Final compliance dates for full implementation of the FDA Sanitary Transportation rules have passed. If you have not fully trained your staff, your company is out of compliance.
Over 84,000 food shippers, carriers and receivers are impacted by this law and most have less than one year for full compliance. This new law requires significant changes to procedures currently employed for food transportation operations, vehicles, tools and equipment used in food transportation. The final rules have now established the law which has significant differences from earlier published proposed food transportation rules, laws and guidance documents. Self-reporting of compliance failures is required as are critical shipper-carrier agreements for data, records and reporting.
Transportation and Logistics food transportation food safety rules have been finalized by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Under congressional instructions, the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) requires the FDA to audit, enforce and improve new rules of food transportation operations, personnel, vehicles, load and unload personnel and practices, cross contact (contamination), vehicle storage, inspection and test, training, records retention, and vehicle qualification.
The session will cover each section of the new sanitary food transportation law you need to protect consumers and your company.
The new law went into effect on April 6, 1016, which mean there is little time left for perishable food carriers, shippers, receivers and maintenance operations to develop and implement risk reducing preventive food handling, load and un-load, as well as make distribution and transportation process improvements.
Join this session by expert speaker Dr. John M. Ryan to get the information and knowledge to comply with FSMA sanitary food transportation law. Get armed with the knowledge needed to build a basic plan and learn the difference between preventive and corrective actions.
Dr. John Ryan is a certified Preventive Controls Qualified Individual (PQCI) specializing in food safety process control and food safety plan validation. He holds a Ph.D. in research and statistical methods and has extensive international manufacturing quality and operations experience in large and small manufacturing operations and he is a retired Hawaii State Department of Agriculture Quality Assurance Division administrator.He currently operates two business divisions focused on food safety system validation (http://www.RyanSystems.com) and transportation controls (http://www.SanitaryColdChain.com).He has previously published books other covering food fraud, teams and teamwork and has recently completed a new book on validating preventive controls in food operations.
01:00 PM EST 12:00 PM CST 11:00 AM MST 10:00 AM PST