TITLE 2. AGRICULTURE
                REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The  State Board of Agriculture and Consumer Services is claiming an exemption from  the Administrative Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4002 A 13 of the  Code of Virginia, which excludes the State Board of Agriculture and Consumer  Services when promulgating regulations pursuant to § 3.2-5121, which  conform, insofar as practicable, with the federal Food and Drug  Administration's Food Code. Pursuant to § 3.2-5121 C of the Code of  Virginia, this regulatory action is exempt from portions of the Administrative  Process Act provided the State Board of Health adopts the same version and both  agency's regulations have the same effective date. Both agencies are working  toward that goal.
         Title of Regulation: 2VAC5-585. Retail Food  Establishment Regulations (amending 2VAC5-585-40, 2VAC5-585-60, 2VAC5-585-70,  2VAC5-585-80, 2VAC5-585-90, 2VAC5-585-100, 2VAC5-585-140, 2VAC5-585-180,  2VAC5-585-360, 2VAC5-585-370, 2VAC5-585-400, 2VAC5-585-410, 2VAC5-585-430,  2VAC5-585-440, 2VAC5-585-450, 2VAC5-585-490, 2VAC5-585-500, 2VAC5-585-540,  2VAC5-585-570, 2VAC5-585-680, 2VAC5-585-700, 2VAC5-585-730, 2VAC5-585-740,  2VAC5-585-760, 2VAC5-585-780, 2VAC5-585-790, 2VAC5-585-800, 2VAC5-585-820,  2VAC5-585-830, 2VAC5-585-850, 2VAC5-585-860, 2VAC5-585-870, 2VAC5-585-900,  2VAC5-585-950, 2VAC5-585-980, 2VAC5-585-1200, 2VAC5-585-1230, 2VAC5-585-1260,  2VAC5-585-1310, 2VAC5-585-1420, 2VAC5-585-1550, 2VAC5-585-1560, 2VAC5-585-1690,  2VAC5-585-1980, 2VAC5-585-2040, 2VAC5-585-2190, 2VAC5-585-2230, 2VAC5-585-2280,  2VAC5-585-2310, 2VAC5-585-2520, 2VAC5-585-2630, 2VAC5-585-2790, 2VAC5-585-2810,  2VAC5-585-2920, 2VAC5-585-2950, 2VAC5-585-2960, 2VAC5-585-3020, 2VAC5-585-3030,  2VAC5-585-3040, 2VAC5-585-3045, 2VAC5-585-3080, 2VAC5-585-3180, 2VAC5-585-3240,  2VAC5-585-3360, 2VAC5-585-3460, 2VAC5-585-3860, 2VAC5-585-4040, 2VAC5-585-4050,  2VAC5-585-4070; repealing 2VAC5-585-110, 2VAC5-585-120, 2VAC5-585-150,  2VAC5-585-750, 2VAC5-585-1020, 2VAC5-585-1030, 2VAC5-585-1440, 2VAC5-585-1880,  2VAC5-585-2510, 2VAC5-585-2590, 2VAC5-585-3010, 2VAC5-585-3050, 2VAC5-585-3060,  2VAC5-585-3110, 2VAC5-585-3120, 2VAC5-585-3160). 
    Statutory Authority: § 3.2-5121 of the Code of  Virginia.
    Effective Date: January 1, 2010.
    Agency Contact: Ryan Davis, Program Manager, Office of  Dairy and Foods, Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, P.O. Box  1163, Richmond, VA 23218, telephone (804) 786-8910, FAX (804) 371-7792, TTY  (800) 828-1120, or email ryan.davis@vdacs.virginia.gov.
    Summary:
    The Retail Food Establishment Regulations establish minimum  sanitary standards for retail food establishments such as supermarkets, grocery  stores, and convenience stores. The standards include the safe and sanitary  maintenance, storage, operation, and use of equipment; the safe preparation,  handling, protection, and preservation of food including necessary  refrigeration or heating methods; procedures for vector and pest control;  requirements for toilet and handwashing facilities for employees, appropriate  lighting and ventilation, and an approved water supply and sewage disposal  system; personal hygiene standards for employees, and the appropriate use of  precautions to prevent the transmission of communicable diseases. 
    The amendments update the regulations to provide  consistency with the current 2005 FDA Food Code and the 2007 Food Code  Supplement. Significant changes include:
    1. Revising the definition of "potentially hazardous  foods" to make it more inclusive by including any food product that  requires time/temperature control for safety (TCS) to limit pathogenic  microorganism growth or toxin formation;
    2. Defining "food allergen" for consistency with  the Food Allergen Labeling and Consumer Protection Act of 2004;
    3. Including the viral pathogen Norovirus in the list of  diseases that require a food employee to be excluded from a food establishment  as well as including Norovirus in the list of employee diseases that food  establishment managers or owners must report to the regulatory authority;
    4. Amending handwashing procedures to include new protocols  relative to the washing of hands and protocols to avoid recontamination of the  hands after handwashing, which will provide consistency with the recommended  handwashing procedures in the Center for Disease Control's Hygienic Practice  Guidelines for Health Care Workers;
    5. Amending the date-marking provisions on foods that  present a higher risk of contamination, and exempting deli salads (e.g., ham,  chicken, egg, seafood, pasta, potato and macaroni) prepared and packaged in a  food processing plant, as well as cultured dairy products and certain types of  hard and semi-soft cheeses, from date marking;
    6. Amending procedures for reduced oxygen packaging (ROP)  by adding requirements relative to specific temperature controls for cook-chill  and sous vide packaging;
    7. Expanding the labeling requirements for food products  packaged in a food establishment to require such labels to include the name of  each major food allergen contained in the food, unless it is already part of  the common name or ingredients;
    8. Adding options for freezing to control parasites as well  as exemptions for certain fish that are aquacultured;
    9. Allowing time to be used as a food safety control  measure for six hours if certain requirements are met; and 
    10. Adding sprouted beans or seeds to the list of products  that require a HACCP plan if the products are sprouted at the retail  establishment.
    Article 2 
  Definitions 
    2VAC5-585-40. Definitions.
    The following words and terms when used in this regulation  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 Part 170 or (ii) "color  additive" having the meaning stated in the Federal Food, Drug, and  Cosmetic Act, 21 USC § 321(t) and 21 CFR Part 70.
    "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.
    "Asymptomatic" means without obvious symptoms;  not showing or producing indication 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.
    "Board" means the Board of Agriculture and Consumer  Services.
    "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 unique combination  of letters and numbers assigned by a shellfish control authority to a molluscan  shellfish dealer according to the provisions of the National Shellfish  Sanitation Program.
    "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.
    "CFR" means Code of Federal Regulations. Citations  in this regulation to the CFR refer sequentially to the title, part, and  section numbers, such as 21 CFR 178.1010 refers to Title 21, Part 178, Section  1010.
    "Code of Federal Regulations" means the compilation  of the general and permanent rules published in the Federal Register by the  executive departments and agencies of the federal government that:
    1. Is published annually by the U.S. Government Printing  Office; and
    2. Contains FDA rules in 21 CFR, USDA rules in 7 CFR and  9 CFR, EPA rules in 40 CFR, and Wildlife and Fisheries rules in 50 CFR.
    "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.
    "Comminuted" means reduced in size by methods  including chopping, flaking, grinding, or mincing. "Comminuted" includes  fish or meat products that are reduced in size and restructured or reformulated  such as gefilte fish, gyros, ground beef, and sausage; and 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 organism or chemical 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 or food processing plant, and does not offer  the food for resale.
    "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 easily movable 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 item" means a provision of this  regulation that, if in noncompliance, is more likely than other violations to  contribute to food contamination, illness, or environmental health hazard.  "Critical item" is an item that is denoted in this regulation with an  asterisk (*).
    "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.
    "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 in  their entirety, or items that contain an ingredient that is raw, undercooked,  or without otherwise being processed to eliminate pathogens.
    "Drinking water" means water that meets the  "water quality standards" requirements for bacteria and nitrates of  the Virginia Waterworks Regulations (12VAC5-590). Drinking water is  traditionally known as "potable water." Drinking water includes the  term water except where the term used connotes that the water is not potable,  such as "boiler water," "mop water," "rainwater,"  "wastewater," and "nondrinking" water.
    "Dry storage area" means a room or area designated  for the storage of packaged or containerized bulk food that is not potentially  hazardous 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 the domesticated  chicken, turkey, duck, goose, or guinea 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 person in charge, 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.
    "Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli  (EHEC)" means E. coli, which cause hemorrhagic colitis, meaning  bleeding enterically or bleeding from the intestine. The term is typically used  in association with E. coli that have the capacity to produce Shiga  toxins and to cause attaching and effacing lesion in the intestine. EHEC is a  subset of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC), whose members produce  additional virulence factors. Infections with EHEC may be asymptomatic but are  classically associated with bloody diarrhea (hemorrhagic colitis) and hemolytic  euremic syndrome (HUS) or thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP). Examples  of serotypes of EHEC include: E. coli O157:H7; E. coli O157:NM; E.  coli O26:H11; E. coli O145:NM; E. coli O103:H2; or E. coli  O111:NM. Also see Shiga toxin-producing E. coli.
    "EPA" means the U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency.
    "Equipment" means an article that is used in the  operation of a food establishment. "Equipment" includes, but is not  limited to, items 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 items 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  a food employee in a food establishment or entering a food establishment  except for those areas open to the general public as an employee.
    "°F" means degrees Fahrenheit.
    "FDA" means the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
    "Fish" means fresh or saltwater finfish,  crustaceans, and 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; all mollusks, if such animal life is  intended for human consumption; and includes any edible human food product  derived in whole or in part from fish, including fish that has been processed  in any manner.
    "Food" means 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.
    "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," as used in this regulation,  means an operation that stores, prepares, packages, serves, vends, or otherwise  offers for retail sale food for human consumption (i) 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; market; vending location; conveyance used to transport  people; institution; or food bank and (ii) that relinquishes possession of a  food to a consumer directly, or indirectly through a delivery service such as  home delivery of grocery orders or restaurant take out orders, or delivery  service that is provided by common carriers.
    "Food establishment," as used in this regulation,  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 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," as used in this regulation,  does not include:
    1. An establishment that offers only prepackaged foods that  are not potentially hazardous;
    2. A produce stand that only offers whole, uncut fresh fruits  and vegetables;
    3. A food processing plant;
    4. A food warehouse;
    5. A kitchen in a private home;
    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 does not provide food directly to a consumer 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" as previously defined in this  section.
    "Game animal" means an animal, the products of  which are food, that is not classified as cattle, sheep, swine, goat, horse,  mule, or other equine in 9 CFR Part 301, Definitions, as Poultry in 9 CFR Part  381, Poultry Products Inspection Regulations, or as fish as previously defined  in this section. "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 such as ostrich, emu, and rhea.
    "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  United States Public Health Service/FDA "Grade A Pasteurized Milk  Ordinance (2003)" and "Grade A Condensed and Dry Milk  Ordinance (1995)" 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 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 profession.
    "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 tenderizing a meat with deep  penetration or injecting the meat such as with juices that may be referred to  as "injecting," "pinning," or "stitch pumping."  During injection infectious or toxigenic microorganisms may be introduced from  its surface to its interior.
    "Juice," when used in the context of food  safety, "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 includes juice as a whole beverage, an ingredient of a beverage  and a purée as an ingredient of a beverage 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; or a food ingredient that contains protein derived from  one of these foods. Major food allergen does not include any highly refined oil  derived from a major food allergen in this definition and any ingredient  derived from such highly refined oil; or 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, Title II, Sec. 201).
    "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 3 and 4.
    "mg/L" means milligrams per liter, which is the  metric equivalent of parts per million (ppm).
    "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.
    "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,  securely bagged, or securely packaged in a food establishment or a food  processing plant. "Packaged" does not include a wrapper, carry-out  box, or other nondurable container used to containerize food with the purpose  of facilitating food protection during service and receipt of the food by the consumer.
    "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.
    "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 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, which include substances such as insecticides  and rodenticides;
    3. Substances necessary for the operation and maintenance of  the establishment such as nonfood grade lubricants, paints, 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.
    "Potentially hazardous food" means a food that  is natural or synthetic and that requires temperature control because it is in  a form capable of supporting:
    1. The rapid and progressive growth of infectious or  toxigenic microorganisms;
    2. The growth and toxin production of Clostridium  botulinum; or
    3. In raw shell eggs, the growth of Salmonella enteritidis.
    "Potentially hazardous food" includes an animal  food (a food of animal origin) that is raw or heat-treated; a food of plant  origin that is heat-treated or consists of raw seed sprouts; cut melons; and  garlic-in-oil mixtures that are not acidified or otherwise modified at a food  processing plant in a way that results in mixtures that do not support growth  as specified above in this definition.
    "Potentially hazardous food" does not include:
    1. An air-cooled hard-boiled egg with shell intact or a  shell egg that is not hard-boiled, but has been treated to destroy all viable  Salmonellae;
    2. A food with an aw value of 0.85 or less;
    3. A food with a pH level of 4.6 or below when measured at  75°F (24°C);
    4. 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;
    5. A food for which laboratory evidence demonstrates that  the rapid and progressive growth of infectious and toxigenic microorganisms or  the growth of Salmonella enteritidis in eggs or Clostridium botulinum cannot  occur, such as a food that has an aw and a pH that are above the levels  specified in this definition and that may contain a preservative, other barrier  to the growth of microorganisms, or a combination of barriers that inhibit the  growth of microorganisms; or
    6. A food that does not support the growth of  microorganisms as specified above in this definition even though the food may  contain an infectious or toxigenic microorganism or chemical or physical  contaminant at a level sufficient to cause illness.
    "Potentially hazardous food (time/temperature control  for safety food)" means a food that requires time/temperature control for  safety (TCS) to limit pathogenic microorganism growth or toxin formation: 
    1. Potentially hazardous food (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 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 that results in mixtures  that do not support pathogenic microorganism growth or toxin formation; and  except as specified in subdivision 2 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-PHF*/non-TCS food**      |          non-PHF/non-TCS food      |          non-PHF/non-TCS food      |    
       |      > 0.92-0.95      |          non-PHF/non-TCS food      |          non-PHF/non-TCS food      |          PA***      |    
       |      >0.95      |          non-PHF/non-TCS food      |          PA      |          PA      |    
       |      *PHF means Potentially    Hazardous Food     **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-PHF*/non-TCS food**      |          non-PHF/non-TCS food      |          non-PHF/non-TCS food      |          non-PHF/non-TCS food      |    
       |      0.88-0.90      |          non-PHF/non-TCS food      |          non-PHF/non-TCS food      |          non-PHF/non-TCS food      |          PA***      |    
       |      >0.90-0.92      |          non-PHF/non-TCS food      |          non-PHF/non-TCS food      |          PA      |          PA      |    
       |      >0.92      |          non-PHF/non-TCS food      |          PA      |          PA      |          PA      |    
       |      *PHF means Potentially    Hazardous Food     **TCS means    Time/Temperature Control for Safety Food     ***PA means Product    Assessment required      |    
  
    2. Potentially hazardous food (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-PHF/non-TCS  food in Table A or B of this definition;
    d. A food that is designated as Product Assessment required  (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.
    "Poultry" means any domesticated bird (chickens,  turkeys, ducks, geese, or guineas), whether live or dead, as defined in 9 CFR  Part 381, Poultry Products Inspection Regulations, and any migratory waterfowl,  game bird, or squab such as pheasant, partridge, quail, grouse, or guineas, or  pigeon or squab, whether live or dead, as defined in 9 CFR Part 362, Voluntary  Poultry Inspection Regulations. "Poultry" does not include ratites.
    "Premises" means the physical facility, its  contents, and the contiguous land or property under the control of the operator  or person in charge.
    "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.
    "Public water system" has the meaning stated in 40  CFR Part 141, National Primary Drinking Water Regulations.
    "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 subsections A through C  of 2VAC5-585-700 or 2VAC5-585-710 or 2VAC5-585-730; (ii) is a raw or partially  cooked animal food and the consumer is advised as specified under subdivisions  D 1 and D 2 of 2VAC5-585-700; or (iii) is prepared in accordance with a  variance that is granted as specified under subdivisions D 1 and D 3 of  2VAC5-585-700; 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. Fruits and vegetables that are cooked for hot holding, as  specified under 2VAC5-585-720;
    4. All potentially hazardous 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 regulation 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 according to 21 CFR Part 113, Thermally  Processed Low-Acid Foods Packaged in Hermetically Sealed Containers.
    "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 surrounding,  21% oxygen atmosphere (approximately 21% at sea level); and (ii) a  process as specified in clause (i) of this definition that involves a food for  which Clostridium botulinum is identified as a microbiological hazard in the  final packaged form 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, such as sous vide;
    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;  and
    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 pathogens; or
    5. Sous vide packaging, in which raw or partially cooked  food is placed in a hermetically sealed, impermeable bag, cooked in the bag,  rapidly chilled, and refrigerated at temperatures that inhibit the growth of  psychotrophic 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 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, and 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  (pesticides classified for restricted use) 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  or 706 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 USC §§ 348 and 376); 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, yield a reduction of five logs, 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 permit 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.
    "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 molluscan  shellfish.
    "Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli" (STEC)  means any E. coli capable of producing Shiga toxins (also called verocytotoxins  or "Shiga-like" toxins). This includes, but is not limited to, E.  coli reported as serotype O157:H7, O157:NM, and O157:H-. Examples of  serotypes of STEC include both O157 and non-O157 E. coli. Also see  Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli.
    "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 spinach.
    "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.
    "Table-mounted equipment" means equipment that  is not easily movable and is designed to be mounted off the floor on a table,  counter, or shelf.
    "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.
    "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, or key, or by 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 and servicing areas on the premises that are  used in conjunction with the vending machines.
    "Warewashing" means the cleaning and sanitizing of  food-contact surfaces of equipment and utensils.
    "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.
    2VAC5-585-60. Demonstration.*
    Based on the risks of foodborne illness inherent to the food  operation, during inspections and upon request the person in charge shall  demonstrate to the department knowledge of foodborne disease prevention,  application of the Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point principles, and the  requirements of this regulation. The person in charge shall demonstrate this  knowledge by:
    1. Complying with this regulation by having no violations  during the current inspection;
    2. Being a certified food protection manager who has shown  proficiency of required information through passing a test that is part of an  accredited program; or
    3. Responding correctly to the inspector's questions as they  relate to the specific food operation. The areas of knowledge include:
    a. Describing the relationship between the prevention of  foodborne disease and the personal hygiene of a food employee;
    b. Explaining the responsibility of the person in charge for preventing  the transmission of foodborne disease by a food employee who has a disease or  medical condition that may cause foodborne disease;
    c. Describing the symptoms associated with the diseases that  are transmissible through food;
    d. Explaining the significance of the relationship between  maintaining the time and temperature of potentially hazardous food (time/temperature  control for safety food) and the prevention of foodborne illness;
    e. Explaining the hazards involved in the consumption of raw  or undercooked meat, poultry, eggs, and fish;
    f. Stating the required food temperatures and times for safe  cooking of potentially hazardous food (time/temperature control for safety  food) including meat, poultry, eggs, and fish;
    g. Stating the required temperatures and times for the safe  refrigerated storage, hot holding, cooling, and reheating of potentially  hazardous food (time/temperature control for safety food);
    h. Describing the relationship between the prevention of  foodborne illness and the management and control of the following:
    (1) Cross contamination;
    (2) Hand contact with ready-to-eat foods;
    (3) Handwashing; and
    (4) Maintaining the food establishment in a clean condition  and in good repair;
    i. Describing the 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;
    i. j. Explaining the relationship between food  safety and providing equipment that is:
    (1) Sufficient in number and capacity; and
    (2) Properly designed, constructed, located, installed,  operated, maintained, and cleaned;
    j. k. Explaining correct procedures for cleaning  and sanitizing utensils and food-contact surfaces of equipment;
    k. l. Identifying the source of water used and  measures taken to ensure that it remains protected from contamination such as  providing protection from backflow and precluding the creation of cross  connections;
    l. m. Identifying poisonous or toxic materials  in the food establishment and the procedures necessary to ensure that they are  safely stored, dispensed, used, and disposed of according to law;
    m. n. Identifying critical control points in the  operation from purchasing through sale or service that when not controlled may  contribute to the transmission of foodborne illness and explaining steps taken  to ensure that the points are controlled in accordance with the requirements of  this regulation;
    n. o. Explaining the details of how the person  in charge and food employees comply with the HACCP plan if a plan is required  by the law, this regulation, or an agreement between the department and the  establishment; and
    o. p. Explaining the responsibilities, rights,  and authorities assigned by this regulation to the:
    (1) Food employee;
    (2) Person in charge; and
    (3) Department.
    q. Explaining how the person in charge, food employees, and  conditional employees comply with reporting responsibilities and the exclusion  or restriction of food employees.
    2VAC5-585-70. Person Duties of person in charge.
    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;
    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;
    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 regulation;
    4. Employees are effectively cleaning their hands, by  routinely monitoring the employees' handwashing;
    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;
    6. Employees are properly cooking potentially hazardous 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;
    7. Employees are using proper methods to rapidly cool  potentially hazardous 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;
    8. 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;
    9. 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;
    10. 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;
    11. Except when otherwise approved as specified in  2VAC5-585-450 B, 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; and
    12. Employees are properly trained in food safety as it  relates to their assigned duties.; and
    13. Food employees and conditional employees are informed  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.
    Article 2 
  Employee Health 
    2VAC5-585-80. Responsibility of the person in charge to  require reporting by food employees and applicants and conditional  employees.*
    A. The person in charge shall require food employee  applicants to whom a conditional offer of employment is made and 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 applicant conditional  employee shall report the information in a manner that allows the person in  charge to prevent the likelihood reduce the risk of foodborne  disease transmission, including providing necessary additional information,  such as the date of onset of jaundice or of symptoms and an  illness specified in subdivision 3 of this section, or of a diagnosis  without symptoms, if the food employee or applicant conditional  employee:
    1. Is diagnosed with an illness due to:
    a. Salmonella typhi;
    b. Shigella spp.;
    c. Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli; or
    d. Hepatitis A virus;
    2. Has a symptom caused by illness, infection, or other  source that is:
    a. Associated with an acute gastrointestinal illness such  as:
    (1) Diarrhea;
    (2) Fever;
    (3) Vomiting;
    (4) Jaundice; or
    (5) Sore throat with fever; or
    b. 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;
    (2) On exposed portions of the arms, unless the lesion is  protected by an impermeable cover; or
    (3) On other parts of the body, unless the lesion is  covered by a dry, durable, tight-fitting bandage;
    3. Had a past illness from:
    a. S. typhi within the past three months;
    b. Shigella spp. within the past month;
    c. Shiga Toxin-Producing Escherichia coli, within the past  month; or
    d. Hepatitis A virus;
    4. Meets one or more of the following high-risk conditions:
    a. Is suspected of causing, or being exposed to, a  confirmed disease outbreak caused by S. typhi, Shigella spp., Shiga  toxin-producing Escherichia coli, or hepatitis A virus including an outbreak at  an event such as a family meal, church supper, or festival because the food  employee or applicant:
    (1) Prepared food implicated in the outbreak;
    (2) Consumed food implicated in the outbreak; or
    (3) Consumed food at the event prepared by a person who is  infected or ill with the infectious agent that caused the outbreak or who is  suspected of being a shedder of the infectious agent;
    b. Lives in the same household as a person who is diagnosed  with a disease caused by S. typhi, Shigella spp., Shiga Toxin-Producing  Escherichia coli, or hepatitis A virus; or
    c. Lives in the same household as a person who attends or  works in a setting where there is a confirmed disease outbreak caused by S.  typhi, Shigella spp., Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli, or hepatitis A  virus.
    1. Has any of the following symptoms:
    a. Vomiting;
    b. Diarrhea;
    c. Jaundice; 
    d. Sore throat with fever; 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, 
    (2) On exposed portions of the arms, unless the lesion is  protected by an impermeable cover, or 
    (3) On other parts of the body, unless the lesion is  covered by a dry, durable, tight-fitting bandage;
    2. Has an illness diagnosed by a health practitioner due  to:
    a. Norovirus;
    b. Hepatitis A virus;
    c. Shigella spp.;
    d. Enterohemorrhagic or Shiga-toxin producing Escherichia  coli; or
    e. Salmonella Typhi;
    3. Had a previous illness, diagnosed by a health  practitioner, within the past three months due to Salmonella Typhi, without  having received antibiotic therapy, as determined by a health practitioner;
    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;  
    b. Enterohemorrhagic or Shiga-toxin producing Escherichia  coli, or Shigella spp. within the past three days of the last exposure; 
    c. Salmonella Typhi within the past 14 days of the last  exposure; or
    d. Hepatitis A virus within the past 30 days of the last  exposure; 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 exposure;
    b. Enterohemorragic or Shiga-toxin producing Escherichia  coli, or Shigella spp. within the past three days of the last exposure; 
    c. Salmonella Typhi within the past 14 days of the last  exposure; or
    d. Hepatitis A virus within the past 30 days of the last  exposure.
    B. The person in charge shall notify the regulatory  authority when a food employee is:
    1. Jaundiced; or
    2. Diagnosed with an illness due to a pathogen as specified  under subdivisions A 2 a through e of this section.
    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 2 a through e 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; 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 9 of 2VAC5-585-100.
    D. The person in charge shall ensure that a food employee  who exhibits or reports a symptom, or who reports a diagnosed illness or  history of exposure as specified under subdivision A 1 through 5 of this  section is:
    1. Excluded as specified under subdivisions 1 through 3 and  4 a, 5 a, 6 a, or 7 a of 2VAC5-585-90 and in compliance with the provisions  specified under subdivisions 1 through 7 of 2VAC5-585-100; or
    2. Restricted as specified under subdivisions 4 b, 5 b, 6  b, 7 b, 8, or 9 of 2VAC5-585-90 and in compliance with the provisions specified  under subdivisions 4 through 9 of 2VAC5-585-100.
    E. A food employee or conditional employee shall report to  the person in charge the information as specified under subsection A of this  section.
    F. A food employee shall:
    1. Comply with an exclusion as specified under subdivisions  1 through 3 and 4 a, 5 a, 6 a, or 7 a of 2VAC5-585-90, and with the provisions  specified under subdivisions 1 through 7 of 2VAC5-585-100; or
    2. Comply with a restriction as specified under subdivisons  4 b, 5 b, 6 b, 7 b, 8, or 9 of 2VAC5-585-90 and comply with the provisions  specified under subdivisons 4 through 9 of 2VAC5-585-100.
    2VAC5-585-90. Exclusions and restrictions.*
    A. The person in charge shall exclude a food employee from  a food establishment if the food employee is diagnosed with an infectious agent  specified in subdivision 1 of 2VAC5-585-80.
    B. Except as specified under subsection C or D of this  section, the person in charge shall restrict a food employee from working with  exposed food; clean equipment, utensils, and linens; and unwrapped  single-service and single-use articles in a food establishment if the food  employee is:
    1. Suffering from a symptom specified under subdivision 2 a  (1), (2), (3) or (5) of 2VAC5-585-80; or
    2. Not experiencing a symptom of acute gastroenteritis  specified in subdivision 2 a of 2VAC5-585-80, but has a stool that yields a  specimen culture that is positive for S. typhi, Shigella spp., or Shiga  toxin-producing Escherichia coli.
    C. If the population served is a highly susceptible  population, the person in charge shall exclude a food employee who:
    1. Is experiencing a symptom of acute gastrointestinal  illness specified under subdivisions 2 a (1), (2), (3) or (5) of 2VAC5-585-80  and meets a high-risk condition specified in subdivision 4 of 2VAC5-585-80;
    2. Is not experiencing a symptom of acute gastroenteritis  specified in subdivision 2 a of 2VAC5-585-80, but has a stool that yields a  specimen culture that is positive for S. typhi, Shigella spp., or Shiga  toxin-producing Escherichia coli;
    3. Had a past illness from S. typhi within the last three  months; or
    4. Had a past illness from Shigella spp. or Shiga  toxin-producing Escherichia coli within the last month.
    D. For a food employee who is jaundiced:
    1. If the onset of jaundice occurred within the last seven  calendar days, the person in charge shall exclude the food employee from the  food establishment; or
    2. If the onset of jaundice occurred more than seven  calendar days before, the person in charge shall:
    a. Exclude the food employee from a food establishment that  serves a highly susceptible population; or
    b. Restrict the food employee from activities specified in  subsection B of this section, if the food establishment does not serve a highly  susceptible population.
    The person in charge shall exclude or restrict a food  employee from a food establishment in accordance with the following:
    1. Except when the symptom is from a noninfectious  condition, exclude a food employee if the food employee is:
    a. Symptomatic with vomiting or diarrhea; or
    b. Symptomatic with vomiting or diarrhea and diagnosed with  an infection from Norovirus, Shigella spp., or Enterohemorrhagic or Shiga-toxin  producing Escherichia coli.
    2. Exclude a food employee who is:
    a. Jaundiced and the onset of jaundice occurred within the  last seven calendar days, unless the food employee provides to the person in  charge written medical documentation from a health practitioner specifying that  the jaundice is not caused by Hepatitis A virus or other fecal-orally  transmitted infection;
    b. Diagnosed with an infection from Hepatitis A virus  within 14 calendar days from the onset of any illness symptoms, or within seven  calendar days of the onset of jaundice; or
    c. Diagnosed with an infection from Hepatitis A virus  without developing symptoms.
    3. Exclude a food employee who is diagnosed with an  infection from Salmonella Typhi, or reports a previous infection with  Salmonella Typhi within the past three months as specified in 2VAC5-585-80 A 3.
    4. If a food employee is diagnosed with an infection from  Norovirus and is asymptomatic:
    a. Exclude the food employee who works in a food  establishment serving a highly susceptible population; or
    b. Restrict the food employee who works in a food  establishment not serving a highly susceptible population.
    5. If a food employee is diagnosed with an infection from  Shigella spp. and is asymptomatic:
    a. Exclude the food employee who works in a food  establishment serving a highly susceptible population; or
    b. Restrict the food employee who works in a food  establishment not serving a highly susceptible population.
    6. If a food employee is diagnosed with an infection from  Enterohemorrhagic or Shiga-toxin producing E. coli, and is asymptomatic:
    a. Exclude the food employee who works in a food  establishment serving a highly susceptible population; or
    b. Restrict the food employee who works in a food  establishment not serving a highly susceptible population.
    7. If a food employee is ill with symptoms of acute onset  of sore throat with fever:
    a. Exclude the food employee who works in a food  establishment serving a highly susceptible population; or
    b. Restrict the food employee who works in a food  establishment not serving a highly susceptible population.
    8. If a food employee is infected with a skin lesion  containing pus such as a boil or infected wound that is open or draining and  not properly covered as specified under 2VAC5-585-80 A 1 e, restrict the food  employee.
    9. If a food employee is exposed to a foodborne pathogen as  specified under 2VAC5-585-80 A 4 or 5, restrict the food employee who works in  a food establishment serving a highly susceptible population.
    2VAC5-585-100. Removal of exclusions and restrictions.
    A. The person in charge may remove an exclusion specified  under 2VAC5-585-90 A if:
    1. The person in charge obtains approval from the  department; and
    2. The person excluded as specified under 2VAC5-585-90 A  provides to the person in charge written medical documentation from a physician  licensed to practice medicine or, if allowed by law, a nurse practitioner or  physician assistant, that specifies that the excluded person may work in an  unrestricted capacity in a food establishment, including an establishment that  serves a highly susceptible population, because the person is free of the  infectious agent of concern as specified in 2VAC5-585-4070.
    B. The person in charge may remove a restriction specified  under:
    1. Subdivision B 1 of 2VAC5-585-90 if the restricted  person:
    a. Is free of the symptoms specified under subdivision 2 a  (1), (2), (3), (5), or 2 b of 2VAC5-585-80 and no foodborne illness occurs that  may have been caused by the restricted person;
    b. Is suspected of causing foodborne illness but:
    (1) Is free of the symptoms specified under subdivision 2 a  (1), (2), (3), (5), or 2 b of 2VAC5-585-80; and
    (2) Provides written medical documentation from a physician  licensed to practice medicine or, if allowed by law, a nurse practitioner or  physician assistant, stating that the restricted person is free of the  infectious agent that is suspected of causing the person's symptoms or causing  foodborne illness, as specified in 2VAC5-585-4070; or
    c. Provides written medical documentation from a physician  licensed to practice medicine or, if allowed by law, a nurse practitioner or  physician assistant, stating that the symptoms experienced result from a  chronic noninfectious condition such as Crohn's disease, irritable bowel  syndrome, or ulcerative colitis; or
    2. Subdivision B 2 of 2VAC5-585-90 if the restricted person  provides written medical documentation from a physician, licensed to practice  medicine, or, if allowed by law, a nurse practitioner or physician assistant,  according to the criteria specified in 2VAC5-585-4070 that indicates the stools  are free of Salmonella typhi, Shigella spp., or Shiga toxin-producing  Escherichia coli, whichever is the infectious agent of concern.
    C. The person in charge may remove an exclusion specified  under 2VAC5-585-90 C if the excluded person provides written medical  documentation from a physician licensed to practice medicine or, if allowed by  law, a nurse practitioner or physician assistant:
    1. That specifies that the person is free of the infectious  agent of concern as specified in 2VAC5-585-4070; or
    2. If the person is excluded under 2VAC5-585-90 C 1, that  the symptoms experienced result from a chronic noninfectious condition such as  Crohn's disease, irritable bowel syndrome, or ulcerative colitis.
    D. The person in charge may remove an exclusion specified  under 2VAC5-585-90 D 1 and 2VAC5-585-90 D 2 a and a restriction specified under  2VAC5-585-90 D 2 b if:
    1. No foodborne illness occurs that may have been caused by  the excluded or restricted person and the person provides written medical  documentation from a physician licensed to practice medicine stating that the  person is free of hepatitis A virus as specified in subdivision 4 a of  2VAC5-585-4070; or
    2. The excluded or restricted person is suspected of  causing foodborne illness and complies with subdivisions 4 a and 4 b of  2VAC5-585-4070.
    The person in charge shall adhere to the following  conditions when removing, adjusting, or retaining the exclusion or restriction  of a food employee:
    1. Except when a food employee is diagnosed with an  infection from Hepatitis A virus or Salmonella Typhi:
    a. Reinstate a food employee who was excluded as specified  under subdivision 1 a of 2VAC5-585-90 if the food employee:
    (1) Is asymptomatic for at least 24 hours; or
    (2) Provides to the person in charge written medical  documentation from a health practitioner that states the symptom is from a  noninfectious condition.
    b. If a food employee was diagnosed with an infection from  Norovirus and excluded as specified under 2VAC5-585-90 1 b:
    (1) Restrict the food employee, who is asymptomatic for at  least 24 hours and works in a food establishment not serving a highly  susceptible population until the conditions for reinstatement as specified in  subdivision 4 a or b of this section are met; or
    (2) Retain the exclusion for the food employee, who is  asymptomatic for at least 24 hours and works in a food establishment that  serves a highly susceptible population, until the conditions for reinstatement  as specified in subdivision 4 a or b of this section are met.
    c. If a food employee was diagnosed with an infection from  Shigella spp. and excluded as specified under subdivision 1 b of 2VAC5-585-90:
    (1) Restrict the food employee, who is asymptomatic, for at  least 24 hours and works in a food establishment not serving a highly  susceptible population, until the conditions for reinstatement as specified in  subdivision 5 a or b of this section are met; or
    (2) Retain the exclusion for the food employee, who is  asymptomatic for at least 24 hours and works in a food establishment that  serves a highly susceptible population, until the conditions for reinstatement  as specified in subdivision 5 a or b, or 5 a and c (1) of this section are met.
    d. If a food employee was diagnosed with an infection from  Enterohemorrhagic or Shiga-toxin producing Escherichia coli and excluded as  specified under subdivision 1 b of 2VAC5-585-90:
    (1) Restrict the food employee, who is asymptomatic for at  least 24 hours and works in a food establishment not serving a highly  susceptible population, until the conditions for reinstatement as specified in  subdivision 6 a or b of this section are met; or
    (2) Retain the exclusion for the food employee, who is  asymptomatic for at least 24 hours and works in a food establishment that  serves a highly susceptible population, until the conditions for reinstatement  as specified in subdivision 6 a or b are met.
    2. Reinstate a food employee who was excluded as specified  under subdivision 2 of 2VAC5-585-90 if the person in charge obtains approval  from the regulatory authority and one of the following conditions is met:
    a. The food employee has been jaundiced for more than seven  calendar days;
    b. The anicteric food employee has been symptomatic with  symptoms other than jaundice for more than 14 calendar days; or
    c. The food employee provides to the person in charge  written medical documentation from a health practitioner stating that the food  employee is free of a Hepatitis A virus infection.
    3. Reinstate a food employee who was excluded as specified  under subdivision 3 of 2VAC5-585-90 if:
    a. The person in charge obtains approval from the  regulatory authority; and
    b. The food employee provides to the person in charge  written medical documentation from a health practitioner that states the  employee is free from S. Typhi infection.
    4. Reinstate a food employee who was excluded as specified  under subdivision 1 b or 4 a of 2VAC5-585-90, who was restricted under  subdivision 4 b of 2VAC5-585-90 if the person in charge obtains approval from  the regulatory authority and one of the following conditions is met:
    a. The excluded or restricted food employee provides to the  person in charge written medical documentation from a health practitioner  stating that the food employee is free of a Norovirus infection;
    b. The food employee was excluded or restricted after  symptoms of vomiting or diarrhea resolved, and more than 48 hours have passed  since the food employee became symptomatic; or
    c. The food employee was excluded or restricted and did not  develop symptoms and more than 48 hours have passed since the food employee was  diagnosed.
    5. Reinstate a food employee who was excluded as specified  under subdivision 1 b or 5 a of 2VAC5-585-90 or who was restricted under  subdivision 5 b of 2VAC5-585-90 if the person in charge obtains approval from  the regulatory authority and one of the following conditions is met:
    a. The excluded or restricted food employee provides to the  person in charge written medical documentation from a health practitioner  stating that the food employee is free of a Shigella spp. infection based on  test results showing two consecutive negative stool specimen cultures that are  taken:
    (1) Not earlier than 48 hours after discontinuance of  antibiotics; and
    (2) At least 24 hours apart;
    b. The food employee was excluded or restricted after  symptoms of vomiting or diarrhea resolved, and more than seven calendar days  have passed since the food employee became asymptomatic; or
    c. The food employee was excluded or restricted and did not  develop symptoms and more than seven calendar days have passed since the food  employee was diagnosed.
    6. Reinstate a food employee who was excluded or restricted  as specified under subdivision 1 b or 6 a of 2VAC5-585-90 or who was restricted  under subdivision 6 b of 2VAC5-585-90 if the person in charge obtains approval  from the regulatory authority and one of the following conditions is met:
    a. The excluded or restricted food employee provides to the  person in charge written medical documentation from a health practitioner  stating that the food employee is free of an infection from Enterohemorrhagic  or Shiga-toxin producing Escherichia coli based on test results that show two  consecutive negative stool specimen cultures that are taken:
    (1) Not earlier than 48 hours after the discontinuance of  antibiotics; and
    (2) At least 24 hours apart;
    b. The food employee was excluded or restricted after  symptoms of vomiting or diarrhea resolved and more than seven calendar days  have passed since the employee became asymptomatic; or
    c. The food employee was excluded or restricted and did not  develop symptoms and more than seven days have passed since the employee was  diagnosed.
    7. Reinstate a food employee who was excluded or restricted  as specified under subdivision 7 a or b of 2VAC5-585-90 if the food employee provides  to the person in charge written medical documentation from a health  practitioner stating that the food employee meets one of the following  conditions:
    a. Has received antibiotic therapy for Streptococcus  pyogenes infection for more than 24 hours;
    b. Has at least one negative throat specimen culture for  Streptococcus pyogenes infection; or
    c. Is otherwise determined by a health practitioner to be  free of Streptococcus pyogenes infection.
    8. Reinstate a food employee who was restricted as  specified under subdivision 8 of 2VAC5-585-90 if the skin, infected wound, cut,  or pustular boil is properly covered with one of the following:
    a. An impermeable cover such as a finger cot or stall and a  single-use glove over the impermeable cover if the infected wound or pustular  boil is on the hand, finger, or wrist;
    b. An impermeable cover on the arm if the infected wound or  pustular boil is on the arm; or
    c. A dry, durable, tight-fitting bandage if the infected  wound or pustular boil is on another part of the body.
    9. Reinstate a food employee who was restricted as  specified under subdivision 9 of 2VAC5-585-90 and was exposed to one of the  following pathogens as specified under 2VAC5-585-80 A 4 or 5:
    a. Norovirus and one of the following conditions is met:
    (1) More than 48 hours have passed since the last day the  food employee was potentially exposed; or
    (2) More than 48 hours have passed since the food  employee's household contact became asymptomatic.
    b. Shigella spp. or Enterohemorrhagic or Shiga-toxin  producing Escherichia coli and one of the following conditions is met:
    (1) More than three calendar days have passed since the  last day the food employee was potentially exposed; or
    (2) More than three calendar days have passed since the  food employee's household contact became asymptomatic.
    c. S. Typhi and one of the following conditions is met:
    (1) More than 14 calendar days have passed since the last  day the food employee was potentially exposed; or
    (2) More than 14 calendar days have passed since the food  employee's household contact became asymptomatic.
    d. Hepatitis A virus and one of the following conditions is  met:
    (1) The food employee is immune to Hepatitis A virus  infection because of prior illness from Hepatitis A;
    (2) The food employee is immune to Hepatitis A virus  infection because of vaccination against Hepatitis A;
    (3) The food employee is immune to Hepatitis A virus  infection because of IgG administration;
    (4) More than 30 calendar days have passed since the last  the food employee was potentially exposed;
    (5) More than 30 calendar days have passed since the food  employee's household contact became jaundiced; or
    (6) The food employee does not use an alternative procedure  that allows bare hand contact with ready-to-eat food until at least 30 days  after the potential exposure, as specified in subdivision 9 d (4) and (5) of  this section, and the food employee receives additional training about:
    (a) Hepatitis A symptoms and preventing the transmission of  infection;
    (b) Proper handwashing procedures; and
    (c) Protecting ready-to-eat food from contamination  introduced by bare hand contact.
    2VAC5-585-110. Responsibility of a food employee or an  applicant to report to the person in charge.* (Repealed.)
    A food employee or a person who applies for a job as a  food employee shall:
    1. In a manner specified under 2VAC5-585-80, report to the  person in charge the information specified under subdivisions 1 through 4 of  2VAC5-585-80; and
    2. Comply with exclusions and restrictions that are  specified under subsections A through D of 2VAC5-585-90.
    2VAC5-585-120. Reporting by the person in charge.* (Repealed.)
    The person in charge shall notify the department that a  food employee is diagnosed with an illness due to Salmonella typhi, Shigella  spp., Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli, or hepatitis A virus.
    2VAC5-585-140. Cleaning procedure of hands and arms.*
    A. Except as specified in subsection B D of  this section, food employees shall clean their hands and exposed portions of  their arms (or surrogate prosthetic devices for hands or arms) for at least 20  seconds, using a cleaning compound in a lavatory that is equipped as specified  under 2VAC5-585-2190.
    B. Food employees shall use the following cleaning procedure in  the order stated to clean their hands and exposed portions of their arms,  including surrogate prosthetic devices for hands and arms:
    1. Vigorous friction on the surfaces of the lathered  fingers, finger tips, areas between the fingers, hands and arms (or by  vigorously rubbing the surrogate prosthetic devices for hands or arms) for at  least 10 to 15 seconds, followed by;
    2. Thorough rinsing under clean, running warm water; and
    3. Immediately follow the cleaning procedure with thorough  drying of cleaned hands and arms (or surrogate prosthetic devices) using a  method as specified under 2VAC5-585-3030.
    1. Rinse under clean, running warm water;
    2. Apply an amount of cleaning compound recommended by the  cleaning compound manufacturer;
    3. Rub together vigorously for at least 10 to 15 seconds  while:
    a. Paying particular attention to removing soil from  underneath the fingernails during the cleaning procedure; and
    b. Creating friction on the surfaces of the hands and arms  or surrogate prosthetic devices for hands and arms, finger tips, and areas  between the fingers;
    4. Thoroughly rinsing under clean, running warm water; and
    5. Immediately follow the cleaning procedure with thorough  drying using a method as specified under 2VAC5-585-3030.
    C. Food employees shall pay particular attention to the  areas underneath the fingernails during the cleaning procedure.
    C. To avoid recontaminating their hands or surrogate  prosthetic devices, food employees may use disposable paper towels or similar  clean barriers when touching surfaces such as manually operated faucet handles  on a handwashing sink or the handle of a restroom door.
    D. If approved and capable of removing the types of soils  encountered in the food operations involved, an automatic handwashing facility  may be used by food employees to clean their hands.
    2VAC5-585-150. (Reserved.) (Repealed.)
    2VAC5-585-180. Hand sanitizers antiseptics.
    A. A hand sanitizer and a chemical hand sanitizing  solution antiseptic used as a topical application, a hand antiseptic  solution used as a hand dip, or a hand antiseptic soap shall:
    1. Comply with one of the following:
    a. Be an approved drug that is listed in the FDA publication  Approved Drug Products with Therapeutic Equivalence Evaluations as an approved  drug based on safety and effectiveness; or
    b. Have active antimicrobial ingredients that are listed in  the FDA tentative final monograph for over the counter (OTC)  Health-Care Antiseptic Drug Products, 59 FR 31402-31452 (June 17, 1994)  as an antiseptic handwash; and
    2. Consist of components that are Comply with one of  the following:
    a. Listed for such use in contact with food in 21 CFR Part  178, Indirect Food Additives: Adjuvants, Production Aids, and Sanitizers; or
    b. Exempt from regulation as food additives under 21 CFR  170.39, Threshold of Regulation for Substances Used in Food-Contact Articles;  or
    c. Generally recognized as safe (GRAS) for the intended use  in contact with food within the meaning of the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic  Act (FFDCA); or
    d. Permitted for such use by an effective Food Contact  Substance Notification as defined by paragraph 409(h) of the FFDCA and listed  in FDA's Inventory of Effective Premarket Notifications for Food Contact  Substances; and
    a. Have components that are exempted from the requirement  of being listed in the federal Food Additive regulations as specified in 21 CFR  170.39 Threshold of regulation for substances used in food-contact articles; or
    b. Comply with and be listed in:
    (1) 21 CFR Part 178, Indirect Food Additives: Adjuvants,  Production Aids, and Sanitizers as regulated for use as a food additive with  conditions of safe use; or
    (2) 21 CFR Part 182, Substances Generally Recognized as  Safe; 21 CFR Part 184, Direct Food Substances Affirmed as Generally Recognized  as Safe; or 21 CFR Part 186, Indirect Food Substances Affirmed as Generally  Recognized as Safe for use in contact with food; and
    3. Be applied only to hands that are cleaned as specified  under 2VAC5-585-140.
    B. If a hand sanitizer or a chemical hand sanitizing antiseptic  or a hand antiseptic solution used as a hand dip does not meet the criteria  specified under subdivision A 2 of this section, use shall be:
    1. Followed by thorough hand rinsing in clean water before  hand contact with food or by the use of gloves; or
    2. Limited to situations that involve no direct contact with  food by the bare hands.
    C. A chemical hand sanitizing hand antiseptic  solution used as a hand dip shall be maintained clean and at a strength  equivalent to 100 ppm (mg/l) chlorine or above.
    2VAC5-585-360. Shell eggs.*
    Shell eggs shall be received clean and sound and may not  exceed the restricted egg tolerances for U.S. Consumer Grade B as specified in 7  CFR Part 56, Regulations Governing the Grading of Shell Eggs and U.S.  Standards, Grades, and Weight Classes for Shell Eggs, and 7 CFR Part 59,  Regulations Governing the Inspection of Eggs and Egg Products United  States Standards, Grades, and Weight Classes for Shell Eggs, AMS 56.200 et  seq., administered by the Agricultural Marketing Service of USDA.
    2VAC5-585-370. Eggs and milk products, pasteurized.*
    A. Liquid, frozen, and dry eggs and egg Egg products  shall be obtained pasteurized.
    B. Fluid and dry milk and milk products complying with  Grade A standards as specified in law shall be obtained pasteurized. shall:
    1. Be obtained pasteurized; and
    2. Comply with Grade A standards as specified in law.
    C. Frozen milk products, such as ice cream, shall be obtained  pasteurized in accordance with 21 CFR Part 135, Frozen Desserts.
    D. Cheese shall be obtained pasteurized unless alternative  procedures to pasteurization are provided for in the Code of Federal Regulations,  such as 21 CFR Part 133, Cheeses and Related Cheese Products, for curing  certain cheese varieties.
    2VAC5-585-400. Shucked shellfish, packaging and identification.
    A. Raw shucked shellfish shall be obtained in nonreturnable  packages that bear a legible label that identifies the:
    1. Name, address, and certification number of the shucker-packer  shucker, packer, or repacker of the molluscan shellfish; and
    2. The "sell by" or "best if used by"  date for packages with a capacity of less than one-half gallon (1.87 L) or the  date shucked for packages with a capacity of one-half gallon (1.87 L) or more.
    B. A package of raw shucked shellfish that does not bear a  label or which bears a 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), Subpart D, Specific Administrative Decisions Regarding Interstate  Shipments.
    2VAC5-585-410. Shellstock identification.*
    A. Shellstock shall be obtained in containers bearing legible  source identification tags or labels that are affixed by the harvester and each  dealer that depurates, ships, or reships the shellstock, as specified in the  National Shellfish Sanitation Program Manual of Operations, Part II  Sanitation of the Harvesting, Processing and Distribution of Shellfish, 1995  Revision, Guide for the Control of Molluscan Shellfish (2007) and  that list:
    1. Except as specified under subsection C of this section, on  the harvester's tag or label, the following information in the following order:
    a. The harvester's identification number that is assigned by  the shellfish control authority;
    b. The date of harvesting;
    c. The most precise identification of the harvest location or  aquaculture site that is practicable based on the system of harvest area  designations that is in use by the shellfish control authority and including  the abbreviation of the name of the state or country in which the shellfish are  harvested;
    d. The type and quantity of shellfish; and
    e. The following statement in bold, capitalized type:  "This tag is required to be attached until container is empty or retagged  and thereafter kept on file for 90 days"; and
    2. Except as specified under subsection D of this section, on  each dealer's tag or label, the following information in the following order:
    a. The dealer's name and address, and the certification number  assigned by the shellfish control authority;
    b. The original shipper's certification number including the  abbreviation of the name of the state or country in which the shellfish are  harvested;
    c. The same information as specified for a harvester's tag  under subdivisions 1 b through d of this subsection; and
    d. The following statement in bold, capitalized type: "This  tag is required to be attached until container is empty and thereafter kept on  file for 90 days." "THIS TAG IS REQUIRED TO BE ATTACHED UNTIL  CONTAINER IS EMPTY AND THEREAFTER KEPT ON FILE FOR 90 DAYS."
    B. A container of shellstock 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), Subpart D, Specific Administrative Decisions Regarding Interstate  Shipments.
    C. If a place is provided on the harvester's tag or label for  a dealer's name, address, and certification number, the dealer's information  shall be listed first.
    D. If the harvester's tag or label is designed to accommodate  each dealer's identification as specified under subdivisions A 2 a and b of  this section, individual dealer tags or labels need not be provided.
    2VAC5-585-430. Molluscan shellfish; original container.
    A. Except as specified in subsections B and C of this  section, molluscan shellfish may not be removed from the container in which  they were received other than immediately before sale or preparation for  service.
    B. For display purposes, shellstock 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 on display is identified as  specified under 2VAC5-585-410 and recorded as specified under 2VAC5-585-440;  and
    2. The shellstock are protected from contamination.
    C. 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. 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.
    2VAC5-585-440. Shellstock; maintaining identification.*
    A. Except as specified under subdivision B C 2  of this section, shellstock tags or labels shall remain attached to the  container in which the shellstock are received until the container is empty.
    B. The date when the last shellstock from the container is  sold or served shall be recorded on the tag or label.
    B. C. The identity of the source of shellstock  shellfish that are sold or served shall be maintained by retaining  shellstock tags or labels for 90 calendar days from the date the container  is emptied that is recorded on the tag or label as specified in  subsection B of this section by:
    1. Using an approved recordkeeping system that keeps the tags  or labels in chronological order correlated to the date when, or dates  during which, the shellstock are sold or served that is recorded on the  tag or label, as specified under subsection B of this section; and
    2. If shellstock are removed from their its  tagged or labeled container:
    a. Preserving source identification by using a recordkeeping  system as specified under subdivision 1 of this subsection; and
    b. Ensuring that shellstock from one tagged or labeled  container are not commingled with shellstock from another container with  certification numbers; different harvest dates; or different growing areas as  identified on the tag or label before being ordered by the consumer.
    Article 3 
  Protection from Contamination after Receiving 
    2VAC5-585-450. Preventing contamination from hands.*
    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 subsection C 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.
    C. When otherwise approved, food employees not serving a  highly susceptible population may contact exposed, ready-to-eat food with their  bare hands.
    D. C. Food employees shall minimize bare hand  and arm contact with exposed food that is not in a ready-to-eat form.S
    D. Food employees not serving a highly susceptible  population may contact exposed, ready-to-eat food with their bare hands if:
    1. The operator obtains prior approval from the regulatory  authority;
    2. Written procedures are maintained in the food  establishment and made available to the regulatory authority 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.
    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 regulatory  authority; and
    7. Documentation that corrective action is taken when subdivisions  1 through 6 of this subsection are not followed.
    2VAC5-585-490. Pasteurized eggs; substitute for raw shell eggs  for certain recipes and populations.*
    Pasteurized eggs or egg products shall be substituted for raw  shell eggs in the preparation of foods such as Caesar salad, hollandaise or  béarnaise sauce, mayonnaise, meringue, and egg-fortified beverages that  are not:
    1. Cooked as specified under subdivisions A 1 or 2 of  2VAC5-585-700; or
    2. Included in 2VAC5-585-700 D.
    2VAC5-585-500. Protection from unapproved additives.*
    A. As specified in 2VAC5-585-350, food Food  shall be protected from contamination that may result from the addition of,  as specified in 2VAC5-585-350:
    1. Unsafe or unapproved food or color additives; and
    2. Unsafe or unapproved levels of approved food and color  additives.
    B. A food employee may not:
    1. Apply sulfiting agents to fresh fruits and vegetables  intended for raw consumption or to a food considered to be a good source of  vitamin B1; or
    2. Serve Except for grapes, serve or sell food  specified in subdivision 1 of this subsection that is treated with sulfiting  agents before receipt by the food establishment, except that grapes need not  meet the provisions of this subsection.
    2VAC5-585-540. Food contact with equipment and utensils.*
    Food shall only contact surfaces of equipment and utensils  that are cleaned as specified under 2VAC5-585-1770 through 2VAC5-585-1870 and  sanitized as specified under 2VAC5-585-1880 through 2VAC5-585-1900.:
    1. Equipment and utensils that are cleaned as specified  under 2VAC5-585-1770 through 2VAC5-595-1870 and sanitized as specified under  2VAC5-585-1890 through 2VAC5-585-1900; or
    2. Single-service and single-use articles.
    2VAC5-585-570. Wiping cloths, use limitation.
    A. Cloths that are in use for wiping food spills shall  be used for no other purpose from tableware and carry-out containers  that occur as food is being served shall be:
    1. Maintained dry; and
    2. Used for no other purpose.
    B. Cloths used in use for wiping food spills  shall be counters and other equipment surfaces shall be:
    1. Dry and used for wiping food spills from tableware and  carry-out containers; or Held between uses in a chemical sanitizer  solution at a concentration specified in 2VAC5-585-3380; and
    2. Wet and cleaned as specified under 2VAC5-585-1920 D,  stored in a chemical sanitizer at a concentration specified in 2VAC5-585-1700,  and used for wiping spills from food-contact and nonfood-contact surfaces of  equipment Laundered daily as specified under 2VAC5-585-1920 D.
    C. Dry or wet cloths that are used with raw animal foods  shall be kept separate from cloths used for other purposes, and moist cloths  used with raw animal foods shall be kept in a separate sanitizing solution Cloths  in use for wiping surfaces in contact with raw animal foods shall be kept  separate from other cloths used for other purposes.
    D. Wet Dry wiping cloths used with a freshly  made sanitizing solution and dry wiping cloths and the chemical  sanitizing solutions specified in subdivision B 1 of this section in which wet  wiping cloths are held between uses shall be free of food debris and  visible soil.
    E. Working containers of sanitizing solutions for storage  of in-use wiping cloths may be placed above the floor and used in a manner to  prevent Containers of chemical sanitizing solutions specified in  subdivision B 1 of this section in which wet wiping cloths are held between  uses shall be stored off the floor and used in a manner that prevents  contamination of food, equipment, utensils, linens, single-service, or  single-use articles.
    F. Single-use disposable sanitizer wipes shall be used in  accordance with EPA-approved manufacturer's label use instructions.
    2VAC5-585-680. Returned food and reservice of food.*
    A. Except as specified under subsection B of this section,  after being served or sold and in the possession of a consumer, food that is  unused or returned by the consumer may not be offered as food for human  consumption.
    B. A Except as specified in subdivision 8 of  2VAC5-585-950, a container of food that is not potentially hazardous (time/temperature  control for safety food) may be transferred re-served from  one consumer to another if:
    1. The food is dispensed so that it is protected from  contamination and the container is closed between uses such as a narrow-neck  bottle containing catsup, steak sauce, or wine; or
    2. The food, such as crackers, salt or pepper, is in an  unopened original package and maintained in sound condition.
    Article 4 
  Destruction of Organisms of Public Health Concern 
    2VAC5-585-700. Raw animal foods.*
    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:
    a. Raw shell eggs that are broken and prepared in response to  a consumer's order and for immediate service; and
    b. Except as specified under subdivisions A 2 and 3 and subsection  subsections B and C of this section, fish and meat including game  animals commercially raised for food as specified under 2VAC5-585-330 A 1 and  game animals under a voluntary inspection program as specified under 2VAC5-585-330  A 2;
    2. 155°F (68°C) for 15 seconds or the temperature specified in  the following chart that corresponds to the holding time for ratites and  injected meats; the following if they are comminuted: fish, meat, game animals  commercially raised for food as specified under 2VAC5-585-330 A 1, and game  animals under a voluntary inspection program as specified under 2VAC5-585-330 A  2; and raw eggs that are not prepared as specified under subdivision A 1 a of  this section:
           |      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 15 seconds for poultry, wild game  animals as specified under 2VAC5-585-330 A 3, stuffed fish, stuffed meat,  stuffed pasta, stuffed poultry, stuffed ratites, or stuffing containing fish,  meat, or poultry.
    B. Whole beef roasts and corned beef roasts, pork roasts,  meat roasts including beef, corned beef, lamb, pork, and cured pork  roasts such as ham shall be cooked:
    1. In 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; and
           |      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      |    
  
    2. 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.
           |      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.      |    
  
    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"; 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 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; and
    2. 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
    3. 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 and approved as specified  under 2VAC5-585-3541;
    b. Documents scientific data or other information that shows  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.
    2VAC5-585-730. Parasite destruction.*
    A. Except as specified in subsection B of this section,  before service or sale in ready-to-eat form, raw, raw-marinated, partially  cooked, or marinated-partially cooked fish other than molluscan shellfish  shall be:
    1. Frozen and stored at a temperature of -4°F (-20°C) or below  for a minimum of 168 hours (seven days) in a freezer; or
    2. Frozen at -31°F (-35°C) or below until solid and stored at  -31°F (-35°C) or below for a minimum of 15 hours; or
    3. Frozen at -31°F (-35°C) or below until solid and stored  at -4°F (-20°C) or below for a minimum of 24 hours.
    B. If the fish are tuna of the species Thunnus alalunga,  Thunnus albacares (Yellowfin tuna), Thunnus atlanticus, Thunnus maccoyii  (Bluefin tuna, Southern), Thunnus obesus (Bigeye tuna), or Thunnus thynnus  (Bluefin tuna, Northern), the fish may be served or sold in a raw,  raw-marinated, or partially cooked ready-to-eat form without freezing as  specified under subsection A of this section.
    B. Subsection A of this section does not apply to:
    1. Molluscan shellfish,
    2. Tuna of the species Thunnus alalunga, Thunnus albacares  (Yellowfin tuna), Thunnus atlanticus, Thunnus maccoyii (Bluefin tuna,  Southern), Thunnus obesus (Bigeye tuna), or Thunnus thynnus (Bluefin,  Northern); or
    3. Aquacultured fish, such as salmon, that:
    a. If raised in open water, are raised in net pens, or 
    b. Are raised in land-based operations such as ponds or  tanks, and
    c. Are fed formulated feed, such as pellets, that contains  no live parasites infective to the aquacultured fish.
    2VAC5-585-740. Records; creation and retention.
    A. Except as specified in 2VAC5-585-730 B and subsection B of  this section, if raw, marinated, raw-marinated, partially cooked, or  marinated-partially cooked fish are served or sold in ready-to-eat form, the  person in charge shall record the freezing temperature and time to which the  fish are subjected and shall retain the records at the food establishment for  90 calendar days beyond the time of service or sale of the fish.
    B. If the fish are frozen by a supplier, a written agreement  or statement from the supplier stipulating that the fish supplied are frozen to  a temperature and for a time specified under 2VAC5-585-730 may substitute for  the records specified under subsection A of this section.
    C. If raw, raw-marinated, partially cooked, or  marinated-partially cooked fish are served or sold in ready-to-eat form, and  the fish are raised and fed as specified in 2VAC5-585-730 B 3, a written  agreement or statement from the supplier or aquaculturist stipulating that the  fish were raised and fed as specified in 2VAC5-585-730 B 3 shall be obtained by  the person in charge and retained in the records of the food establishment for  90 calendar days beyond the time of service or sale of the fish.
    2VAC5-585-750. Reheating; preparation for immediate service.  (Repealed.)
    Cooked and refrigerated food that is prepared for  immediate service in response to an individual consumer order, such as a roast  beef sandwich au jus, may be served at any temperature.
    2VAC5-585-760. Reheating for hot holding.*
    A. Except as specified under subsections B, C and E of this  section, potentially hazardous food (time/temperature control for safety  food) that is cooked, cooled, and reheated for hot holding shall be  reheated so that all parts of the food reach at least 165°F (74°C) for 15  seconds.
    B. Except as specified under subsection C of this section,  potentially hazardous food (time/temperature control for safety food)  reheated in a microwave oven for hot holding shall be reheated so that all  parts of the food reach a temperature of at least 165°F (74°C) and the food is  rotated or stirred, covered, and allowed to stand covered two minutes after  reheating.
    C. Ready-to-eat food taken from a commercially processed,  hermetically sealed container, or from an intact package from a food processing  plant that is inspected by the food regulatory authority that has jurisdiction  over the plant, shall be heated to a temperature of at least 135°F (57°C) for  hot holding.
    D. Reheating for hot holding shall be done rapidly and the  time the food is between the temperature specified under 2VAC5-585-820 A 2 and 165°F  (74°C) the temperatures specified under subsections A through C of this  section may not exceed two hours.
    E. Remaining unsliced portions of meat roasts that are  cooked as specified under 2VAC5-585-700 B may be reheated for hot holding using  the oven parameters and minimum time and temperature conditions specified under  2VAC5-585-700 B.
    2VAC5-585-780. Potentially hazardous food, slacking.
    Frozen potentially hazardous food (time/temperature  control for safety food) that is slacked to moderate the temperature shall  be held:
    1. Under refrigeration that maintains the food temperature at  41°F (5°C) or less, or at 45°F (7°C) or less as specified under 2VAC5-585-820 A  2 b; or
    2. At any temperature if the food remains frozen.
    2VAC5-585-790. Thawing.
    Except as specified in subdivision 4 of this section,  potentially hazardous food (time/temperature control for safety food)  shall be thawed:
    1. Under refrigeration that maintains the food temperature at  41°F (5°C) or less, or at 45°F (7°C) or less as specified under 2VAC5-585-820 A  2 b; or
    2. Completely submerged under running water:
    a. At a water temperature of 70°F (21°C) or below;
    b. With sufficient water velocity to agitate and float off loose  particles in an overflow; 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), or 45°F (7°C) as specified under  2VAC5-585-820 A 2 b; 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), or 45°F (7°C) as specified under 2VAC5-585-820 A 2 b, 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; or
    (2) The time it takes under refrigeration to lower the food  temperature to 41°F (5°C), or 45°F (7°C) as specified under 2VAC5-585-820 A 2  b;
    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
    b. Thawed in a microwave oven and immediately transferred to  conventional cooking equipment, with no interruption in the process; 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.
    2VAC5-585-800. Cooling.*
    A. Cooked potentially hazardous food (time/temperature  control for safety food) shall be cooled:
    1. Within two hours, from 135°F (57°C) to 70°F (21°C); and
    2. Within a total of six hours, from 135°F (57°C) to 41°F  (5°C) or less, or to 45°F (7°C) or less as specified under 2VAC5-585-820 A 2 b.
    B. Potentially hazardous food (time/temperature control  for safety food) shall be cooled within four hours to 41°F (5°C) or less,  or to 45°F (7°C) or less as specified under 2VAC5-585-820 A 2 b if prepared  from ingredients at ambient temperature, such as reconstituted foods and canned  tuna.
    C. Except as specified in subsection D of this section, a potentially  hazardous food (time/temperature control for safety food) received in  compliance with laws allowing a temperature above 41°F (5°C) during shipment  from the supplier as specified in 2VAC5-585-340 B, shall be cooled within four  hours to 41°F (5°C) or less, or 45°F (7°C) or less as specified under of  2VAC5-585-820 A 2 b.
    D. Raw shell eggs shall be received as specified under  2VAC5-585-340 C and immediately placed in refrigerated equipment that maintains  an ambient air temperature of 45°F (7°C) or less.
    2VAC5-585-820. Potentially hazardous food; hot and cold  holding.*
    A. Except during preparation, cooking, or cooling, or when  time is used as the public health control as specified under 2VAC5-585-850,  potentially hazardous food (time/temperature control for safety food)  shall be maintained:
    1. At 135°F (57°C) or above, except that roasts cooked to a  temperature and for a time specified in 2VAC5-585-700 B or reheated as  specified in 2VAC5-585-760 E may be held at a temperature of 130°F (54°C) or  above; or
    2. At a temperature specified in the following:
    a. 41°F (5°C) or less; or
    b. 45°F (7°C) or between 45°F (7°C) and 41°F (5°C) in existing  refrigeration equipment that is not capable of maintaining the food at 41°F  (5°C) or less if:
    (1) The equipment is in place and in use in the food  establishment; and
    (2) Before January 1, 2012, the equipment is upgraded or  replaced to maintain food at a temperature of 41°F (5°C) or less.
    B. Shell eggs that have not been treated to destroy all  viable Salmonellae shall be stored in refrigerated equipment that maintains an  ambient air temperature of 45°F (7°C) or less.
    C. Potentially hazardous food (time/temperature control  for safety food) in a homogenous liquid form may be maintained outside the  temperature control requirements, as specified in subsection A of this section,  while contained within specially designed equipment that complies with the  design and construction requirements as specified under subdivision 5 of  2VAC5-585-1230.
    2VAC5-585-830. Ready to eat, potentially hazardous food; date  marking.*
    A. Except when packaging food using a reduced oxygen  packaging method as specified under 2VAC5-585-870 and except as specified  in subsection subsections D and E of this section,  refrigerated, ready‑to‑eat, potentially hazardous food (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 based on the temperature  and time combinations specified below. The day of preparation shall be counted  as Day 1.
    1. 41°F (5°C) or less for a maximum of seven days; or
    2. 45°F (7°C) or between 41°F (5°C) and 45°F (7°C) for a  maximum of four days in existing refrigeration equipment that is not capable of  maintaining the food at 41°F (5°C) or less if:
    a. The equipment is in place and in use in the food  establishment; and
    b. Before January 1, 2012, the equipment is upgraded or  replaced to maintain food at a temperature of 41°F (5°C) or less.
    B. Except as specified in subsections D and E through  F of this section, refrigerated, ready-to-eat, potentially hazardous food (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:
    1. The day the original container is opened in the food  establishment shall be counted as Day 1; 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.
    C. A refrigerated, ready-to-eat potentially hazardous 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,  may be marked as specified in subsection A or B of this section, or by an  alternative method acceptable to the department (time/temperature  control for safety food) ingredient or a portion of a refrigerated,  ready-to-eat, potentially hazardous food (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.
    D. 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.
    E. Subsection B of this section does not apply to the  following when the face has been cut, but the remaining portion is whole and  intact:
    1. Fermented sausages produced in a federally inspected  food processing plant that are not labeled "Keep Refrigerated" and  that retain the original casing on the product;
    2. Shelf stable, dry, fermented sausages; and
    3. Shelf stable salt-cured products such as prosciutto and  Parma (ham) produced in a federally inspected food processing plant that are  not labeled "Keep Refrigerated."
    F. A refrigerated, ready-to-eat, potentially hazardous  food ingredient or a portion of a refrigerated, ready-to-eat, potentially  hazardous 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.
    D. A date marking system that meets the criteria specified  in subsections A and B of this section may include:
    1. Using a method approved by the regulatory authority for  refrigerated, ready-to-eat potentially hazardous food (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 of 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 regulatory authority 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. 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, Current good manufacturing practice in  manufacturing, packing, or holding human food;
    2. Hard cheeses containing not more than 39% moisture as  defined in 21 CFR Part 133, Cheeses and related cheese products, 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, Cheeses and related  cheese products, such as blue, edam, gorgonzola, gouda, and Monterey jack;
    4. Cultured dairy products as defined in 21 CFR Part 131,  Milk and cream, 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, Acidified foods;
    6. Shelf stable, dry fermented sausages, such as pepperoni  and Genoa salami that are not labeled "Keep Refrigerated" as  specified in 9 CFR Part 317, Labeling, marking devices, and containers, and  which retain the original casing on the product; and
    7. Shelf stable salt-cured products such as prosciutto and  Parma (ham) that are not labeled "Keep Refrigerated" as specified in  9 CFR Part 317, Labeling, marking devices, and containers.
    2VAC5-585-850. Time as a public health control.*
    A. Except as specified under subsection B D of  this section, if time only, rather than time in conjunction with  temperature, without temperature control is used as the public  health control for a working supply of potentially hazardous food (time/temperature  control for safety food) before cooking, or for ready-to-eat potentially  hazardous food (time/temperature control for safety food) that is  displayed or held for sale or service for immediate consumption:
    1. Written procedures shall be prepared in advance,  maintained in the food establishment, and made available to the regulatory  authority upon request that specify:
    a. Methods of compliance with subdivision B 1 through 4 or  C 1 through 5 of this section; and 
    b. Methods of compliance with 2VAC5-585-800 for food that  is prepared, cooked, and refrigerated before time is used as a public health  control.
    B. If time without temperature control is used as the  public health control up to a maximum of 4 hours:
    1. The food shall have an initial temperature of 41°F (5°C)  or less when removed from cold holding temperature control, or 135°F (57°C) or  greater when removed from hot-holding temperature control;
    1. 2. The food shall be marked or otherwise  identified to indicate the time that is four hours past the point in time when  the food is removed from temperature control;
    2. 3. 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;  and
    3. 4. The food in unmarked containers or  packages or marked to exceed a four-hour limit shall be discarded; and .
    4. Written procedures shall be maintained in the food  establishment and made available to the department upon request, that ensure  compliance with:
    a. Subdivisions 1 through 4 of this subsection; and
    b. 2VAC5-585-800 for food that is prepared, cooked, and  refrigerated before time is used as a public health control.
    B. In a food establishment that serves a highly  susceptible population, time only, rather than time in conjunction with  temperature, may not be used as the public health control for raw eggs.
    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; 
    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;
    3. The food shall be marked or otherwise identified to  indicate:
    a. The time when the food is removed from 41°F (5°C) or  less cold holding temperature control, 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;
    4. The food shall be:
    a. Discarded if the temperature of the foods exceeds 70°F  (21°C), 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; and
    5. The food in unmarked containers or packages, or marked  with a time that exceeds the six-hour limit shall be discarded.
    D. A food establishment that serves a highly susceptible  population may not use time as specified under subsections A, B, or C of this  section as the public health control for raw eggs.
    2VAC5-585-860. Variance requirement.*
    A food establishment shall obtain a variance from the  department as specified in 2VAC5-585-3540 and 2VAC5-585-3541 before:
    1. Smoking food as a method of food preservation rather than  as a method of flavor enhancement;
    2. Curing food;
    3. Using food additives or adding components such as vinegar:
    a. As a method of food preservation rather than as a method of  flavor enhancement; or
    b. To render a food so that it is not potentially hazardous;
    4. Packaging food using a reduced oxygen packaging method  except as specified under 2VAC5-585-870 where a barrier to Clostridium  botulinum in addition to refrigeration exists;
    5. Operating a molluscan shellfish life-support system display  tank used to store and display shellfish that are offered for human  consumption;
    6. Custom processing animals that are for personal use as food  and not for sale or service in a food establishment; or
    7. Sprouting seeds or beans; or
    7. 8. Preparing food by another method that is  determined by the department regulatory authority to require a  variance.
    2VAC5-585-870. Reduced oxygen packaging; criteria.*
    A. Except for a food establishment that obtains a variance  as specified under 2VAC5-585-860, a food establishment that packages food using  a reduced oxygen packaging method and Clostridium botulinum is identified as a  microbiological hazard in the final packaged form shall ensure that there are  at least two barriers in place to control the growth and toxin formation of  Clostridium botulinum.
    B. A food establishment that packages food using a reduced  oxygen packaging method and Clostridium botulinum is identified as a  microbiological hazard in the final packaged form shall have a HACCP plan that  contains the information specified under subdivision 4 of 2VAC5-585-3630 and  that:
    1. Identifies the food to be packaged;
    2. Limits the food packaged to a food that does not support  the growth of Clostridium botulinum because it complies with one of the  following:
    a. Has an aw of 0.91 or less;
    b. Has a pH of 4.6 or less;
    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, Use of  Food Ingredients and Sources of Radiation, and is received in an intact package;  or
    d. Is a food with a high level of competing organisms such  as raw meat or raw poultry;
    3. Specifies methods for maintaining food at 41°F (5°C) or  below;
    4. Describes how the packages shall be prominently and  conspicuously labeled on the principal display panel in bold type on a  contrasting background, with instructions to:
    a. Maintain the food at 41°F (5°C) or below; and
    b. For food held at refrigeration temperatures, discard the  food if within 14 calendar days of its packaging it is not served for on-premises  consumption, or consumed if served or sold for off-premises consumption;
    5. Limits the refrigerated shelf life to no more than 14  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;
    6. Includes operational procedures that:
    a. Prohibit contacting food with bare hands;
    b. Identify a designated area and the method by which:
    (1) Physical barriers or methods of separation of raw foods  and ready‑to‑eat foods minimize cross contamination; and
    (2) Access to the processing equipment is restricted to  responsible trained personnel familiar with the potential hazards of the  operation; and
    c. Delineate cleaning and sanitization procedures for food‑contact  surfaces; and
    7. Describes the training program that ensures that the  individual responsible for the reduced oxygen packaging operation understands  the:
    a. Concepts required for a safe operation;
    b. Equipment and facilities; and
    c. Procedures specified under subdivision 6 of this  subsection and subdivision 4 of 2VAC5-585-3630.
    C. Except for fish that is frozen before, during, and  after packaging, a food establishment may not package fish using a reduced  oxygen packaging method.
    A. Except for a food establishment that obtains a variance  as specified under 2VAC5-585-860 and except as specified under subsections C  and E of this section, a food establishment that packages potentially hazardous  food (time/temperature control for safety food) using a reduced oxygen  packaging method shall ensure that there are at least two barriers in place to  control the growth and toxin formation of Clostridium botulinum and the growth  of Listeria monocytogenes.
    B. A food establishment that packages potentially  hazardous food (time/temperature control for safety food) using a reduced  oxygen method shall have a HACCP plan that contains the following information  specified under subdivision 4 of 2VAC5-585-3630:
    1. Identifies food to be packaged;
    2. Except as specified in subsections C and E and as  specified in subsection 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:
    a. Has an Aw of 0.91 or less,
    b. Has a pH of 4.6 or less,
    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, Use of  food ingredients and sources of radiation, and is received in an intact  package, or
    d. Is a food with a high level of competing organisms such  as raw meat or raw poultry;
    3. Describes how the package shall be prominently and  conspicuously labeled on the principal display panel in bold type on a  contrasting background, with instructions to:
    a. Maintain food at 41°F (5°C) or below, and 
    b. Discard the food within 14 calendar days of its  packaging if it is not served for on-premises consumption, or consumed if  served or sold for off-premises consumption;
    4. Limits the refrigerated shelf life to no more than 14  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;
    5. Includes operational procedures that:
    a. Prohibit contacting food with bare hands;
    b. Identify a designated work area and the method by which:
    (1) Physical barriers or methods of separation of raw foods  and ready-to-eat foods minimize cross contamination, and
    (2) Access to the processing equipment is limited to  responsible trained personnel familiar with the potential hazards of the  operation; and
    c. Delineate cleaning and sanitization procedures for food  contact surfaces; and
    6. Describes the training program that ensures that the  individual responsible for the reduced oxygen packaging operation understands  the:
    a. Concepts required for safe operation;
    b. Equipment and facilities; and
    c. Procedures specified under subdivision 5 of this  subsection and 2VAC5-585-3630 D.
    C. Except for fish that is frozen before, during, and  after packaging, a food establishment may not package fish using a reduced  oxygen packaging method.
    D. Except as specified in subsection C of this section, a  food establishment may package food using a cook-chill or sous-vide process  without obtaining a variance if:
    1. The food establishment implements a HACCP plan that  contains the information as specified under 2VAC5-585-3630 D;
    2. 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 bagged product to another business entity or the consumer;
    b. Cooked to heat all parts of the food to a temperature  and for a time as specified under 2VAC5-585-700;
    c. Protected from contamination after cooking as specified  in 2VAC5-585-450 through 2VAC5-585-690;
    d. Placed in a package or bag with an oxygen barrier and  sealed before cooking, or placed in a package or bag and sealed immediately  after cooking, and before reaching a temperature below 135°F (57°C);
    e. Cooled to 41°F (5°C) in the sealed package or bag as  specified under 2VAC5-585-800, and subsequently;
    (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 days  after the date of preparation;
    (2) 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 72 hours, at  which time the food must be consumed or discarded;
    (3) Cooled to 38°F (3°C) or less within 24 hours of  reaching 41°F (5°C) and held there for no more than 72 hours from packaging, at  which time the food must be consumed or discarded; or
    (4) Held frozen with no shelf-life restriction while frozen  until consumed or used;
    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;
    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; and
    h. Labeled with the product name and the date packaged; and
    3. The records required to confirm that cooling and cold  holding refrigeration time/temperature parameters are required as part of the  HACCP plan, are maintained and are:
    a. Made available to the regulatory authority upon request;  and
    b. Held for six months; and
    4. Written operational procedures as specified under  subdivision B 5 of this section and a training program as specified under  subdivision B 6 of this section are implemented.
    E. A food establishment may package cheese using a reduced  oxygen packaging method without obtaining a variance:
    1. If it limits the cheeses packaged to those that are  commercially manufactured in a food processing plant with no ingredients added  in the food establishment and that meet the Standards of Identity as specified  in 21 CFR 133.150, Hard Cheeses, 21 CFR 133.169, Pasteurized process cheese, or  21 CFR 133.187, Semi-soft cheeses;
    2. If it has a HACCP plan that contains the information  specified in 2VAC5-585-3630 D;
    3. Except as specified under subdivisions B 2, B 3 b, and B  4, complies with subsection B of this section;
    4. If it labels the package on the principal display panel  with a "use by" date that does not exceed 30 days or the original  manufacturer's "sell by" or "use by" date, whichever comes  first; and
    5. If it discards the reduced oxygen packaged cheese if it  is not sold for off-premises consumption or consumed within 30 calendar days of  its packaging.
    2VAC5-585-900. Food labels.
    A. Food packaged in a food establishment shall be labeled as  specified in law, including 21 CFR Part 101, Food Labeling, and 9 CFR Part  317, Labeling, Marking Devices, and Containers.
    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  in descending order of predominance by weight, including a declaration of  artificial color or flavor and chemical preservatives, if contained in the  food;
    3. An accurate declaration of the quantity of contents;
    4. The name and place of business of the manufacturer, packer,  or distributor; and
    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.
    5. 6. Except as exempted in the Federal Food,  Drug, and Cosmetic Act 21 USC § 343(q) (3) through (5), nutrition labeling  as specified in 21 CFR Part 101, Food Labeling, and 9 CFR Part 317, Subpart B,  Nutrition Labeling.
    6. 7. For any salmonid fish containing  canthaxanthin 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.
    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 and 5 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.
    Article 8 
  Special Requirements for Highly Susceptible Populations 
    2VAC5-585-950. Pasteurized foods and prohibited food.*
    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 9 or less 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), Food  Labeling, or 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; 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 subdivisions 2 through 5 of  2VAC5-585-3630 and as specified under 21 CFR Part 120, Hazard Analysis And  Critical Control Point (HACCP) Systems, Subpart B, Pathogen Reduction, 120.24,  Process Controls.
    2. Pasteurized shell eggs or pasteurized liquid, frozen, or  dry eggs or egg products shall be substituted for raw shell eggs in the  preparation of:
    a. Foods such as Caesar salad, hollandaise or béarnaise sauce,  mayonnaise, meringue, eggnog, ice cream, and egg-fortified beverages;  and
    b. Except as specified in subdivision 5 6 of this  section, recipes in which more than one egg is broken and the eggs are  combined.
    3. The following foods may not be served or offered for sale  in a ready-to-eat form:
    a. Raw animal foods such as raw fish, raw-marinated fish, raw  molluscan shellfish, and steak tartare;
    b. A partially cooked animal food such as lightly cooked fish,  rare meat, soft-cooked eggs that are made from raw shell eggs, and meringue;  and
    c. Raw seed sprouts.
    4. Food employees may not contact ready-to-eat food as  specified in 2VAC5-585-450 B.
    5. Time only, as the public health control as specified  under 2VAC5-585-850, may not be used for raw eggs.
    5. 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 enteritidis growth is  controlled before and after cooking; and
    (b) Salmonella Enteritidis enteritidis is  destroyed by cooking the eggs according to the temperature and time specified  in 2VAC5-585-700 A 2;
    (4) d. Contains the information specified under  subdivision 4 of 2VAC5-585-3630 including procedures that:
    (a) (1) Control cross contamination of  ready-to-eat food with raw eggs; and
    (b) (2) Delineate cleaning and sanitization  procedures for food-contact surfaces; and
    (5) e. 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 [ reserved re-served ] as specified  under 2VAC5-585-680 B 1 and 2.
    8. Foods may not be [ reserved  re-served ] under the following conditions:
    1. Any food served to patients or clients who are under  contact precautions in medical isolation or quarantine, or protective  environment isolation may not be [ reserved re-served ]  to others outside.
    2. Packages of food from any patients, clients, or other  consumers should not be [ reserved re-served ]  to persons in protective environment isolation.
    2VAC5-585-980. Lead in ceramic, china, and crystal utensils,  use limitation.
    A. Ceramic, china, crystal utensils, and decorative  utensils such as hand-painted ceramic or china that are used in contact with  food shall be lead-free or contain levels of lead not exceeding the limits of  the following utensil categories:
           |      Utensil Category      |          Ceramic Article Description      |          Maximum Lead (mg/L)      |    
       |      Hot Beverage Mugs, Cups, Pitchers      |          Coffee Mugs      |          0.5      |    
       |      Large Hollowware (excluding pitchers)      |          Bowls >1.1 L Liter (1.16 qt) Quart)      |          1.0      |    
       |      Small Hollowware (excluding cups and mugs)      |          Bowls <1.1 L Liter (1.16 qt) Quart)      |          2.0      |    
       |      Flat Utensils Tableware      |          Plates, Saucers      |          3.0      |    
  
    B. Pewter alloys containing lead in excess of 0.05% may  not be used as a food contact surface.
    C. Solder and flux containing lead in excess of 0.2% may  not be used as a food contact surface.
    2VAC5-585-1020. Lead in pewter alloys, use limitation. (Repealed.)
    Pewter alloys containing lead in excess of 0.05% may not  be used as a food-contact surface.
    2VAC5-585-1030. Lead in solder and flux, use limitation.  (Repealed.)
    Solder and flux containing lead in excess of 0.2% may not  be used as a food-contact surface.
    2VAC5-585-1200. Pressure measuring devices, mechanical  warewashing equipment.
    Pressure measuring devices that display the pressures in the  water supply line for the fresh hot water sanitizing rinse shall have  increments of one pound per square inch (seven kilopascals) or smaller and  shall be accurate to ± two 2 pounds per square inch (± 14  kilopascals) in the 15-25 pounds per square inch (100-170 kilopascals) range  in the range indicated on the manufacturer's data plate.
    2VAC5-585-1230. Dispensing equipment, protection of equipment  and food.
    In equipment that dispenses or vends liquid food or ice in  unpackaged form:
    1. The delivery tube, chute, orifice, and splash surfaces  directly above the container receiving the food shall be designed in a manner,  such as with barriers, baffles, or drip aprons, so that drips from condensation  and splash are diverted from the opening of the container receiving the food;.
    2. The delivery tube, chute, and orifice shall be protected  from manual contact such as by being recessed;.
    3. The delivery tube or chute and orifice of equipment used to  vend liquid food or ice in unpackaged form to self-service consumers shall be  designed so that the delivery tube or chute and orifice are protected from  dust, insects, rodents, and other contamination by a self-closing door if the  equipment is:
    a. Located in an outside area that does not otherwise afford  the protection of an enclosure against the rain, windblown debris, insects,  rodents, and other contaminants that are present in the environment; or
    b. Available for self-service during hours when it is not  under the full-time supervision of a food employee; and.
    4. The dispensing equipment actuating lever or mechanism and  filling device of consumer self-service beverage dispensing equipment shall be  designed to prevent contact with the lip-contact surface of glasses or cups  that are refilled.
    5. Dispensing equipment in which potentially hazardous food  (time/temperature control for safety food) in homogenous liquid form is  maintained outside of the temperature control requirements as specified in  2VAC5-585-820 C shall:
    a. Be specifically designed and equipped to maintain the  commercial sterility of aseptically packaged food in a homogenous liquid form  for a specified duration from the time of opening the packaging within the  equipment; and
    b. Conform to the requirements for this equipment as  specified in NSF/ANSI 18-2006 Manual Food and Beverage Dispensing Equipment.
    2VAC5-585-1260. Beverage tubing, separation.
    Beverage Except for cold plates that are  constructed integrally with an ice storage bin, beverage tubing and  cold-plate beverage cooling devices may not be installed in contact with stored  ice. This section does not apply to cold plates that are constructed  integrally with an ice storage bin.
    2VAC5-585-1310. Vending machines, automatic shutoff.*
    A. A machine vending potentially hazardous food (time/temperature  control for safety food) shall have an automatic control that prevents the  machine from vending food:
    1. If there is a power failure, mechanical failure, or other  condition that results in an internal machine temperature that cannot maintain  food temperatures as specified under Part III (2VAC5-585-260 et seq.) of this  chapter; and
    2. If a condition specified under subdivision 1 of this  subsection occurs, until the machine is serviced and restocked with food that  has been maintained at temperatures specified under Part III.
    B. When the automatic shutoff within a machine vending  potentially hazardous food (time/temperature control for safety food) is  activated:
    1. In a refrigerated vending machine, the ambient temperature  may not exceed 41°F (5°C) or 45°F (7°C) as specified under 2VAC5-585-820 A 2  for more than 30 minutes immediately after the machine is filled, serviced, or  restocked; or
    2. In a hot holding vending machine, the ambient temperature  may not be less than 135°F (57°C) for more than 120 minutes immediately after  the machine is filled, serviced, or restocked.
    2VAC5-585-1420. Case lot handling equipment apparatuses,  movability.
    Equipment Apparatuses, such as dollies,  pallets, racks, and skids used to store and transport large quantities of  packaged foods received from a supplier in a cased or overwrapped lot, shall be  designed to be moved by hand or by conveniently available equipment such as  hand trucks and forklifts.
    2VAC5-585-1440. Food equipment, certification and  classification. (Repealed.)
    Food equipment that is certified or classified for sanitation  by an American National Standards Institute (ANSI)-accredited certification  program will be deemed to comply with Articles 1 (2VAC5-585-960 et seq.) and 2  (2VAC5-585-1080 et seq.) of this part.
    2VAC5-585-1550. Fixed equipment, spacing or sealing.
    A. Equipment that is fixed because it is not easily movable  shall be installed so that it is:
    1. Spaced to allow access for cleaning along the sides,  behind, and above the equipment;
    2. Spaced from adjoining equipment, walls, and ceilings a  distance of not more than 1/32 inch or one millimeter; or
    3. Sealed to adjoining equipment or walls, if the equipment is  exposed to spillage or seepage.
    B. Table-mounted Counter-mounted equipment that  is not easily movable shall be installed to allow cleaning of the equipment and  areas underneath and around the equipment by being:
    1. Sealed to the table; or
    2. Elevated on legs as specified under 2VAC5-585-1560 D.
    2VAC5-585-1560. Fixed equipment, elevation or sealing.
    A. Except as specified in subsection subsections  B and C of this section, floor-mounted equipment that is not easily movable  shall be sealed to the floor or elevated on legs that provide at least a  six-inch (15-centimeter) clearance between the floor and the equipment.
    B. If no part of the floor under the floor-mounted equipment  is more than six inches (15 centimeters) from the point of cleaning access, the  clearance space may be only four inches (10 centimeters).
    C. This section does not apply to display shelving units,  display refrigeration units, and display freezer units located in the consumer  shopping areas of a retail food store, if the floor under the units is  maintained clean.
    D. Except as specified in subsection E of this section, table-mounted  counter-mounted equipment that is not easily movable shall be elevated  on legs that provide at least a four-inch (10-centimeter) clearance between the  table and the equipment.
    E. The clearance space between the table and table-mounted  counter-mounted equipment may be:
    1. Three inches (7.5 centimeters) if the horizontal distance  of the table top under the equipment is no more than 20 inches (50 centimeters)  from the point of access for cleaning; or
    2. Two inches (5 centimeters) if the horizontal distance of  the table top under the equipment is no more than three inches (7.5  centimeters) from the point of access for cleaning.
    2VAC5-585-1690. Mechanical warewashing equipment, sanitization  pressure.
    The flow pressure of the fresh hot water sanitizing rinse in  a warewashing machine may not be less than 15 pounds per square inch (100  kilopascals) or more than 25 pounds per square inch (170 kilopascals) as  measured in the water line immediately downstream or upstream from the fresh  hot water sanitizing rinse control valve, as measured in the water line  immediately downstream or upstream from the fresh hot water sanitizing rinse  control valve, shall be within the range specified on the machine  manufacturer's data plate and may not be less than five pounds per square inch  (35 kilopascals) or more than 30 pounds per square inch (200 kilopascals).
    Article 7 
  Sanitization of Equipment and Utensils 
    2VAC5-585-1880. Food-contact surfaces and utensils. (Repealed.)
    Equipment food-contact surfaces and utensils shall be  sanitized.
    2VAC5-585-1980. Food-contact surfaces.
    Lubricants as specified in 2VAC5-585-3420 shall be  applied to food-contact surfaces that require lubrication in a manner that does  not contaminate food-contact surfaces.
    2VAC5-585-2040. Preset tableware.
    If tableware is preset:
    1. It shall be protected from contamination by being  wrapped, covered, or inverted;
    2. Exposed, unused settings shall be removed when a  consumer is seated; or
    3. Exposed, unused settings shall be cleaned and sanitized  before further use if the settings are not removed when a consumer is seated.
    A. Tableware that is preset shall be protected from  contamination by being wrapped, covered, or inverted.
    B. When tableware is preset, exposed, unused settings  shall be:
    1. Removed when a consumer is seated; or
    2. Cleaned and sanitized before further use if the settings  are not removed when a consumer is seated.
    2VAC5-585-2190. Handwashing facility, installation sink,  water temperature, and flow.
    A. A handwashing lavatory sink shall be  equipped to provide water at a temperature of at least 100°F (38°C) through a  mixing valve or combination faucet.
    B. A steam mixing valve may not be used at a handwashing lavatory  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.
    2VAC5-585-2230. Handwashing facilities sinks, numbers  and capacities.*
    A. Except as specified in subsections B and C of this  section, at least one handwashing lavatory sink, or the number of  handwashing lavatories sinks necessary for their convenient use  by employees in areas specified under 2VAC5-585-2280, and not fewer than the  number of handwashing lavatories sinks required by law shall be  provided.
    B. If approved and capable of removing the types of soils  encountered in the food operations involved, automatic handwashing facilities  may be substituted for handwashing lavatories sinks in a food  establishment that has at least one handwashing lavatory sink.
    C. If approved, when food exposure is limited and handwashing  lavatories sinks are not conveniently available, such as in some  mobile or temporary food establishments or at some vending machine locations,  employees may use chemically-treated towelettes for handwashing.
    2VAC5-585-2280. Handwashing facilities sinks,  locations.*
    A handwashing facility sink shall be located:
    1. To be readily accessible for use by employees in food  preparation, food dispensing, and warewashing areas; and
    2. In, or immediately adjacent to, toilet rooms.
    2VAC5-585-2310. Using a handwashing facility sink.
    A. A handwashing facility sink shall be  maintained so that it is accessible at all times for employee use.
    B. A handwashing facility sink may not be used  for purposes other than handwashing.
    C. An automatic handwashing facility sink shall  be used in accordance with manufacturer's instructions.
    2VAC5-585-2510. Establishment drainage system. (Repealed.)
    Food establishment drainage systems, including grease  traps, that convey sewage shall be designed and installed as specified under  2VAC5-585-2180 A.
    2VAC5-585-2520. Backflow prevention.*
    A. Except as specified in subsections B and, C,  and D of this section, a direct connection may not exist between the sewage  system and a drain originating from equipment in which food, portable  equipment, or utensils are placed.
    B. Subsection A of this section does not apply to floor  drains that originate in refrigerated spaces that are constructed as an  integral part of the building.
    B. C. If allowed by law, a warewashing machine  may have a direct connection between its waste outlet and a floor drain when  the machine is located within five feet (1.5 m) (1.5 meters) of a  trapped floor drain and the machine outlet is connected to the inlet side of a  properly vented floor drain trap.
    C. D. If allowed by law, a warewashing or  culinary sink may have a direct connection.
    Article 5 
  Refuse, Recyclables, and Returnables 
    2VAC5-585-2590. Indoor storage area. (Repealed.)
    If located within the food establishment, a storage area  for refuse, recyclables, and returnables shall meet the requirements specified  under 2VAC5-585-2790, 2VAC5-585-2810 through 2VAC5-585-2880, 2VAC5-585-2930,  and 2VAC5-585-2940.
    2VAC5-585-2630. Receptacles in vending machines.
    A Except for a receptacle for a beverage bottle  crown closures, a refuse receptacle may not be located within a vending  machine, except that a receptacle for beverage bottle crown closures may be  located within a vending machine.
    Part VI 
  Physical Facilities 
    Article 1 
  Materials for Construction and Repair 
    2VAC5-585-2790. Indoor areas; surface characteristics.
    A. Except as specified in subsection B of this section,  materials for indoor floor, wall, and ceiling surfaces under conditions of  normal use shall be:
    1. Smooth, durable, and easily cleanable for areas where food  establishment operations are conducted;
    2. Closely woven and easily cleanable carpet for carpeted  areas; and
    3. Nonabsorbent for areas subject to moisture such as food  preparation areas, walk-in refrigerators, warewashing areas, toilet rooms,  mobile food establishment servicing areas, and areas subject to flushing or  spray cleaning methods.
    B. In a temporary food establishment:
    1. A floor may be concrete, if graded to drain, machine-laid  asphalt, or dirt or gravel if it is covered with mats, removable platforms,  duckboards, or other suitable approved materials that are effectively  treated to control dust and mud; and
    2. Walls and ceilings may be constructed of a material that  protects the interior from the weather and windblown dust and debris.
    Article 2 
  Design, Construction, and Installation 
    2VAC5-585-2810. Floors, walls, and ceilings - cleanability.
    Except as specified under 2VAC5-585-2840, the floors,  floor coverings, walls, wall coverings, and ceilings shall be designed,  constructed, and installed so they are smooth and easily cleanable, except that  and except for antislip floor coverings or applications that may  be used for safety reasons, floors, floor coverings, walls, wall coverings,  and ceilings shall be designed, constructed, and installed so they are smooth  and easily cleanable.
    2VAC5-585-2920. Toilet rooms, enclosed.
    A toilet room located on the premises shall be completely  enclosed and provided with a tight-fitting and self-closing door except that  this requirement does not apply to a toilet room that is located outside a food  establishment and does not open directly into the food establishment such as a  toilet room that is provided by the management of a shopping mall.
    Except where a toilet room is located outside a food  establishment and does not open directly into the food establishment such as a  toilet room that is provided by the management of a shopping mall, a toilet  room located on the premises shall be completely enclosed and provided with a  tight-fitting and self-closing door.
    2VAC5-585-2950. Outdoor food vending areas, overhead protection.
    If located outside, a machine used to vend food shall be  provided with overhead protection except that machines vending canned beverages  need not meet this requirement.
    Except for machines that vend canned beverages, if located  outside, a machine used to vend food shall be provided with overhead  protection.
    2VAC5-585-2960. Outdoor servicing areas, overhead protection.
    Servicing areas shall be provided with overhead protection  except that areas used only for the loading of water or the discharge of sewage  and other liquid waste, through the use of a closed system of hoses, need not  be provided with overhead protection.
    Except for areas used only for the loading of water or the  discharge of sewage or other liquid waste, through the use of a closed system  of hoses, servicing areas shall be provided with overhead protection.
    Article 3 
  Numbers and Capacities 
    2VAC5-585-3010. Handwashing lavatories, minimum number. (Repealed.)
    Handwashing lavatories shall be provided as specified  under 2VAC5-585-2230.
    2VAC5-585-3020. Handwashing cleanser, availability.
    Each handwashing lavatory sink or group of two  adjacent lavatories handwashing sinks shall be provided with a  supply of hand cleaning liquid, powder, or bar soap.
    2VAC5-585-3030. Hand drying provision.
    Each handwashing lavatory sink or group of  adjacent lavatories handwashing sinks shall be provided with:
    1. Individual, disposable towels;
    2. A continuous towel system that supplies the user with a  clean towel; or
    3. A heated-air hand drying device.
    2VAC5-585-3040. Handwashing aids and devices, use restrictions.
    A sink used for food preparation or utensil washing may not  be provided with the handwashing aids and devices required for a handwashing lavatory  sink as specified under 2VAC5-585-3020 and 2VAC5-585-3030 and  2VAC5-585-2650 C.
    2VAC5-585-3045. Handwashing signage.
    A sign or poster that notifies food employees to wash their  hands shall be provided at all handwashing lavatories sinks used  by food employees and shall be clearly visible to food employees.
    2VAC5-585-3050. Disposable towels, waste receptacle. (Repealed.)
    A handwashing lavatory or group of adjacent lavatories  that is provided with disposable towels shall be provided with a waste  receptacle as specified under 2VAC5-585-2650 C.
    2VAC5-585-3060. Toilets and urinals, minimum number. (Repealed.)
    Toilets and urinals shall be provided as specified under  2VAC5-585-2240.
    2VAC5-585-3080. Lighting, intensity.
    The light intensity shall be:
    1. At least 10 foot candles (110 lux) (108 lux)  at a distance of 30 inches (75 cm) above the floor, in walk-in refrigeration  units and dry food storage areas and in other areas and rooms during periods of  cleaning;
    2. At least 20 foot candles (220 lux) (215 lux):
    a. At a surface where food is provided for consumer  self-service such as buffets and salad bars or where fresh produce or packaged  foods are sold or offered for consumption;
    b. Inside equipment such as reach-in and under-counter  refrigerators;
    c. At a distance of 30 inches (75 cm) above the floor in areas  used for handwashing, warewashing, and equipment and utensil storage, and in  toilet rooms; and
    3. At least 50 foot candles (540 lux) at a surface where a  food employee is working with food or working with utensils or equipment such  as knives, slicers, grinders, or saws where employee safety is a factor.
    2VAC5-585-3110. Service sinks, availability. (Repealed.)
    A service sink or curbed cleaning facility shall be  provided as specified under 2VAC5-585-2250.
    Article 4 
  Location and Placement 
    2VAC5-585-3120. Handwashing lavatories, conveniently  located. (Repealed.)
    Handwashing lavatories shall be conveniently located as  specified under 2VAC5-585-2280.
    2VAC5-585-3160. Refuse, recyclables, and returnables -  receptacles, waste handling units, and designated storage areas. (Repealed.)
    Units, receptacles, and areas designated for storage of  refuse and recyclable and returnable containers shall be located as specified  under 2VAC5-585-2680.
    2VAC5-585-3180. Cleaning, frequency and restrictions.
    A. The physical facilities shall be cleaned as often as  necessary to keep them clean.
    B. Cleaning Except for cleaning that is necessary  due to a spill or other accident, cleaning shall be done during periods  when the least amount of food is exposed such as after closing. This  requirement does not apply to cleaning that is necessary due to a spill or  other accident.
    2VAC5-585-3240. Maintaining and using handwashing  lavatories. Cleaning of plumbing fixtures.
    Handwashing lavatories shall be kept Plumbing  fixtures such as handwashing sinks, toilets, and urinals shall be cleaned as  often as necessary to keep them clean, and maintained and used as  specified under 2VAC5-585-2310. 
    2VAC5-585-3360. Conditions of use.*
    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;
    c. The conditions of certification, if certification is  required, for use of the pest control materials; 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;  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 by:
    (1) Removing the items;
    (2) Covering the items with impermeable covers; or
    (3) Taking other appropriate preventive actions; and
    (4) Cleaning and sanitizing equipment and utensils after the  application.
    B. A restricted use pesticide shall be applied only by an  applicator certified as defined in §§ 3.1-249.51, 3.1-249.52, and  3.1-249.53 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.
    2VAC5-585-3460. Medicines - restriction and storage.*
    A. Only Except for medicines that are stored or  displayed for retail sale, only those medicines that are necessary for the  health of employees shall be allowed in a food establishment. This section  does not apply to medicines that are stored or displayed for retail sale.
    B. Medicines that are in a food establishment for the  employees' use shall be labeled as specified under 2VAC5-585-3320 and located  to prevent the contamination of food, equipment, utensils, linens, and  single-service and single-use articles.
    2VAC5-585-3860. Documenting information and observations.
    The authorized representative of the commissioner shall  document on an inspection report form:
    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 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 and the person in charge to  demonstrate their knowledge of their responsibility to report a disease or  medical condition as specified under 2VAC5-585-110 and 2VAC5-585-120 2VAC5-585-80  B and D;
    c. Nonconformance with critical 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 2VAC5-585-60;
    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 4 f of 2VAC5-585-3630; and
    f. Nonconformance with critical limits of a HACCP plan.
    Article 5 
  Prevention of Foodborne Disease Transmission by Employees 
    2VAC5-585-4040. Investigation and control, obtaining  information: personal history of illness, medical examination, and specimen  analysis.
    The department shall act when it has reasonable cause to  believe that a food employee or conditional employee has possibly  transmitted disease; may be infected with a disease in a communicable form that  is transmissible through food; may be a carrier of infectious agents that cause  a disease that is transmissible through food; or is affected with a boil, an  infected wound, or acute respiratory infection, by:
    1. Securing a confidential medical history of the employee  suspected of transmitting disease or making other investigations as deemed  appropriate; and
    2. Requiring appropriate medical examinations, including  collection of specimens for laboratory analysis, of a suspected employee and  other employees.
    2VAC5-585-4050. Restriction or exclusion of food employee.
    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 request that the suspected food employee, or  conditional employee, or operator institute one of the following control  measures:
    1. Restricting the food employee or conditional employee;  or
    2. Excluding the food employee or conditional employee.
    2VAC5-585-4070. Release of food employee from restriction or  exclusion.
    The department shall release a food employee or  conditional employee from restriction or exclusion according to law and the  following conditions: conditions specified under 2VAC5-585-100.
    1. A food employee who was infected with Salmonella typhi  if the food employee's stools are negative for S. typhi based on testing of at  least three consecutive stool specimen cultures that are taken:
    a. Not earlier than one month after onset;
    b. At least 48 hours after discontinuance of antibiotics;  and
    c. At least 24 hours apart; and
    2. If one of the cultures taken as specified in subdivision  1 of this section is positive, repeat cultures are taken at intervals of one  month until at least three consecutive negative stool specimen cultures are  obtained.
    3. A food employee who was infected with Shigella spp. or  Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli if the employee's stools are negative  for Shigella spp. or Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli based on testing of  two consecutive stool specimen cultures that are taken:
    a. Not earlier than 48 hours after discontinuance of  antibiotics; and
    b. At least 24 hours apart.
    4. A food employee who was infected with hepatitis A virus  if:
    a. Symptoms cease; or
    b. At least two blood tests show falling liver enzymes.
    DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE (2VAC5-585)
    Approved Drug Products with Therapeutic Equivalence  Evaluations (updated daily), 25th Edition, available from the 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.
    7 CFR Parts 56 and 59, January 2006, published by the U.S.  Government Printing Office, 732 North Capitol St., NW, Washington, DC 20401.
    9 CFR Parts 301, 308, 317, 319, 352, 354, 362, 381, 424,  and 590, January 2006, published by the U.S. Government Printing Office, 732  North Capitol St., NW, Washington, DC 20401.
    21 CFR Parts 70, 101, 113, 114, 120, 129 - 186, 21 CFR  1030.10, and 1240.60(d), April 2006, published by the U.S. Government Printing  Office, 732 North Capitol St., NW, Washington, DC 20401.
    40 CFR Parts 141, 152 and 40 CFR 180.940, and 185 and 40  CFR, July 2005, published by the U.S. Government Printing Office, 732 North  Capitol St., NW, Washington, DC 20401.
    50 CFR Part 17, October 2005, published by the U.S.  Government Printing Office, 732 North Capitol St., NW, Washington, DC 20401.
    Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, as amended through  December 31, 2004, 21 USC §§ 321, 342, 343, 348 and 376, published by the U.S.  Government Printing Office, 732 North Capitol St., NW, Washington, DC 20401.
    Grade "A" Pasteurized Milk Ordinance, 2003  Revision, published by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public  Health Service, Food and Drug Administration, Milk Safety Branch (HFS-626),  5100 Paint Branch Parkway, College Park, MD 20740-3835.
    Grade "A" Condensed and Dry Milk Ordinance, 1995  Revision, published by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public  Health Service, Food and Drug Administration, Milk Safety Branch (HFS-626),  5100 Paint Branch Parkway, College Park, MD 20740-3835.
    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.
    National Shellfish Sanitation Program Manual of  Operations, 1995 Revision, 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.
    Virginia Waterworks Regulations, 12VAC5-590, May 2006,  Virginia Department of Health, 109 Governor Street, Richmond, VA 23219.
    Virginia Statewide Building Code, 13VAC5-63, November  2005, Virginia Department of Housing and Community Development, 501 North 2nd  Street, Richmond, VA 23219.
    National Shellfish Sanitation Program Guide for the  Control of Molluscan Shellfish (2007), 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 18-2006 Manual Food and Beverage Dispensing  Equipment, American National Standard, published by NSF International, 789  North Dixboro Road, P.O. Box 130140, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48113-0140.
    
        VA.R. Doc. No. R09-1653; Filed November 16, 2009, 1:53 p.m.