or shellfish is served or sold raw, undercooked, or without otherwise being processed to eliminate pathogens, either in ready-to-eat form or as an ingredient in another ready-to-eat food, the operator permit holder shall inform consumers of the significantly increased risk of consuming such foods by way of a disclosure and reminder, as specified in subsections B and C of this section, using brochures, deli case or menu advisories, label statements, table tents, placards, or other effective written means.Pf
B. Disclosure shall include:
1. A description of the animal-derived foods, such as "oysters on the half shell (raw oysters)," "raw-egg Caesar salad," and "hamburgers (can be cooked to order)";Pf or
2. Identification of the animal-derived foods by asterisking them to a footnote that states that the items are served raw or undercooked, or contain (or may contain) raw or undercooked ingredients.Pf
C. Reminder shall include asterisking the animal-derived foods requiring disclosure to a footnote that states:
1. Regarding the safety of these items, written information is available upon request;Pf
2. Consuming raw or undercooked meats, poultry, seafood, shellfish, or eggs may increase your risk of foodborne illness;Pf or
3. Consuming raw or undercooked meats, poultry, seafood, shellfish, or eggs may increase your risk of foodborne illness, especially if you have certain medical conditions.Pf
In a food establishment that serves a highly susceptible population:
1. The following criteria apply to juice:
a. For the purposes of subdivision 1 of this section only, children who are age nine years or younger and receive food in a school, day care setting, or similar facility that provides custodial care are included as highly susceptible populations;
b. Prepackaged juice or a prepackaged beverage containing juice that bears a warning label as specified in 21 CFR 101.17(g) or a packaged juice or beverage containing juice that bears a warning label as specified under subdivision 2 of 2VAC5-585-765 may not be served or offered for sale;P and
c. Unpackaged juice that is prepared on the premises for service or sale in a ready-to-eat form shall be processed under a HACCP plan that contains the information specified in 2VAC5-585-3630 and as specified in 21 CFR 120.24.P
2. Pasteurized eggs or egg products shall be substituted for raw eggs in the preparation of:P
a. Foods such as Caesar salad, hollandaise or béarnaise sauce, mayonnaise, meringue, eggnog, ice cream, and egg-fortified beverages;P and
b. Except as specified in subdivision 6 of this section, recipes in which more than one egg is broken and the eggs are combined.P
3. The following foods may not be served or offered for sale in a ready-to-eat form:P
a. Raw animal foods such as raw fish, raw-marinated fish, raw molluscan shellfish, and steak tartare;P
b. A partially cooked animal food such as lightly cooked fish, rare meat, soft-cooked eggs that are made from raw eggs, and meringue;P and
c. Raw seed sprouts.;P and
d. Packaged foods subject to 2VAC5-585-726 that are not cooked in accordance with that section.
4. Food employees may not contact ready-to-eat food as specified in 2VAC5-585-450 B and E.P
5. Time only, as the public health control as specified under 2VAC5-585-850 D, may not be used for raw eggs.P
6. Subdivision 2 b of this section does not apply if:
a. The raw eggs are combined immediately before cooking for one consumer's serving at a single meal, cooked as specified under 2VAC5-585-700 A 1, and served immediately, such as an omelet, soufflé, or scrambled eggs;
b. The raw eggs are combined as an ingredient immediately before baking and the eggs are thoroughly cooked to a ready-to-eat form, such as a cake, muffin, or bread; or
c. The preparation of the food is conducted under a HACCP plan that:
(1) Identifies the food to be prepared;
(2) Prohibits contacting ready-to-eat food with bare hands;
(3) Includes specifications and practices that ensure:
(a) Salmonella Enteritidis growth is controlled before and after cooking; and
(b) Salmonella Enteritidis is destroyed by cooking the eggs according to the temperature and time specified in 2VAC5-585-700 A 2;
(4) Contains the information specified under subdivision 5 of 2VAC5-585-3630 including procedures that:
(a) Control cross contamination of ready-to-eat food with raw eggs; and
(b) Delineate cleaning and sanitization procedures for food-contact surfaces; and
(5) Describes the training program that ensures that the food employee responsible for the preparation of the food understands the procedures to be used.
7. Except as specified in subdivision 8 of this section, food may be re-served as specified under 2VAC5-585-680 B 1 and 2.
8. Food may not be re-served under the following conditions:
a. Any food served to patients or clients who are under contact precautions in medical isolation or quarantine, or protective environment isolation may not be re-served to others outside.
b. Packages of food from any patients, clients, or other consumers should not be re-served to persons in protective environment isolation.
A. Except as specified under subsection B of this section, molluscan shellfish life support system display tanks may not be used to store or display shellfish that are offered for human consumption and shall be conspicuously marked so that it is obvious to consumers that the shellfish are for display only.P
B. Molluscan shellfish life-support system display tanks that are used to store or display shellfish that are offered for human consumption shall be operated and maintained in accordance with a variance granted by the department as specified in 2VAC5-585-3540 and a HACCP plan that:Pf
1. Is submitted by the operator permit holder and approved as specified under 2VAC5-585-3541;Pf and
2. Ensures that:
a. Water used with fish other than molluscan shellfish does not flow into the molluscan tank;Pf
b. The safety and quality of the shellfish as they were received are not compromised by the use of the tank;Pf and
c. The identity of the source of the shellstock is retained as specified under 2VAC5-585-440.Pf
A. Except as specified in subsection C of this section, a sink with at least three compartments shall be provided for manually washing, rinsing, and sanitizing equipment and utensils.Pf
B. Sink compartments shall be large enough to accommodate immersion of the largest equipment and utensils. If equipment or utensils are too large for the warewashing sink, a warewashing machine or alternative equipment as specified in subsection C of this section shall be used.Pf
C. Alternative manual warewashing equipment may be used when there are special cleaning needs or constraints and its use is approved. Alternative manual warewashing equipment may include:
1. High-pressure detergent sprayers;
2. Low-pressure or line-pressure spray detergent foamers;
3. Other task-specific cleaning equipment;
4. Brushes or other implements;
5. Two-compartment sinks as specified under subsections D and E of this section; or
6. Receptacles that substitute for the compartments of a multicompartment sink.
D. Before a two-compartment sink is used:
1. The operator permit holder shall have its use approved; and
2. The operator permit holder shall limit the number of kitchenware items cleaned and sanitized in the two-compartment sink, shall limit warewashing to batch operations for cleaning kitchenware such as between cutting one type of raw meat and another or cleanup at the end of a shift, and shall:
a. Make up the cleaning and sanitizing solutions immediately before use and drain them immediately after use; and
b. Use a detergent-sanitizer to sanitize and apply the detergent-sanitizer in accordance with the manufacturer's label instructions and as specified under 2VAC5-585-1710; or
c. Use a hot water sanitization immersion step as specified under subdivision 3 of 2VAC5-585-1860.
E. A two-compartment sink may not be used for warewashing operations where cleaning and sanitizing solutions are used for a continuous or intermittent flow of kitchenware or tableware in an ongoing warewashing process.
A. Except as specified in subsection B of this section, equipment, a cabinet used for the storage of food, or a cabinet used to store cleaned and sanitized equipment, utensils, laundered linens, and single-service and single-use articles may not be located:
1. In locker rooms;
2. In toilet rooms;Pf
3. In garbage rooms;
4. In mechanical rooms;
5. Under sewer lines that are not shielded to intercept potential drips;
6. Under leaking water lines including leaking automatic fire sprinkler heads or under lines on which water has condensed;
7. Under open stairwells; or
8. Under other sources of contamination.
B. A storage cabinet used for linens or single-service or single-use articles may be stored in a locker room.
C. If a mechanical clothes washer or dryer is provided, it shall be located (i) so that the washer or dryer is protected from contamination and (ii) only where there is no exposed food; clean equipment, utensils, and linens; or unwrapped single-service and single-use articles.
A chemical sanitizer used in a sanitizing solution for a manual or mechanical operation at contact times specified under subdivision 3 of 2VAC5-585-1900 shall meet the criteria specified under 2VAC5-585-3380, shall be used in accordance with the EPA-registered label use instructions,P and shall be used as follows:
1. A chlorine solution shall have a minimum temperature based on the concentration and pH of the solution as listed in the following chart;P
Minimum Concentration |
Minimum Temperature |
||
mg/L (ppm) |
pH 10 or less |
pH 8.0 or less |
|
25-49 |
120 (49) |
120 (49) |
|
50-99 |
100 (38) |
75 (24) |
|
100 |
55 (13) |
55 (13) |
2. An iodine solution shall have a:
a. Minimum temperature of 68°F (20°C);P
b. pH of 5.0 or less or a pH no higher than the level for which the manufacturer specifies the solution is effective;P and
c. Concentration between 12.5 mg/L (ppm) and 25 mg/L (ppm);P
3. A quaternary ammonium compound solution shall:
a. Have a minimum temperature of 75°F (24°C);P
b. Have a concentration as specified under 2VAC5-585-3380 and as indicated by the manufacturer's use directions included in the labeling;P and
c. Be used only in water with 500 mg/L (ppm) hardness or less or in water having a hardness no greater than specified by the EPA-registered label use instructions;P
4. If another solution of a chemical specified under subdivisions 1 through, 2, and 3 of this section is used, the operator permit holder shall demonstrate to the department that the solution achieves sanitization and the use of the solution shall be approved;P or
5. If a chemical sanitizer other than chlorine, iodine, or a quaternary ammonium compound is used, it shall be applied in accordance with the EPA-registered label use instructions;P and
6. If a chemical sanitizer is generated by a device located on site at the food establishment, it shall be used as specified in subdivisions 1 through 4 of this section and shall be produced by a device that:
a. Complies with regulation as specified in §§ 2(q)(1) and 12 of the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (7 USC § 136(q)(1) and 7 USC § 136j);P
b. Complies with 40 CFR 152.500 and 40 CFR 156.10;P
c. Displays the EPA device manufacturing facility registration number on the device;Pf and
d. Is operated and maintained in accordance with manufacturer's instructions.Pf
A. Except as specified in subsection B of this section, cleaned and sanitized equipment, utensils, laundered linens, and single-service and single-use articles may not be stored:
1. In locker rooms;
2. In toilet rooms;Pf
3. In garbage rooms;
4. In mechanical rooms;
5. Under sewer lines that are not shielded to intercept potential drips;
6. Under leaking water lines including leaking automatic fire sprinkler heads or under lines on which water has condensed;
7. Under open stairwells; or
8. Under other sources of contamination.
B. Laundered linens and single-service and single-use articles that are packaged or in a facility such as a cabinet may be stored in a locker room.
A. Water from a private well shall be sampled and tested at least annually for nitrate and total coliform.Pf
B. If nitrate, which is reported as "N" on the test results, exceeds 10 mg/L (ppm), the operator permit holder shall notify the department within 24 hours from when the operator permit holder is notified of the nitrate positive test result.Pf
C. If a sample is total coliform positive, the positive culture medium shall be further analyzed to determine if E. coli is present. The operator permit holder shall notify the department within two calendar days from when the operator permit holder is notified of the coliform-positive test result. Pf
D. If E. coli is present, the operator permit holder shall notify the department within 24 hours from when the operator permit holder is notified of the E. coli positive test result.Pf
A. A handwashing sink shall be equipped to provide water at a temperature of at least 100°F (38°C) 85°F (29.4°C) through a mixing valve or combination faucet.Pf
B. A steam mixing valve may not be used at a handwashing sink.
C. A self-closing, slow-closing, or metering faucet shall provide a flow of water for at least 15 seconds without the need to reactivate the faucet.
D. An automatic handwashing facility shall be installed in accordance with manufacturer's instructions.
A. Areas designated for employees to eat, drink, and use tobacco products shall be located so that food, equipment, linens, and single-service and single-use articles are protected from contamination.
B. Lockers or other suitable facilities shall be located in a designated room or area where contamination of food, equipment, utensils, linens, and single-service and single-use articles cannot occur.
Products that are held by the operator permit holder for credit, redemption, or return to the distributor, such as damaged, spoiled, or recalled products, shall be segregated and held in designated areas that are separated from food, equipment, utensils, linens, and single-service and single-use articles.Pf
A. Except as specified in subsections B, C, and D of this section, live animals may not be allowed on the premises of a food establishment.Pf
B. Live animals may be allowed in the following situations if the contamination of food; clean equipment, utensils, and linens; and unwrapped single-service and single-use articles cannot result:
1. Edible fish or decorative fish in aquariums, shellfish or crustacea on ice or under refrigeration, and shellfish and crustacea in display tank systems;
2. Patrol dogs accompanying police or security officers in offices and dining, sales, and storage areas, and sentry dogs running loose in outside fenced areas;
3. In areas that are not used for food preparation and that are usually open for customers, such as dining and sales areas, service animals that are controlled by the disabled employee or person, if a health or safety hazard will not result from the presence or activities of the service animal;
4. Pets in the common dining areas of institutional care facilities such as nursing homes, assisted living facilities, group homes, or residential care facilities at times other than during meals if:
a. Effective partitioning and self-closing doors separate the common dining areas from food storage or food preparation areas;
b. Condiments, equipment, and utensils are stored in enclosed cabinets or removed from the common dining areas when pets are present; and
c. Dining areas including tables, countertops, and similar surfaces are effectively cleaned before the next meal service;
5. In areas that are not used for food preparation, storage, sales, display, or dining, in which there are caged animals or animals that are similarly confined, such as in a variety store that sells pets or a tourist park that displays animals; and
6. Dogs in outdoor dining areas if:
a. The outdoor dining area is not fully enclosed with floor to ceiling walls and is not considered a part of the interior physical facility.
b. The outdoor dining area is equipped with an entrance that is separate from the main entrance to the food establishment, and the separate entrance serves as the sole means of entry for patrons accompanied by dogs.
c. A sign stating that dogs are allowed in the outdoor dining area is posted at each entrance to the outdoor dining area in such a manner as to be clearly observable by the public.
d. A sign within the outdoor dining area stating the requirements as specified in subdivisions 6 e, f, and g of this subsection is provided in such a manner as to be clearly observable by the public.
e. Food and water provided to dogs is served using equipment that is not used for the service of food to a person or is served in single-use articles.
f. Dogs are not allowed on chairs, seats, benches, or tables.
g. Dogs are kept on a leash or within a pet carrier and under the control of an adult at all times.
h. The establishment provides effective means for cleaning up dog vomitus and fecal matter.
C. A dog may be allowed within a designated area inside or on the premises of, except in any area used for the manufacture of food products, a distillery, winery, farm winery, brewery, or limited brewery licensed pursuant to § 4.1-206 § 4.1-206.1 of the Code of Virginia, a winery or farm winery licensed pursuant to § 4.1-207 of the Code of Virginia, or a brewery or farm brewery licensed pursuant to § 4.1-208 of the Code of Virginia.
D. Live or dead fish bait may be stored if contamination of food; clean equipment, utensils, and linens; and unwrapped single-service and single-use articles cannot result.
A. Poisonous or toxic materials shall be:
1. Used according to:
a. Law and this chapter;
b. Manufacturer's use directions included in labeling, and, for a pesticide, manufacturer's label instructions that state that use is allowed in a food establishment;P
c. The conditions of certification, if certification is required, for use of the pest control materials;P and
d. Additional conditions that may be established by the department; and
2. Applied so that:
a. A hazard to employees or other persons is not constituted;P and
b. Contamination including toxic residues due to drip, drain, fog, splash, or spray on food, equipment, utensils, linens, and single-service and single-use articles is prevented, and for a restricted-use pesticide, this is achieved. Contamination shall be prevented by:P
(1) Removing the items;P
(2) Covering the items with impermeable covers;P or (3) Taking taking other appropriate preventive actions;P and
(4) (3) Cleaning and sanitizing equipment and utensils after the application.P
B. A restricted use pesticide shall be applied only by an applicator certified as defined in 7 USC § 136(e); §§ 3.2-3929, 3.2-3930, and 3.2-3931 of the Code of Virginia (Virginia Pesticide Control Act); or a person under the direct supervision of a certified applicator.Pf
A container previously used to store poisonous or toxic materials may not be used to store, transport, or dispense food, equipment, utensils, linens, or single-service or single-use articles.P
A. The department shall apply this chapter to promote its underlying purpose, as specified in 2VAC5-585-20, of safeguarding public health and ensuring that food is safe, unadulterated, and honestly presented when offered to the consumer or donated.
B. In enforcing the provisions of this chapter, the department shall assess existing facilities or equipment that were in use before the effective date of this chapter based on the following considerations:
1. Whether the facilities or equipment are in good repair and capable of being maintained in a sanitary condition;
2. Whether food-contact surfaces comply with 2VAC5-585-960 through 2VAC5-585-1060;
3. Whether the capacities of cooling, heating, and holding equipment are sufficient to comply with 2VAC5-585-1450; and
4. The existence of a documented agreement with the establishment operator permit holder that the facilities or equipment will be replaced as specified in subdivision 6 7 of 2VAC5-585-3750.
A. If necessary to protect against public health hazards or nuisances, the department may impose specific requirements in addition to the requirements contained in this chapter that are authorized by law.
B. The department shall document the conditions that necessitate the imposition of additional requirements and the underlying public health rationale. The documentation shall be provided to the establishment operator permit applicant, permit holder, or person in charge and a copy shall be maintained in the department's file for the food establishment.
If the department grants a variance as specified in 2VAC5-585-3540, or a HACCP plan is otherwise required as specified under 2VAC5-585-3620, the operator permit holder shall:
1. Maintain the approved variance at the food establishment;Pf
2. Comply with the HACCP plans and procedures that are submitted as specified under 2VAC5-585-3630 and approved as a basis for the modification or waiver;P and
3. Maintain and provide to the department, upon request, records specified under subdivisions 5 and 6 c of 2VAC5-585-3630 that demonstrate that the following are routinely employed:
a. Procedures for monitoring critical control points;Pf
b. Monitoring of the critical control points;Pf
c. Verification of the effectiveness of the operation or process;Pf and
d. Necessary corrective actions if there is failure at a critical control point.Pf
An operator A permit applicant or permit holder shall submit to the department properly prepared plans and specifications for review and approval before:
1. The construction of a food establishment;Pf
2. The conversion of an existing structure for use as a food establishment;Pf or
3. The remodeling of a food establishment or a change of type of food establishment or food operation if the department determines that plans and specifications are necessary to ensure compliance with this chapter.Pf
A. Before engaging in an activity that requires a HACCP plan, an operator a permit applicant or permit holder shall submit to the department for approval a properly prepared HACCP plan as specified under 2VAC5-585-3630 and the relevant provisions of this chapter if:
1. Submission of a HACCP plan is required according to law;
2. A variance is required as specified under 2VAC5-585-700 D 4, 2VAC5-585-860, or 2VAC5-585-1300 B; or
3. The department determines that a food preparation or processing method requires a variance based on a plan submittal specified under 2VAC5-585-3610, an inspectional finding, or a variance request.
B. Before engaging in reduced oxygen packaging without a variance as specified under 2VAC5-585-870, an operator a permit applicant or permit holder shall submit a properly prepared HACCP plan to the department.
For a food establishment that is required under 2VAC5-585-3620 to have a HACCP plan, the operator permit applicant or permit holder shall submit to the department a properly prepared HACCP plan that includes:
1. General information such as the name of the operator permit applicant or permit holder, the food establishment address, and contact information;
2. A categorization of the types of time/temperature control for safety foods that are to be controlled under the HACCP plan;Pf
3. A flow diagram or chart for each specific food or category type that identifies:
a. Each step in the process;Pf and
b. The steps that are critical control points;Pf
4. The ingredients, recipes, or formulations; materials and equipment used in the preparation of each specific food or category type; and methods and procedural control measures that address the food safety concerns involved;Pf
5. A critical control points summary for each specific food category type that clearly identifies:
a. Each critical control point;Pf
b. The significant hazards for each critical control point;Pf
c. The critical limits for each critical control point;Pf
d. The method and frequency for monitoring and controlling each critical control point by the designated food employee or the person in charge;Pf
e. Action to be taken by the designated food employee or person in charge if the critical limits for each critical control point are not met;Pf
f. The method and frequency for the person in charge to routinely verify that the food employee is following standard operating procedures and monitoring critical control points;Pf and
g. Records to be maintained by the person in charge to demonstrate that the HACCP plan is properly operated and managed;Pf
6. Supporting documents such as:
a. Food employee and supervisory training plan and operating procedures that address the food safety issues of concern;Pf
b. Copies of blank record forms that are necessary to implement the HACCP plan;Pf
c. Additional scientific data or other information, as required by the department, supporting the determination that food safety is not compromised by the proposal;Pf and
7. Any other information required by the department.
A person seeking to operate a food establishment shall submit an application for a permit at least 30 calendar days before the date planned for opening the food establishment.
A person seeking to operate a food establishment shall submit to the department a written application for a permit on a form provided by the department.
To qualify for a permit, an applicant shall:
1. Be an owner of the food establishment or an officer of the establishment's legal ownership;
2. Comply with the requirements of this chapter; and
3. As specified under 2VAC5-585-3820, allow the department access to the food establishment and provide the department with required information and records.
The application for a permit shall include:
1. The name, mailing address, telephone number, and signature of the person applying for the permit;
2. The name, mailing address, and location of the food establishment; and
3. Other information required by the department.
The department shall issue a permit to an applicant that is required to submit plans as specified in 2VAC5-585-3600 after:
1. The applicant submits a properly completed application;
2. The department reviews and approves the required plans, specifications, and information; and
3. A preoperational inspection required by 2VAC5-585-3650 shows that the establishment is built or remodeled in accordance with the approved plans and specifications and that the establishment is in compliance with this chapter.
A. The department may issue a permit to a new owner of an existing food establishment after a properly completed application is submitted, reviewed, and approved and an inspection shows that the establishment is in compliance with this chapter.
B. An existing food establishment shall notify the department in writing of a transfer of legal ownership or termination of business operations. Such notice shall be submitted in writing to the department at least 30 days prior to the transfer of legal ownership or termination of business operation.
A. At the time of the initial inspection, the department shall provide to the operator permit holder a copy of this chapter so that the operator permit holder is notified of the compliance requirements and the conditions of retention, as specified under 2VAC5-585-3750, that are applicable to the food establishment.
B. Failure to provide the information specified in subsection A of this section does not prevent the department from taking authorized action or seeking remedies if the operator permit holder fails to comply with this chapter or an order, warning, or directive of the department.
The operator permit holder shall:
1. Post the permit in a location in the food establishment that is conspicuous to consumers;
2. Comply with the provisions of this chapter including the conditions of a granted variance as specified under 2VAC5-585-3542 and approved plans as specified under 2VAC5-585-3610;
2. 3. If a food establishment is required under 2VAC5-585-3620 to operate under a HACCP plan, comply with the plan as specified under 2VAC5-585-3542;
3. 4. Immediately contact the department to report an illness of a food employee or conditional employee as specified under 2VAC5-585-80 B;
4. 5. Immediately discontinue operations and notify the department if an imminent health hazard may exist as specified under 2VAC5-585-3910;
5. 6. Allow authorized representatives of the commissioner access to the food establishment as specified under 2VAC5-585-3820;
6. 7. Replace existing facilities and equipment specified in 2VAC5-585-3510 with facilities and equipment that comply with this chapter if:
a. The department directs the replacement because the facilities and equipment constitute a public health hazard or nuisance or no longer comply with the criteria upon which the facilities and equipment were accepted;
b. The department directs the replacement of the facilities and equipment because of a change of ownership; or
c. The facilities and equipment are replaced in the normal course of operation;
7. 8. Comply with directives of the department, including timeframes for corrective actions specified in inspection reports, notices, orders, warnings, and other directives issued by the department in regard to the operator's permit holder's food establishment or in response to community emergencies;
8. 9. Accept notices issued and served by the department according to law;
9. 10. Be subject to the administrative, civil, injunctive, and criminal remedies authorized in law for failure to comply with this chapter or a directive of the department, including timeframes for corrective actions specified in inspection reports, notices, orders, warnings, and other directives; and
10. 11. Notify customers that a copy of the most recent establishment inspection report is available upon request by posting a sign or placard in a location in the food establishment that is conspicuous to customers or by another method acceptable to the department.
A permit shall not be transferred from:
1. One person to another person;
2. One food establishment to another food establishment; or
3. One type of food operation to another type of food operation if the food operation changes from the type of operation specified in the application as specified under 2VAC5-585-3700 and the change in operation is not approved.
The authorized representative of the commissioner shall document:
1. Administrative information about the food establishment's legal identity, street and mailing addresses, type of establishment and operation, inspection date, and other information such as type of water supply and sewage disposal, and personnel certificates that may be required; and
2. Specific factual observations of violative conditions or other deviations from this chapter that require correction by the establishment operator permit holder, including:
a. Failure of the person in charge to demonstrate the knowledge of foodborne illness prevention, application of HACCP principles, and the requirements of this chapter specified under 2VAC5-585-60;
b. Failure of food employees, conditional employees, and the person in charge to report a disease or medical condition as specified under 2VAC5-585-80 B and D;
c. Nonconformance with priority items and priority foundation items of this chapter;
d. Failure of the appropriate food employees to demonstrate their knowledge of, and ability to perform in accordance with, the procedural, monitoring, verification, and corrective action practices required by the department as specified under 2VAC5-585-3542;
e. Failure of the person in charge to provide records required by the department for determining conformance with a HACCP plan as specified under subdivision 5 g of 2VAC5-585-3630; and
f. Nonconformance with critical limits of a HACCP plan.
The authorized representative of the commissioner shall:
1. Inform a person who declines to sign an acknowledgment of receipt of inspectional findings as specified in 2VAC5-585-3880 that:
a. An acknowledgment of receipt is not an agreement with findings;
b. Refusal to sign an acknowledgment of receipt will not affect the operator's permit holder's obligation to correct the violations noted in the inspection report within the time frames specified; and
c. A refusal to sign an acknowledgment of receipt is noted in the inspection report and conveyed to the department's historical record for the food establishment; and
2. Make a final request that the person in charge sign an acknowledgment receipt of inspectional findings.
A. Except as specified in subsections B and C of this section, an operator a permit holder shall immediately discontinue operations and notify the department if an imminent health hazard may exist because of an emergency such as a fire, flood, extended interruption of electrical or water service, sewage backup, misuse of poisonous or toxic materials, onset of an apparent foodborne illness outbreak, gross insanitary occurrence or condition, or other circumstance that may endanger public health.P
B. An operator A permit holder need not discontinue operations in an area of an establishment that is unaffected by the imminent health hazard.
C. Considering the nature of the potential hazard involved and the complexity of the corrective action needed, the department may agree to continuing operations in the event of an extended interruption of electrical or water service if:
1. A written emergency operating plan has been approved by the department;
2. Immediate corrective action is taken to eliminate, prevent, or control any food safety risk and imminent health hazard associated with the electrical or water service interruption; and
3. The department is informed upon implementation of the written emergency operating plan.
If operations are discontinued as specified under 2VAC5-585-3910 or otherwise according to law, the operator permit holder shall obtain approval from the department before resuming operations.
A. Except as specified in subsection B of this section, an operator a permit holder or person in charge shall at the time of inspection correct a violation of a priority item or priority foundation item of this chapter and implement corrective actions for a HACCP plan provision that is not in compliance with its critical limit.Pf
B. Considering the nature of the potential hazard involved and the complexity of the corrective action needed, the department may agree to or specify a longer timeframe, not to exceed:
1. 72 hours after the inspection, for the operator permit holder to correct violations of a priority item; or
2. 10 calendar days after the inspection, for the operator permit holder to correct violations of a priority foundation item or HACCP plan deviations.
A. After observing at the time of inspection a correction of a violation of a priority item or priority foundation item or a HACCP plan deviation, the authorized representative of the commissioner shall enter the violation and information about the corrective action on the inspection report.
B. As specified under 2VAC5-585-3930 B, after receiving notification that the operator permit holder has corrected a violation of a priority item or priority foundation item or HACCP plan deviation, or at the end of the specified period of time, the authorized representative shall verify correction of the violation or deviation during the next inspection of the establishment and shall document the information on an inspection report, and enter the report in the department's records.
A. Except as specified in subsection B of this section, the operator permit holder or person in charge shall correct core items by a date and time agreed to or specified by the department but no later than 90 calendar days after the inspection.
B. The department may approve a compliance schedule that extends beyond the time limits specified under subsection A of this section if a written schedule of compliance is submitted by the operator permit holder and no health hazard exists or will result from allowing an extended schedule for compliance.
Based on the findings of an investigation related to a food employee or conditional employee who is suspected of being infected or diseased, the department may issue an order to the suspected food employee, conditional employee, or operator permit holder instituting one or more of the following control measures:
1. Restricting the food employee or conditional employee;
2. Excluding the food employee or conditional employee; or
3. Closing the food establishment in accordance with law.
Based on the findings of the investigation as specified in 2VAC5-585-4040 and to control disease transmission, the department may issue an order of restriction or exclusion to the suspected food employee or the operator permit holder without prior warning, notice of hearing, or a hearing if the order:
1. States the reasons for the restriction or exclusion that is ordered;
2. States the evidence that the food employee or operator permit holder shall provide in order to demonstrate that the reasons for the restriction or exclusion are eliminated;
3. States that the suspected food employee or the operator permit holder may request an appeal hearing by submitting a timely request as provided in law; and
4. Provides the name and address of the authorized representative of the commissioner to whom a request for appeal hearing be made.
Permit Application for Retail Food Establishment, VDACS-FSP-APPRE (rev. 6/23)
Approved Drug Products with Therapeutic Equivalence Evaluations, 39th Edition, 2019, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Food and Drug Administration, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, Office of Pharmaceutical Science, Office of Generic Drugs at http://www.fda.gov/cder/ob/default.htm
Conference for Food Protection Standards for Accreditation of Food Protection Manager Certification Programs, April 2018, Conference for Food Protection, 30 Elliott Court, Martinsville, IN 46151-1331
Interstate Certified Shellfish Shippers List (updated monthly), published by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Food and Drug Administration, Office of Seafood (HFS-417), 5100 Paint Branch Parkway, College Park, MD 20740-3835
NSF/ANSI 18-2016 Manual Food and Beverage Dispensing Equipment, 2012, NSF International, 789 North Dixboro Road, P.O. Box 130140, Ann Arbor, MI 48113-0140, www.nsf.org