TITLE 12. HEALTH
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
State Board of Health is claiming an exemption from the Administrative Process
Act in accordance with § 2.2-4002 A 22 of the Code of Virginia, which
excludes the board in promulgating regulations pursuant to
§ 35.1-14 C of the Code of Virginia that incorporate the federal Food
and Drug Administration's Food Code pertaining to restaurants or food service.
In addition, § 35.1-14 E provides that the provisions of the
Administrative Process Act shall not apply to the adoption of any regulation pursuant
to § 35.1-14 C if the Board of Agriculture and Consumer Services adopts
the same edition of the Food Code, or the same portions thereof, pursuant to
§ 3.2-5121 B of the Code of Virginia and the regulations adopted by the
State Board of Health and the Board of Agriculture and Consumer Services have
the same effective date.
Title of Regulation: 12VAC5-421. Food Regulations (amending 12VAC5-421-10, 12VAC5-421-50
through 12VAC5-421-210, 12VAC5-421-220, 12VAC5-421-250 through 12VAC5-421-410,
12VAC5-421-430 through 12VAC5-421-520, 12VAC5-421-540 through 12VAC5-421-580,
12VAC5-421-600, 12VAC5-421-630, 12VAC5-421-650, 12VAC5-421-670, 12VAC5-421-680,
12VAC5-421-700 through 12VAC5-421-765, 12VAC5-421-780 through 12VAC5-421-880,
12VAC5-421-900, 12VAC5-421-930 through 12VAC5-421-960, 12VAC5-421-980,
12VAC5-421-990, 12VAC5-421-1000, 12VAC5-421-1070, 12VAC5-421-1090,
12VAC5-421-1100, 12VAC5-421-1110, 12VAC5-421-1180, 12VAC5-421-1190,
12VAC5-421-1230, 12VAC5-421-1240, 12VAC5-421-1300, 12VAC5-421-1310,
12VAC5-421-1320, 12VAC5-421-1350, 12VAC5-421-1360, 12VAC5-421-1370,
12VAC5-421-1450, 12VAC5-421-1460, 12VAC5-421-1500 through 12VAC5-421-1530,
12VAC5-421-1630, 12VAC5-421-1650 through 12VAC5-421-1680, 12VAC5-421-1700,
12VAC5-421-1720, 12VAC5-421-1730, 12VAC5-421-1740, 12VAC5-421-1770,
12VAC5-421-1780, 12VAC5-421-1810, 12VAC5-421-1890, 12VAC5-421-1900,
12VAC5-421-1920, 12VAC5-421-2040, 12VAC5-421-2050 through 12VAC5-421-2130,
12VAC5-421-2160 through 12VAC5-421-2210, 12VAC5-421-2230, 12VAC5-421-2250
through 12VAC5-421-2280, 12VAC5-421-2310 through 12VAC5-421-2360,
12VAC5-421-2420, 12VAC5-421-2430, 12VAC5-421-2460, 12VAC5-421-2490,
12VAC5-421-2520, 12VAC5-421-2540, 12VAC5-421-2550, 12VAC5-421-2570,
12VAC5-421-2990, 12VAC5-421-3020, 12VAC5-421-3030, 12VAC5-421-3070,
12VAC5-421-3150, 12VAC5-421-3210, 12VAC5-421-3270, 12VAC5-421-3310 through
12VAC5-421-3500, 12VAC5-421-3590, 12VAC5-421-3600, 12VAC5-421-3620,
12VAC5-421-3630, 12VAC5-421-3670, 12VAC5-421-3700, 12VAC5-421-3770, 12VAC5-421-3780,
12VAC5-421-3800, 12VAC5-421-3810, 12VAC5-421-3815, 12VAC5-421-3860,
12VAC5-421-3910, 12VAC5-421-3930 through 12VAC5-421-3980, 12VAC5-421-4000;
adding 12VAC5-421-55, 12VAC5-421-65, 12VAC5-421-255, 12VAC5-421-725, 12VAC5-421-750,
12VAC5-421-755, 12VAC5-421-1435, 12VAC5-421-1535, 12VAC5-421-1885,
12VAC5-421-2045; repealing 12VAC5-421-1870, 12VAC5-421-2150, 12VAC5-421-3990).
Statutory Authority: §§ 35.1-11 and 35.1-14 of the Code
of Virginia.
Effective Date: July 12, 2016.
Agency Contact: Julie Henderson, Director of Food and
General Environmental Services, Department of Health, 109 Governor Street,
Richmond, VA 23219, telephone (804) 864-7455, FAX (804) 864-7475, TTY (800)
828-1120, or email julie.henderson@vdh.virginia.gov.
Summary:
The Food Regulations (12VAC5-421) establish minimum
sanitary standards for operating a food establishment. Those 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 and heating methods, and procedures for vector and pest
control; requirements for toilet and cleansing facilities for employees and
customers; requirements for appropriate lighting and ventilation; requirements
for an approved water supply and sewage disposal system; personal hygiene
standards for employees, particularly those engaged in food handling; and the
appropriate use of precautions to prevent the transmission of communicable
diseases. The regulations also inform a potential food establishment owner or
operator how to obtain a permit from the Virginia Department of Health (VDH) to
operate a food establishment.
The current regulation is based on the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) 2005 Food Code and the 2005 Food Code Supplement. The
existing regulation is being amended to be consistent with the current 2013 FDA
Food Code and the Supplement to the 2013 FDA Food Code. Many of the proposed
changes simply refine and provide further clarity to existing regulations.
The amendments include (i) food establishments must
refrigerate cut leafy greens to ensure that the product is safe to consume;
(ii) food establishments must have employees who are fully informed regarding
food allergens and their dangers; (iii) food establishment employees must be
aware of their responsibility to inform management of any health or illness
issue that might affect the safety of food products; (iv) the establishment
must have procedures in place for addressing vomitus or fecal matter discharge
on surfaces in the food establishment; (v) wild mushrooms cannot be sold unless
the establishment has been approved to do so by the regulatory authority; (vi)
bare hand contact with ready-to-eat food ingredients is allowed in certain
instances; (vii) game animals that are sold must be raised, slaughtered, and
processed under a voluntary inspection program that is conducted by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture or the state agency that has animal health
jurisdiction; (viii) the food establishment must discontinue operations and
notify VDH if an imminent health hazard exists at the establishment; (ix) the
establishment must immediately contact VDH to report a food employee illness
due to nontyphoidal Salmonella if it is determined that the illness is of a
nature that can be transmitted through food; (x) the establishment must correct
all priority item violations within 72 hours and all priority foundation item
violations within 10 days; (xi) the food establishment must have at least one
supervisor who is a certified food protection manager, with some exceptions;
(xii) changes in the requirements for water supplies; and (xiii) changes
regarding the presence of dogs in food establishments under certain conditions,
which were modified at the final stage.
Other changes made at the final stage were in the 2013 FDA
Food Code Supplement and include (i) requiring food allergy awareness as a
component of employee training; (ii) clarifying that certain cooked and
refrigerated foods prepared for immediate service may be served for immediate
service and do not need to be heated to a specific temperature; (iii) requiring
food labels to include sub-ingredients and astaxanthin as an additional color
additive in salmonid fish; (iv) clarifying the requirements for
processing apple butter and molasses in copper and copper alloy containers; (v)
requiring a permit applicant or holder to submit a properly prepared hazard
analysis critical control point plan to the regulatory authority before
engaging in reduced oxygen packaging without a variance; and (vi) clarifying
that chemicals may be used to wash or assist in the peeling process of fruits
and vegetables if done so in accordance with federal regulation and the
manufacturer's instructions.
The amendments are adopted concurrently with the Virginia
Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services action adopting certain changes
based on the 2013 FDA Food Code and Supplement, also published in this issue of
the Virginia Register of Regulations.
Part I
Definitions, Purpose and Administration
12VAC5-421-10. Definitions.
The following words and terms when used in this chapter shall
have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.
"Accredited program" means a food protection
manager certification program that has been evaluated and listed by an
accrediting agency as conforming to national standards 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, § 201(s) and 21 CFR Part 170 170.3(e)(1) or
(ii) "color additive" having the meaning stated in the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act, § 201(t) and 21 CFR Part 70 70.3(f).
"Adulterated" has the meaning stated in the Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, § 402.
"Agent" means a legally authorized representative
of the owner.
"Agent of the commissioner" means the district or
local health director, unless otherwise stipulated.
"Approved" means acceptable to the department based
on a determination of conformity with principles, practices, and generally
recognized standards that protect public health.
"Approved water supply" system"
means a permitted waterworks constructed, maintained, and operated
pursuant to 12VAC5-590; or a private well constructed, maintained, and operated
pursuant to 12VAC5-630. which has a valid waterworks operation permit
from the department or a nonpublic water supply which is evaluated, tested and
if found in reasonable compliance with the construction standards of the
Private Well Regulations (12VAC5-630) and the bacteriological water quality
standards of the Virginia Waterworks Regulations (12VAC5-590), accepted and
approved by the director or the director's designee.
"Asymptomatic" means without obvious symptoms; not
showing or producing indication indications of a disease or other
medical condition, such as an individual infected with a pathogen but not
exhibiting or producing any signs or symptoms of vomiting, diarrhea, or
jaundice. Asymptomatic includes not showing symptoms because symptoms have
resolved or subsided, or because symptoms never manifested.
"aw" means water activity which 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.
"Bed and breakfast" means a tourist home that
serves meals.
"Beverage" means a liquid for drinking, including
water.
"Board" means the State Board of Health.
"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 ].
"Building official" means a representative of the
Department of Housing and Community Development.
"Casing" means a tubular container for sausage
products made of either natural or artificial (synthetic) material.
"Catering operation" means a person who
contracts with a client to prepare a specific menu and amount of food in an
approved and permitted food establishment for service to the client's guests or
customers at a service location different from the permitted food
establishment. Catering may also include cooking or performing final
preparation of food at the service location.
"Catering operation" does not include:
1. A private chef or cook who, as the employee of a
consumer, prepares food solely in the consumer's home.
2. Delivery service of food by an approved and permitted
food establishment to an end consumer.
"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.
"CFR" means Code of Federal Regulations.
Citations in this chapter to the CFR refer sequentially to the title, part, and
section number, such as 40 CFR 180.194 refers to Title 40, Part 180, Section
194.
"CIP" means cleaned in place by the circulation or
flowing by mechanical means through a piping system of a detergent solution,
water rinse, and sanitizing solution onto or over equipment surfaces that require
cleaning, such as the method used, in part, to clean and sanitize a frozen
dessert machine. CIP does not include the cleaning of equipment such as band
saws, slicers or mixers that are subjected to in-place manual cleaning without
the use of a CIP system.
"CFR" means Code of Federal Regulations.
Citations in these regulations 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 which:
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 (i) fish or meat products that are reduced in size and
restructured or reformulated such as gefilte fish, gyros, ground beef, and
sausage; and (ii) a mixture of two or more types of meat that
have been reduced in size and combined, such as sausages made from two or more
meats.
"Commissary" means a catering establishment, restaurant
food establishment, or any other place in which food, food containers,
or supplies are kept, handled, prepared, packaged, or stored for
distribution to satellite operations.
"Commissioner" means the State Health Commissioner,
his duly designated officer, or his agent.
"Conditional employee" means a potential food
employee to whom a job offer is made, conditional on with employment
dependent upon 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.
"Core item" means a provision in this chapter
that is not designated as a priority item or a priority foundation item. Core
item includes an item that usually relates to general sanitation, operational
controls, sanitation standard operating procedures (SSOPs), facilities or
structures, equipment design, or general maintenance.
"Corrosion-resistant materials" means a material that
maintains acceptable surface cleanability characteristics under prolonged
influence of the food to be contacted, the normal use of cleaning compounds and
sanitizing solutions, and other conditions of the use environment.
"Counter-mounted equipment" means equipment that is
not [ easily movable portable ] and is designed to be
mounted off the floor on a table, counter, or shelf.
"Critical control point" means a point or procedure
in a specific food system where loss of control may result in an unacceptable
health risk.
"Critical item" means a provision of these
regulations that, if in noncompliance, is more likely than other violations to
contribute to food contamination, illness, or environmental degradation.
"Critical limit" means the maximum or minimum value
to which a physical, biological, or chemical parameter must be controlled at a
critical control point to minimize the risk that the identified food safety
hazard may occur.
"Cut leafy greens" means fresh leafy greens
whose leaves have been cut, shredded, sliced, chopped, or torn. The term
"leafy greens" includes iceberg lettuce, romaine lettuce, leaf
lettuce, butter lettuce, baby leaf lettuce (i.e., immature lettuce or leafy
greens), escarole, endive, spring mix, spinach, cabbage, kale, arugula, and chard.
The term "leafy greens" does not include herbs such as cilantro or
parsley.
"Dealer" means a person who is authorized by a
shellfish control authority for the activities of a shellstock shipper,
shucker-packer, repacker, reshipper, or depuration processor of molluscan
shellfish according to the provisions of the National Shellfish Sanitation
Program and is listed in the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's Interstate
Certified Shellfish Shippers List, updated monthly (U.S. Food and Drug
Administration).
"Delicatessen" means a store where ready to eat
products such as cooked meats, prepared salads, etc. are sold for off-premises
consumption.
"Department" means the State Health Virginia
Department of Health.
"Director" means the district or local health
director.
"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 for bacteria 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 time/temperature control for safety food and dry goods
such as single-service items.
"Easily cleanable" means a characteristic of a
surface that:
1. Allows effective removal of soil by normal cleaning
methods;
2. Is dependent on the material, design, construction, and
installation of the surface; and
3. Varies with the likelihood of the surface's role in
introducing pathogenic or toxigenic agents or other contaminants into food
based on the surface's approved placement, purpose, and use.
"Easily cleanable" includes a tiered application of
the criteria that qualify the surface as easily cleanable as specified above 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 [ (weighing 30 pounds or less) ];
mounted on casters, gliders, or rollers; or provided with a mechanical means to
safely tilt a unit of equipment for cleaning; and
2. Having no utility connection, a utility connection that
disconnects quickly, or a flexible utility connection line of sufficient length
to allow the equipment to be moved for cleaning of the equipment and adjacent
area.
"Egg" means the shell egg of avian species such as
chicken, duck, goose, guinea, quail, ratites ratite, 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 permit holder, person in
charge, food employee, person having supervisory or management duties, person
on the payroll, family member, volunteer, person performing work under
contractual agreement, or other person working in a food establishment.
"Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli
(EHEC)" means E.coli that 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 STEC, whose members produce additional virulence factors. Infections
with EHEC may be asymptomatic but are classically associated with bloody
diarrhea (hemorrhagic colitis) and hemolytic uremic 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 apparatuses used for handling or storing
large quantities of packaged foods that are received from a supplier in a cased
or overwrapped lot, such as hand trucks, forklifts, dollies, pallets, racks,
and skids.
"Exclude" means to prevent a person from working as
[ a food an ] employee in a food establishment or
entering a food establishment 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; and 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 (i) a raw, cooked, or processed
edible substance, ice, beverage, or ingredient used or intended for use or for
sale in whole or in part for human consumption or (ii) chewing gum.
"Foodborne disease outbreak" means the occurrence
of two or more cases of a similar illness resulting from the ingestion of a
common food.
"Food-contact surface" means a surface of equipment
or a utensil with which food normally comes into contact, or a surface of
equipment or a utensil from which food may drain, drip, or splash into a food,
or onto a surface normally in contact with food.
"Food employee" means an individual working with
unpackaged food, food equipment or utensils, or food-contact surfaces.
"Food establishment" means an operation that (i)
stores, prepares, packages, serves, or vends food directly to the
consumer or otherwise provides food to the public for human
consumption (i), such as a 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
food to a consumer directly; or indirectly through a delivery service,
such as home delivery of grocery orders or restaurant takeout orders, or
delivery service that is provided by common carriers.
"Food establishment" includes (a) (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; (b) (ii) an operation that is conducted in a mobile,
stationary, temporary, or permanent facility or location; where
consumption is on or off the premises; and regardless of whether there
is a charge for the food; and (c) (iii) a facility that does not
meet the exemption criteria identified in subdivision 6 of this definition or a
facility that meets the exemption requirements but chooses to be regulated
under these regulations this chapter.
For the purpose of implementing this chapter, the
following places are also included in the definition of a "food
establishment" as defined in subdivision 9 of § 35.1-1 of the Code of
Virginia:
1. Any place where food is prepared for service to the public
on or off the premises, or any place where food is served. Examples of such
places include but are not limited to lunchrooms, short order places,
cafeterias, coffee shops, cafes, taverns, delicatessens, dining accommodations
of public or private clubs, kitchen facilities of hospitals and nursing homes,
dining accommodations of public and private schools and colleges, and kitchen
areas of local correctional facilities subject to standards adopted under § 53.1-68
of the Code of Virginia.
2. Any place or operation that prepares or stores food for
distribution to persons of the same business operation or of a related business
operation for service to the public. Examples of such places or operations
include but are not limited to operations preparing or storing food for
catering services, push cart operations, hotdog stands, and other mobile points
of service. Such mobile points of service are also deemed to be restaurants
unless the point of service and of consumption is in a private residence.
"Food establishment" does not include:
1. An establishment that offers only prepackaged foods that
are not potentially hazardous food that is not time/temperature control
for safety food;
2. A produce stand that only offers whole, uncut fresh fruits
and vegetables;
3. A food processing plant;, including those
that are located on the premises of a food establishment;
4. A kitchen in a private home if only food that is not potentially
hazardous time/temperature control for safety food is prepared for
sale or service at a function such as a religious or charitable organization's
bake sale if allowed by law and if the consumer is informed by a clearly
visible placard at the sales or service location that the food is prepared in a
kitchen that is not subject to regulation and inspection by the regulatory
authority;
5. An area where food that is prepared as specified in
subdivision 4 above of this definition is sold or offered for
human consumption;
6. A kitchen in a private home, such as, but not limited to, a
family day-care provider or a home for adults, serving 12 or fewer recipients;
or a bed-and-breakfast operation that prepares and offers food only to guests
if the premises of the home is owner or owner-agent occupied, the
number of available guest bedrooms does not exceed six, breakfast is the
only meal offered, the number of guests served does not exceed 18, and the
consumer is informed by statements contained in published advertisements,
mailed brochures, and placards posted at the registration area that the food is
prepared in a kitchen that is, by these regulations this chapter,
exempt from this chapter; or
7. A private home that receives catered or home-delivered food.;
or
8. Places manufacturing packaged or canned foods that are
distributed to grocery stores or other similar food retailers for sale to the
public.
For the purpose of implementing this chapter, the following
are also exempt from the definition of a "food establishment" in this
chapter, as defined in §§ 35.1-25 and 35.1-26 of the Code of Virginia:
1. Boarding houses that do not accommodate transients;
2. Cafeterias operated by industrial plants for employees
only;
3. Churches, fraternal, school and social organizations and
volunteer fire departments and rescue squads that hold dinners and bazaars not
more than one time per week and not in excess of two days duration at which
food prepared in homes of members or in the kitchen of the church or
organization and is offered for sale to the public;
4. Grocery stores, including the delicatessen that is a part
of a grocery store, selling exclusively for off-premises consumption and places
manufacturing or selling packaged or canned goods;
5. Churches that serve meals for their members as a regular
part of their religious observance; and
6. Convenience stores or gas stations that are subject to the
State Board of Agriculture and Consumer Services' Retail Food Establishment
Regulations (2VAC5-585) or any regulations subsequently adopted and that (i)
have 15 or fewer seats at which food is served to the public on the premises of
the convenience store or gas station and (ii) are not associated with a
national or regional restaurant chain. Notwithstanding this exemption, such
convenience stores or gas stations shall remain responsible for collecting any
applicable local meals tax.
"Food processing plant" means a commercial
operation that manufactures, packages, labels, or stores food for human
consumption and provides food for sale or distribution to other business
entities such as food processing plants or food establishments. Food processing
plant does not include a food establishment.
"Game animal" means an animal, the products of
which are food, that is not classified as: 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 defined in this
section (i) livestock, sheep, swine, goat, horse, mule, or other equine
in 9 CFR 301.2; (ii) poultry; or (iii) fish.
"Game animal" includes mammals such as reindeer, elk,
deer, antelope, water buffalo, bison, rabbit, squirrel, opossum, raccoon,
nutria, or muskrat and nonaquatic reptiles such as land snakes.
"Game animal" does not include ratites 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 USPHS/FDA
"Grade [ A ] Grade "A" Pasteurized
Milk Ordinance" and "Grade A Condensed and Dry Milk
Ordinance", 2013 Revision, (U.S. Food and Drug Administration),
with which certain fluid and dry milk and milk products comply.
"HACCP Plan" means a written document that
delineates the formal procedures for following the Hazard Analysis 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 professional ].
"Hermetically sealed container" means a container
that is designed and intended to be secure against the entry of microorganisms
and, in the case of low acid canned foods, to maintain the commercial sterility
of its contents after processing.
"Highly susceptible population" means persons who
are more likely than other people in the general population to experience
foodborne disease because they are:
1. Immunocompromised, preschool age children, or older adults;
and
2. 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.
"Hot water" means water at a temperature of
100°F or higher unless otherwise stated.
"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 which 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. manipulating meat to which a solution has
been introduced into its interior by processes such as "injecting,"
"pump marinating," or "stitch pumping."
"Juice" means the aqueous liquid expressed or
extracted from one or more fruits or vegetables, purées of the edible portions
of one or more fruits or vegetables, or any concentrate of such liquid or
purée. Juice does not include, for purposes of HACCP, liquids, purées, or
concentrates that are not used as beverages or ingredients of beverages.
"Kitchenware" means food preparation and storage
utensils.
"Law" means applicable local, state, and federal
statutes, regulations, and ordinances.
"Linens" means fabric items such as cloth hampers,
cloth napkins, table cloths, wiping cloths, and work garments including cloth
gloves.
"Major food allergen" means milk, egg, fish (such
as bass, flounder, cod, and including crustacean shellfish such as crab,
lobster, or shrimp), tree nuts (such as almonds, pecans, or walnuts), wheat,
peanuts, and soybeans; 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. (Pub. ]
L. 108-282).
"Meat" means the flesh of animals used as food
including the dressed flesh of cattle, swine, sheep, or goats and other edible
animals, except fish, poultry, and wild game animals as specified under
12VAC5-421-330 [ A 2 and ] A 3 [ and 4 ].
"Mechanically tenderized" means manipulating meat
with deep penetration by processes which may be referred to as "blade
tenderizing," "jaccarding," "pinning,"
"needling," or using blades, pins, needles, or any mechanical device.
"Mechanically tenderized" does not include processes by which
solutions are injected into meat.
"mg/L" means milligrams per liter, which is the
metric equivalent of parts per million (ppm).
"Mobile food unit" means a food establishment that
is mounted on wheels that is (excluding boats in the water)
readily moveable from place to place at all times during operation and
shall include, but not be limited to, pushcarts, trailers, trucks, or
vans. There is no size limit to mobile food units but they must be mobile at
all times during operation and must be on wheels (excluding boats in the water)
at all times. The unit, all operations, and all equipment must be integral
to and be within or attached to the unit.
"Molluscan shellfish" means any edible species of
fresh or frozen oysters, clams, mussels, and scallops or edible portions
thereof, except when the scallop product consists only of the shucked adductor
muscle.
"Noncontinuous cooking" means the cooking of
food in a food establishment using a process in which the initial heating of
the food is intentionally halted so that it may be cooled and held for complete
cooking at a later time prior to sale or service. "Noncontinuous
cooking" does not include cooking procedures that only involve temporarily
interrupting or slowing an otherwise continuous cooking process.
"Occasional" means not more than one time per week,
and not in excess of two days duration.
"Organization" means any one of the following:
1. A volunteer fire department or rescue squad or auxiliary
unit thereof which has been recognized in accordance with § 15.2-955 of the
Code of Virginia by an ordinance or resolution of the political subdivision
where the volunteer fire department or rescue squad is located as being a part
of the safety program of such political subdivision;
2. An organization operated exclusively for religious,
charitable, community or educational purposes;
3. An association of war veterans or auxiliary units
thereof organized in the United States;
4. A fraternal association or corporation operating under
the lodge system;
5. A local chamber of commerce; or
6. A nonprofit organization that raises funds by conducting
raffles which generate annual gross receipts of less than $75,000, provided
such gross receipts from the raffle, less expenses and prizes, are used
exclusively for charitable, educational, religious or community purposes.
"Packaged" means bottled, canned, cartoned, [ securely ]
bagged, or [ securely ] wrapped, whether packaged in a food
establishment or a food processing plant. Packaged does not include wrapped
or placed in a carry-out container to protect the food during service or
delivery to the consumer, by a food employee, upon consumer request.
"Permit" means a license issued by the regulatory
authority that authorizes a person to operate a food establishment.
"Permit holder" 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, and possesses a valid permit to operate a food
establishment.
"Person" means an association, a corporation,
individual, partnership, other legal entity, government, or governmental
subdivision or agency.
"Person in charge" means the individual present at
a food establishment who is responsible for the operation at the time of
inspection.
"Personal care items" means items or substances
that may be poisonous, toxic, or a source of contamination and are used to
maintain or enhance a person's health, hygiene, or appearance. Personal care
items include items such as medicines; first aid supplies; and other items such
as cosmetics, and toiletries such as toothpaste and mouthwash.
"pH" means the symbol for the negative logarithm of
the hydrogen ion concentration, which is a measure of the degree of acidity or
alkalinity of a solution. Values between 0 and 7.0 indicate acidity and
values between 7.0 and 14 indicate alkalinity. The value for pure distilled
water is 7.0, which is considered neutral.
"Physical facilities" means the structure and
interior surfaces of a food establishment including accessories such as soap
and towel dispensers and attachments such as light fixtures and heating or air
conditioning system vents.
"Plumbing fixture" means a receptacle or device
that is permanently or temporarily connected to the water distribution system
of the premises and demands a supply of water from the system or discharges
used water, waste materials, or sewage directly or indirectly to the drainage
system of the premises.
"Plumbing system" means the water supply and
distribution pipes; plumbing fixtures and traps; soil, waste, and vent pipes;
sanitary and storm sewers and building drains, including their respective
connections, devices, and appurtenances within the premises; and water-treating
equipment.
"Poisonous or toxic materials" means substances
that are not intended for ingestion and are included in four categories:
1. Cleaners and sanitizers, which that include
cleaning and sanitizing agents and agents such as caustics, acids, drying
agents, polishes, and other chemicals;
2. Pesticides which, except sanitizers, that
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 (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.
"Potable water" means water fit for human
consumption that is obtained from an approved water supply and that is (i)
sanitary and normally free of minerals, organic substances, and toxic agents in
excess of reasonable amounts and (ii) adequate in quantity and quality for the
minimum health requirements of the persons served (see Article 2 (§ 32.1-167 et
seq.) of Chapter 6 of Title 32.1 of the Code of Virginia). Potable water is
traditionally known as drinking water and excludes such nonpotable forms as
"boiler water, "mop water," "rainwater,"
"wastewater," and "nondrinking" water.
"Poultry" means any domesticated bird (chickens,
turkeys, ducks, geese, or guineas) guineas, ratites, or squabs),
whether live or dead, as defined in 9 CFR Part 381 9 CFR 381.1, Poultry
Products Inspection Regulations, and any migratory waterfowl, game bird, or
squab such as pheasant, partridge, quail, grouse, guineas, or pigeon
or squab whether live or dead, as defined in 9 CFR Part 362,
Voluntary Poultry Inspection Regulations 9 CFR 362.1. "Poultry"
does not include ratites.
"Premises" means the physical facility, its
contents, and the contiguous land or property under the control of the permit
holder; or the physical facility, its contents, and the land or property which
are under the control of the permit holder and may impact food establishment
personnel, facilities, or operations, if a food establishment is only one
component of a larger operation such as a health care facility, hotel, motel,
school, recreational camp, or prison.
"Primal cut" means a basic major cut into which
carcasses and sides of meat are separated, such as a beef round, pork loin,
lamb flank or veal breast.
"Priority foundation item" means a provision in
this chapter whose application supports, facilitates, or enables one or more
priority items. "Priority foundation item" includes an item that
requires the purposeful incorporation of specific actions, equipment, or
procedures by industry management to attain control of risk factors that
contribute to foodborne illness or injury such as personnel training,
infrastructure or necessary equipment, HACCP plans, documentation or record
keeping, and labeling and is denoted in this regulation with a superscript PfPf.
"Priority item" means a provision in this
chapter whose application contributes directly to the elimination, prevention
or reduction to an acceptable level of hazards associated with foodborne
illness or injury and there is no other provision that more directly controls
the hazard. "Priority item" includes items with a quantifiable
measure to show control of hazards such as cooking, reheating, cooling, and
handwashing and is denoted in this chapter with a superscript Pp.
"Private well" means any water well constructed
for a person on land that is owned or leased by that person and is usually
intended for household, groundwater source heat pump, agricultural use,
industrial use, or other nonpublic water well.
"Public water system" has the meaning stated in
40 CFR Part 141, National Primary Drinking Water Regulations.
"Pure water" means potable water fit for human
consumption that is (i) sanitary and normally free of minerals, organic
substances, and toxic agents in excess of reasonable amounts and (ii) adequate
in quantity and quality for the minimum health requirements of the persons
served (see § 32.1-176.1 and 32.1-167 of the Code of Virginia and
12VAC5-590 and 12VAC5-630-370. Potable water is traditionally known as drinking
water, and excludes such nonpotable forms as "boiler water,"
"mop water," "rainwater," "wastewater," and
"nondrinking water."
"Pushcart" means any wheeled vehicle or device
other than a motor vehicle or trailer that may be moved with or without the
assistance of a motor and that does not require registration by the department
of motor vehicles. A pushcart is limited to the sale and/or service of hot
dogs and frankfurter-like foods.
"Ratite" means a flightless bird such as an emu,
ostrich, or rhea.
"Ready-to-eat food" means food that:
1. Is in a form that is edible without additional preparation
to achieve food safety, as specified under 12VAC5-421-700 A through,
B, and C, 12VAC5-421-710 [ , ] or 12VAC5-421-730;
2. Is a raw or partially cooked animal food and the consumer
is advised as specified under 12VAC5-421- 700 D 1 and 2 3; or
3. Is prepared in accordance with a variance that is granted
as specified under 12VAC5-421-700 D 1 and 2 4.
Ready-to-eat food 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
12VAC5-421-700, or 12VAC5-421-710 or frozen as specified under
12VAC5-421-730;
2. Raw fruits and vegetables that are washed as specified
under 12VAC5-421-510;
3. Fruits and vegetables that are cooked for hot holding as
specified under 12VAC5-421-720;
4. All potentially hazardous food time/temperature
control for safety food that is cooked to the temperature and time required
for the specific food under 12VAC5-421-700 and cooled as specified in
12VAC5-421-800;
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 [ pathogen
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 the reduction of
the amount of oxygen in a package by removing oxygen; displacing oxygen and
replacing it with another gas or combination of gases; or otherwise controlling
the oxygen content to a level below that normally found in the atmosphere
(approximately 21% at sea level); and a process as specified in this definition
that involves a food for which the hazards Clostridium botulinum or Listeria
monocytogenes require control in the final packaged form. Reduced oxygen
packaging includes:
1. Vacuum packaging, in which air is removed from a package of
food and the package is hermetically sealed so that a vacuum remains inside the
package;
2. Modified atmosphere packaging, in which the atmosphere of a
package of food is modified so that its composition is different from air but
the atmosphere may change over time due to the permeability of the packaging
material or the respiration of the food. Modified atmosphere packaging includes
reduction in the proportion of oxygen, total replacement of oxygen, or an
increase in the proportion of other gases such as carbon dioxide or nitrogen;
3. Controlled atmosphere packaging, in which the atmosphere of
a package of food is modified so that until the package is opened, its
composition is different from air, and continuous control of that atmosphere is
maintained, such as by using oxygen scavengers or a combination of total
replacement 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 psychrotrophic pathogens; or
5. Sous vide packaging, in which raw or partially cooked food
is [ placed in a hermetically sealed, vacuum packaged in an ]
impermeable bag, cooked in the bag, rapidly chilled, and refrigerated at
temperatures that inhibit the growth of psychrotrophic pathogens.
"Refuse" means solid waste not carried by water
through the sewage system.
"Regulatory authority" means the Virginia
Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, the Virginia Department of
Health or their authorized representative having jurisdiction over the food
establishment.
"Reminder" means a written statement concerning the
health risk of consuming animal foods raw, undercooked, or without otherwise
being processed to eliminate pathogens.
"Reservice" means the transfer of food that is
unused and returned by a consumer after being served or sold and in the
possession of the consumer, to another person.
"Restrict" means to limit the activities of a food
employee so that there is no risk of transmitting a disease that is
transmissible through food and the food employee does not work with exposed
food, clean equipment, utensils, linens, 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 shall 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);
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 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. Sewage includes water-carried and non-water-carried
human excrement or kitchen, laundry, shower, bath, or lavatory waste separately
or together with such underground surface, storm, or other water and liquid
industrial wastes as may be present from residences, buildings, vehicles,
industrial establishments, or other places.
"Shellfish control authority" means a state,
federal, foreign, tribal or other government entity legally responsible
for administering a program that includes certification of molluscan shellfish
harvesters and dealers for interstate commerce such as the Virginia Department
of Health Division of Shellfish Sanitation.
"Shellstock" means raw, in-shell molluscan
shellfish.
"Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli" (STEC)
or "STEC" means any E. coli capable of producing Shiga toxins
(also called verocytotoxins or "Shiga-like" toxins) verocytotoxins).
STEC infections can be asymptomatic or may result in a spectrum of illness
ranging from mild nonbloody diarrhea, to hemorrhagic colitis (i.e., bloody
diarrhea) to hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), which is a type of kidney
failure). Examples of serotypes of STEC include both O157 and non-O157
E.coli. Also see Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli. E. coli 0157:H7, E.
coli 0157:NM, E. coli 026:H11; E. coli 0145NM, E. coli 0103:H2, and E. coli
0111:NM. STEC are sometimes referred to as VTEC (verocytotoxigenic E. coli) or
as EHEC (Enterohemorrhagic E. coli). EHEC are a subset of STEC that can cause
hemorrhagic colitis or HUS.
"Shucked shellfish" means molluscan shellfish that
have one or both shells removed.
"Single-service articles" means tableware,
carry-out utensils, and other items such as bags, containers, placemats,
stirrers, straws, toothpicks, and wrappers that are designed and constructed
for one time, one person use after which they are intended for discard.
"Single-use articles" means utensils and bulk food
containers designed and constructed to be used once and discarded. Single-use
articles includes items such as wax paper, butcher paper, plastic wrap, formed
aluminum food containers, jars, plastic tubs or buckets, bread wrappers, pickle
barrels, ketchup bottles, and number 10 cans which do not meet the materials,
durability, strength and cleanability specifications contained in
12VAC5-421-960, 12VAC5-421-1080, and 12VAC5-421-1100 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 shrimp.
"Smooth" means a food-contact surface having a
surface free of pits and inclusions with a cleanability equal to or exceeding
that of (100 grit) number three stainless steel; a nonfood-contact non-food-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.
"Substantial compliance" shall mean that details
of means equipment or structure design or construction and/or;
food preparation, handling, storage, transportation and/or; or
cleaning procedures that will not substantially affect health
consideration or performance of the facility or its the
employees.
"Tableware" means eating, drinking, and serving
utensils for table use such as flatware including forks, knives, and spoons;
hollowware including bowls, cups, serving dishes, tumblers; and plates.
"Temperature measuring device" means a thermometer,
thermocouple, thermistor, or other device that indicates the temperature of
food, air, or water.
"Temporary food establishment" means a food
establishment that operates for a period of no more than 14 consecutive days in
conjunction with a single event or celebration.
"Time/temperature control for safety food" or
"TCS food" means a food that requires time/temperature control for
safety to limit pathogenic microorganism growth or toxin formation:
1. TCS food includes an animal food that is raw or heat
treated; a plant food that is heat treated or consists of raw seed sprouts, cut
melons, cut leafy greens, cut tomatoes, or mixtures of cut tomatoes that are
not modified in a way so that they are unable to support pathogenic microorganism
growth or toxin formation, or garlic-in-oil mixtures that are not modified in a
way so that they are unable to support pathogenic microorganism growth or toxin
formation; and except as specified in subdivision 2 d of this definition, a
food that because of the interaction of its Aw and pH values is
designated as product assessment required (PA) in Table A or B of this
definition:
Table A. Interaction of pH
and Aw for control of spores in food heat treated to destroy
vegetative cells and subsequently packaged.
|
Aw values
|
pH values
|
4.6 or less
|
>4.6-5.6
|
>5.6
|
=0.92
|
non-TCS food*
|
non-TCS food
|
non-TCS food
|
>0.92-0.95
|
non-TCS food
|
non-TCS food
|
PA**
|
>0.95
|
non-TCS food
|
PA
|
PA
|
*TCS food means time/temperature control for safety food
**PA means product assessment required
|
Table B. Interaction of pH and Aw for control
of vegetative cells and spores in food not heat treated or heat treated but
not packaged.
|
Aw values
|
pH values
|
< 4.2
|
4.2 - 4.6
|
> 4.6 - 5.0
|
> 5.0
|
<0.88
|
non-TCS food*
|
non-TCS food
|
non-TCS food
|
non-TCS food
|
0.88-0.90
|
non-TCS food
|
non-TCS food
|
non-TCS food
|
PA**
|
>0.90-0.92
|
non-TCS food
|
non-TCS food
|
PA
|
PA
|
>0.92
|
non-TCS food
|
PA
|
PA
|
PA
|
*TCS food means time/temperature control for safety food
**PA means product assessment required
|
2. TCS food does not include:
a. An air-cooled hard-boiled egg with shell intact, or an
egg with shell intact that is not hard-boiled, but has been pasteurized to
destroy all viable salmonellae;
b. A food in an unopened hermetically sealed container that
is commercially processed to achieve and maintain commercial sterility under
conditions of nonrefrigerated storage and distribution;
c. A food that because of its pH or Aw value, or
interaction of Aw and pH values, is designated as a non-TCS food in
Table A or B of this definition;
d. A food that is designated as PA in Table A or B of this
definition and has undergone a product assessment showing that the growth or
toxin formation of pathogenic microorganisms that are reasonably likely to
occur in that food is precluded due to:
(1) Intrinsic factors including added or natural
characteristics of the food such as preservatives, antimicrobials, humectants,
acidulants, or nutrients;
(2) Extrinsic factors including environmental or
operational factors that affect the food such as packaging, modified atmosphere
such as reduced oxygen packaging, shelf-life and use, or temperature range of
storage and use; or
(3) A combination of intrinsic and extrinsic factors; or
e. A food that does not support the growth or toxin
formation of pathogenic microorganisms in accordance with one of the
subdivisions 2 a through 2 d of this definition even though the food may
contain a pathogenic microorganism or chemical or physical contaminant at a
level sufficient to cause illness or injury.
"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
regulatory authority that authorizes a modification or waiver of one or more
requirements of this chapter if, in the opinion of the regulatory authority, 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 areas and areas on the
premises that are used to service and maintain the vending machines.
"Warewashing" means the cleaning and sanitizing of
[ utensils and ] food-contact surfaces of equipment [ and
utensils ].
"Waterworks" means a system that serves piped
water for human consumption to at least 15 service connections or 25 or more
individuals for at least 60 days out of the year. "Waterworks"
includes all structures, equipment and appurtenances used in the storage,
collection, purification, treatment, and distribution of potable water except
the piping and fixtures inside the building where such water is delivered (see
Article 2 (§ 32.1-167 et seq.) of Chapter 6 of Title 32.1 of the Code of
Virginia).
"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.
Part II
Management and Personnel
Article 1
Supervision
12VAC5-421-50. Assignment of responsibility.
A. Except as specified in subsection B of this section, the
permit holder shall be the person in charge or shall designate a person in
charge and shall ensure that a person in charge is present at the food
establishment during all hours of operation.Pf
B. In a food establishment with two or more separately
permitted departments that are the legal responsibility of the same permit
holder and that are located on the same premises, the permit holder may, during
specific time periods when food is not being prepared, packaged, or served,
designate a single person in charge who is present on the premises during all
hours of operation, and who is responsible for each separately permitted food
establishment on the premises.Pf
12VAC5-421-55. Certified food protection manager.
A. At least one employee with supervisory and management
responsibility and the authority to direct and control food preparation and
service shall be a certified food protection manager, demonstrating proficiency
of required knowledge and information through passing a test that is part of an
accredited program.
B. This section does not apply to food establishments that
serve only non-temperature control for safety food and food establishments
where food handling does not exceed reheating, cold holding, and hot holding of
commercially processed and packaged ready-to-eat foods.
C. For purposes of enforcement, this section will take
effect on July 1, 2018.
12VAC5-421-60. Demonstration of knowledge.
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 regulatory authority knowledge of foodborne disease
prevention, and the requirements of these regulations this chapter.
The person in charge shall demonstrate this knowledge by:
1. Complying with the Food Regulations this chapter
by having no violations of critical priority items during the
current inspection;Pf
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;Pf or
3. Responding correctly to the environmental health
specialist's questions as they relate to the specific food operation. The areas
of operation may include:
a. Describing the relationship between the prevention of
foodborne disease and the personal hygiene of a food employee;Pf
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;Pf
c. Describing the symptoms associated with the diseases that
are transmissible through food;Pf
d. Explaining the significance of the relationship between
maintaining the time and temperature of potentially hazardous food
(time/temperature control for safety food) time/temperature control for
safety food and the prevention of foodborne illness;Pf
e. Explaining the hazards involved in the consumption of raw
or undercooked meat, poultry, eggs, and fish;Pf
f. Stating the required food temperatures and times for safe
cooking of potentially hazardous food (time/temperature control for safety
food) time/temperature control for safety food including meat,
poultry, eggs, and fish;Pf
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) time/temperature
control for safety food;Pf
h. Describing the relationship between the prevention of
foodborne illness and the management and control of the following:
(1) Cross contamination,Pf
(2) Hand contact with ready-to-eat foods,Pf
(3) Handwashing,Pf and
(4) Maintaining the food establishment in a clean condition
and in good repair;Pf
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;Pf
j. Explaining the relationship between food safety and
providing equipment that is:
(1) Sufficient in number and capacity,Pf
and
(2) Properly designed, constructed, located, installed,
operated, maintained, and cleaned;Pf
k. Explaining correct procedures for cleaning and sanitizing
utensils and food-contact surfaces of equipment;Pf
l. Identifying the source of water used and measures taken to
ensure that it the water supply remains protected from
contamination such as providing protection from backflow and precluding the
creation of cross connections;Pf
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;Pf
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 chapter;Pf
o. Explaining the details of how the person in charge and food
employees comply with a HACCP plan if such a plan is required by the law,
this chapter, or a voluntary agreement between the regulatory authority and
the food establishment; andPf
p. Explaining the responsibilities, rights, and authorities
assigned by this chapter to the:
(1) Food employee,Pf
(2) Conditional employee,Pf
(2) (3) Person in charge,Pf
and
(3) (4) Regulatory authority;Pf
and
q. Explaining how the person in charge, food employees, and
conditional employees comply with reporting responsibilities and the exclusion
or restriction of food employees.Pf
12VAC5-421-65. Food protection manager certification.
A. A person in charge who demonstrates knowledge by being
a food protection manager who is certified by a food protection manager
certification program that is evaluated by a Conference for Food
Protection-recognized accrediting agency as conforming to the Conference for
Food Protection Standards for Accreditation of Food Protection Manager
Certification Programs, April 2012, (Conference for Food Protection) is deemed
to comply with subdivision 2 of 12VAC5-421-60.
B. A food establishment that has an employee who is
certified by a food protection certification program that is evaluated and
listed by a Conference for Food Protection-recognized accrediting agency as
conforming to the Conference for Food Protection Standards for Accreditation of
Food Protection Manager Certification Programs, April 2012, (Conference for
Food Protection) is deemed to comply with 12VAC5-421-55.
12VAC5-421-70. 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 12VAC5-421-2990;Pf
2. Persons unnecessary to the food establishment operation are
not allowed in the food preparation, food storage, or warewashing areas, except
that brief visits and tours may be authorized by the person in charge if steps
are taken to ensure that exposed food; clean equipment, utensils, and linens;
and unwrapped single-service and single-use articles are protected from
contamination;Pf
3. Employees and other persons such as delivery and
maintenance persons and pesticide applicators entering the food preparation,
food storage, and warewashing areas comply with these regulations this
chapter;Pf
4. Employees are effectively cleaning their hands, by
routinely monitoring the employees' handwashing;Pf
5. Employees are visibly observing foods as they are received
to determine that they are from approved sources, delivered at the required
temperatures, protected from contamination, unadulterated, and accurately
presented, by routinely monitoring the employees' observations and periodically
evaluating foods upon their receipt;Pf
6. Employees are verifying that foods delivered to the food
establishment during non-operating hours are from approved sources and are
placed into appropriate storage locations such that they are maintained at the
required temperatures, protected from contamination, unadulterated, and
accurately presented [ .; ]Pf
6. 7. Employees are properly cooking potentially
hazardous food [ TCS time/temperature control for
safety ] food, being particularly careful in cooking those
foods known to cause severe foodborne illness and death, such as eggs and
comminuted meats, through daily oversight of the employees' routine monitoring
of the cooking temperatures using appropriate temperature measuring devices
properly scaled and calibrated as specified under 12VAC5-421-1180 and
12VAC5-421-1730 B;Pf
7. 8. Employees are using proper methods to
rapidly cool potentially hazardous foods time/temperature control for
safety food that are is not held hot or are is
not for consumption within four hours, through daily oversight of the
employees' routine monitoring of food temperatures during cooling;Pf
9. Employees are properly maintaining the temperatures of
time/temperature control for safety food during hot and cold holding through
daily oversight of the employees routine monitoring of food temperatures
[ .; ]Pf
8. 10. Consumers who order raw or partially
cooked ready-to-eat foods of animal origin are informed as specified under
12VAC5-421-930 that the food is not cooked sufficiently to ensure its safety;Pf
9. 11. Employees are properly sanitizing cleaned
multiuse equipment and utensils before they are reused, through routine
monitoring of solution temperature and exposure time for hot water sanitizing,
and chemical concentration, pH, temperature, and exposure time for chemical
sanitizing;Pf
10. 12. Consumers are notified that clean
tableware is to be used when they return to self-service areas such as salad
bars and buffets;Pf
11. 13. Except when approval is obtained from
the regulatory authority as specified in 12VAC5-421-450 B E,
employees are preventing cross-contamination of ready-to-eat food with bare
hands by properly using suitable utensils such as deli tissue, spatulas, tongs,
single-use gloves, or dispensing equipment; Pf
12. 14. Employees are properly trained in food
safety [ , including food allergy awareness, ] as it relates
to their assigned duties;Pf and
13. 15. Food employees and conditional employees
are informed in a verifiable manner of their responsibility to report in
accordance with law, to the person in charge, information about their health
and activities as they relate to diseases that are transmissible through food,
as specified under 12VAC5-421-80. Pf; and
16. Written procedures and plans, where specified by this
chapter and as developed by the food establishment, are maintained and
implemented as required.Pf
Article 2
Employee Health
12VAC5-421-80. Responsibility of permit holder, person in
charge, and conditional employees.
A. The permit holder shall require food employees and
conditional employees to report to the person in charge information about their
health and activities as they relate to diseases that are transmissible through
food. A food employee or conditional employee shall report the information in a
manner that allows the person in charge to reduce the risk of foodborne disease
transmission, including providing necessary additional information, such as the
date of onset of symptoms and an illness, or of a diagnosis without symptoms,
if the food employee or conditional employee:
1. Has any of the following symptoms:
a. Vomiting;P
b. Diarrhea;P
c. Jaundice;P
d. Sore throat with fever;P or
e. A lesion containing pus such as a boil or infected wound
that is open or draining and is:
(1) On the hands or wrists, unless an impermeable cover such
as a finger cot or stall protects the lesion and a single-use glove is worn
over the impermeable cover;P
(2) On exposed portions of the arms, unless the lesion is
protected by an impermeable cover;P or
(3) On other parts of the body, unless the lesion is covered
by a dry, durable, tight-fitting bandage;P
2. Has an illness diagnosed by a health practitioner due to:
a. Norovirus;P
b. Hepatitis A virus;P
c. Shigella spp.;P
d. [ Enterohemorrhagic or ] Shiga-toxin
producing Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli; or
P
e. Typhoid fever (caused by Salmonella [ Typhi)
typhi) ];P or
f. Salmonella (nontyphoidal) [ .; ]P
3. Had a previous illness [ Typhoid
typhoid ] fever, 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;P
4. Has been exposed to, or is the suspected source of, a
confirmed disease outbreak, because the food employee or conditional employee
consumed or prepared food implicated in the outbreak, or consumed food at an
event prepared by a person who is infected or ill with:
a. Norovirus within the past 48 hours of the last exposure; P
b. Enterohemorrhagic or Shiga-toxin producing Shiga
toxin-producing Escherichia coli, or Shigella spp. within the past three
days of the last exposure;P
c. Typhoid fever (caused by Salmonella [ Typhi
typhi ]) within the past 14 days of the last exposure;P
or
d. Hepatitis A virus within the past 30 days of the last
exposure;P 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, and individual diagnosed with an illness caused by:
a. Norovirus within the past 48 hours of exposure;P
b. Enterohemorragic or Shiga-toxin producing Shiga
toxin-producing Escherichia coli or Shigella spp. within the past three
days of the last exposure;P
c. Typhoid fever (caused by Salmonella [ Typhi
typhi ]) within the past 14 days of the last exposure;P
or
d. Hepatitis A virus within the past 30 days of the last
exposure.P
B. The person in charge shall notify the regulatory authority
when a food employee is:
1. Jaundiced;Pf or
2. Diagnosed with an illness due to a pathogen as specified
under [ subdivision subdivisions ] A 2 a through e
f of this section.Pf
C. The person in charge shall ensure that a conditional
employee:
1. Who exhibits or reports a symptom, or who reports a
diagnosed illness as specified under subdivision A 2 a through e subdivisions
A 1, 2, and 3 of this section, is prohibited from becoming a food employee
until the conditional employee meets the criteria for the specific symptoms or
diagnosed illness as specified under 12VAC5-421-100;P and
2. Who will work as a food employee in a food establishment
that serves a highly susceptible population and reports a history of exposure
as specified under subdivision subdivisions A 4 through and
5 of this section, is prohibited from becoming a food employee until the
conditional employee meets the criteria specified under subdivision 9 10
of 12VAC5-421-100.P
D. The person in charge shall ensure that a food employee who
exhibits or reports a symptom, or who reports a diagnosed illness or history of
exposure as specified under subdivision subdivisions A 1 through
5 of this section is:
1. Excluded as specified under subdivisions 1 through,
2, and 3 of 12VAC5-421-90, and subdivisions D 1, E 1, F 1, or G 1 4
a, 5 a, 6 a, 7, or 8 a of 12VAC5-421-90 and in compliance with the
provisions specified under subdivision subdivisions 1 through 7
8 of 12VAC5-421-100;P or
2. Restricted as specified under subdivisions subdivision
4 b, 5 b, 6 b, or 7 8 b of 12VAC5-421-90, or subdivisions 8 or
subdivision 9 or 10 of 12VAC5-421-90 and in compliance with the
provisions specified under subdivisions 4 through 9 10 of
12VAC5-421-100.P
E. A food employee or conditional employee shall report to
the person in charge the information as specified under subsection A of this
section.Pf
F. A food employee shall:
1. Comply with an exclusion as specified under subdivisions 1 through,
2, and 3 of 12VAC5-421-90 and subdivisions subdivision 4 a, 5
a, 6 a, or 7, or 8 a of 12VAC5-421-90 and with the
provisions specified under subdivisions 1 through 7 8 of
12VAC5-421-100;P or
2. Comply with a restriction as specified under subdivisions 4
b, 5 b, 6 b, or 7, or 8 b of 12VAC5-421-90, or subdivisions
subdivision 8, 9, or 9 10 of 12VAC5-421-90 and
comply with the provisions specified under subdivisions 4 through 9 10
of 12VAC5-421-100.P
12VAC5-421-90. Exclusions and restrictions.
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;P
or
b. Symptomatic with vomiting or diarrhea and diagnosed with an
infection from Norovirus, Shigella spp., Salmonella (nontyphoidal), or Enterohemorrhagic
or Shiga-toxin producing Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli.P
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;P
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;P or
c. Diagnosed with an infection from Hepatitis A virus without
developing symptoms.P
3. Exclude a food employee who is diagnosed with an
infection from Salmonella Typhi [ Typhoid typhoid ]
fever, or reports a previous infection with Salmonella Typhi having
had [ Typhoid typhoid ] fever within
the past three months as specified in 12VAC5-421-80 A 3.P
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;P or
b. Restrict the food employee who works in a food
establishment not serving a highly susceptible population.P
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;P or
b. Restrict the food employee who works in a food
establishment not serving a highly susceptible population.P
6. If a food employee is diagnosed with an infection from Enterohemorrhagic
or Shiga-toxin producing E.coli Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli,
and is asymptomatic:
a. Exclude the food employee who works in a food establishment
serving a highly susceptible population;P or
b. Restrict the food employee who works in a food
establishment not serving a highly susceptible population.P
7. If a food employee is diagnosed with an infection from
Salmonella (nontyphoidal) and is asymptomatic, restrict the food
employee who works in a food establishment:
a. Serving a highly susceptible population,P or
b. Not serving a highly susceptible population.P
7. 8. 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;P or
b. Restrict the food employee who works in a food
establishment not serving a highly susceptible population.P
8. 9. 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 12VAC5-421-80 A 1 e, restrict the
food employee.P
9. 10. If a food employee is exposed to a
foodborne pathogen as specified under 12VAC5-421-80 A 4 or 5, restrict the food
employee who works in a food establishment serving a highly susceptible
population.P
12VAC5-421-100. Removal, adjustment, or retention of exclusions
and restrictions.
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 [ Typhoid
typhoid ] fever or an infection from Hepatitis A virus or
Salmonella Typhi:
a. Reinstate a food employee who was excluded as specified
under subdivision 1 a of 12VAC5-421-90 if the food employee:
(1) Is asymptomatic for at least 24 hours;P
or
(2) Provides to the person in charge written medical
documentation from a health practitioner that states the symptom is from a
noninfectious condition.P
b. If a food employee was diagnosed with an infection from
Norovirus and excluded as specified under subdivision 1 b of 12VAC5-421-90:
(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 4 a or b of this section are met;P 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.P
c. If a food employee was diagnosed with an infection from
Shigella spp. and excluded as specified under subdivision 1 b of 12VAC5-421-90:
(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;P 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 1 c (1) of this section are met.P
d. If a food employee was diagnosed with an infection from Enterohemorrhagic
or Shiga-toxin producing Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli and
excluded as specified under subdivision 1 b of 12VAC5-421-90:
(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;P 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.P
e. If a food employee was diagnosed with an infection from
Salmonella (nontyphoidal) and excluded as specified under subdivision 1
b of 12VAC5-421-90:
(1) Restrict the food employee who is asymptomatic for at
least 30 days until conditions for reinstatement as specified under subdivision
7 a or 7 b of this section are met;P or
(2) Retain the exclusion for the food employee who is
symptomatic, until conditions for reinstatement as specified under subdivision
7 a or 7 b of this section are met.
2. Reinstate a food employee who was excluded as specified
under subdivision 2 of 12VAC5-421-90 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;P
b. The anicteric food employee has been symptomatic with
symptoms other than jaundice for more than 14 calendar days;P
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.P
3. Reinstate a food employee who was excluded as specified
under subdivision 3 of 12VAC5-421-90 if:
a. The person in charge obtains approval from the regulatory
authority;P 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 [ Typhoid typhoid ]
fever.P
4. Reinstate a food employee who was excluded as specified
under subdivision 1 b or 4 a of 12VAC5-421-90, who was restricted under
subdivision 4 b of 12VAC5-421-90 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;P
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;P 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.P
5. Reinstate a food employee who was excluded as specified
under subdivision 1 b or 5 a of 12VAC5-421-90 or who was restricted under
subdivision 5 b of 12VAC5-421-90 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,P and
(2) At least 24 hours apart;P
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;P 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.P
6. Reinstate a food employee who was excluded or restricted as
specified under subdivision 1 b or 6 a of 12VAC5-421-90 or who was restricted
under subdivision 6 b of 12VAC5-421-90 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 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;P and
(2) At least 24 hours apart;P
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;P 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.P
7. Reinstate a food employee who was excluded as specified
under subsection 1 a of 12VAC5-421-90 or who was restricted as specified under
subsection 7 of 12VAC5-421-90 if the person in charge obtains approval from the
regulatory authorityP 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 [ nontyphoida ]
Salmonella [ (nontyphoidal) ] 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;P and
(2) At least 24 hours apart;P
b. The food employee was restricted after symptoms of
vomiting or diarrhea resolved, and more than 30 days have passed since the food
employee became asymptomatic;P or
c. The food employee was excluded or restricted and did not
develop symptoms and more than 30 days have passed since the food employee was
diagnosed.P
7. 8. Reinstate a food employee who was excluded
or restricted as specified under subdivision 7 8 a or b of
12VAC5-421-90 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;P
b. Has at least one negative throat specimen culture for
Streptococcus pyogenes infection;P or
c. Is otherwise determined by a health practitioner to be free
of Streptococcus pyogenes infection.P
8. 9. Reinstate a food employee who was
restricted as specified under subdivision 8 9 of 12VAC5-421-90 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;P
b. An impermeable cover on the arm if the infected wound or
pustular boil is on the arm;P or
c. A dry, durable, tight-fitting bandage if the infected wound
or pustular boil is on another part of the body.P
9. 10. Reinstate a food employee who was
restricted as specified under subdivision 9 10 of 12VAC5-421-90
and was exposed to one of the following pathogens as specified under
12VAC5-421-80 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;P or
(2) More than 48 hours have passed since the food employee's
household contact became asymptomatic.P
b. Shigella spp. or [ Enterohemorrhagic or ] Shiga-toxin
producing 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;P or
(2) More than three calendar days have passed since the food
employee's household contact became asymptomatic.P
c. S. Typhi Typhoid fever (caused by Salmonella
[ Typhi) 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;P or
(2) More than 14 calendar days have passed since the food
employee's household contact became asymptomatic.P
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;P
(2) The food employee is immune to Hepatitis A virus infection
because of vaccination against Hepatitis A;P
(3) The food employee is immune to Hepatitis A virus infection
because of IgG administration;P
(4) More than 30 calendar days have passed since the last the
food employee was potentially exposed;P
(5) More than 30 calendar days have passed since the food
employee's household contact became jaundiced;P 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 subdivisions 9 10 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;P
(b) Proper handwashing procedures;P and
(c) Protecting ready-to-eat food from contamination introduced
by bare hand contact.P
Article 3
Personal Cleanliness
12VAC5-421-130. Clean condition of hands and arms.
Food employees shall keep their hands and exposed portions of
their arms clean.P
12VAC5-421-140. Cleaning procedure of hands and arms.
A. Except as specified in subsection 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 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
12VAC5-421-2190 A.P
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. Rinse under clean, running warm water;P
2. Apply an amount of cleaning compound recommended by the
cleaning compound manufacturer;P
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;P
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;P
4. Thoroughly rinsing under clean, running warm water;P
and
5. Immediately follow the cleaning procedure with thorough
drying using a method as specified under 12VAC5-421-3030.P
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 or surrogate prosthetic
devices.
12VAC5-421-160. When to wash.
Food employees shall clean their hands and exposed portions
of their arms as specified under 12VAC5-421-140 immediately before engaging in
food preparation including working with exposed food, clean equipment and
utensils, and unwrapped single-service and single-use articlesP
and:
1. After touching bare human body parts or hair other than
clean hands and clean, exposed portions of arms;P
2. After using the toilet room;P
3. After caring for or handling support service
animals or aquatic animals as allowed under 12VAC5-421-250 B;P
4. Except as specified in 12VAC5-421-220 B, after coughing,
sneezing, using a handkerchief or disposable tissue, using tobacco, eating, or
drinking;P
5. After handling soiled equipment or utensils;P
6. During food preparation, as often as necessary to remove
soil and contamination and to prevent cross contamination when changing tasks;P
7. When switching between working with raw foods and working
with ready-to-eat foods;P
8. Before donning gloves [ for to initiate a
task that involves ] working with foods;P and
9. After engaging in other activities that contaminate the
hands.P
12VAC5-421-170. Where to wash.
Food employees shall clean their hands in a handwashing lavatory
sink or approved automatic handwashing facility and shall not clean
their hands (i) in a sink used for food preparation or utensil washing or
(ii) in a service sink or a curbed cleaning facility used for the disposal of
mop water and similar liquid waste.Pf
12VAC5-421-180. Hand antiseptics.
A. A hand 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," 34th Edition,
2014, (U.S. Food and Drug Administration) as an approved drug based on
safety and effectiveness;Pf or
b. Have active antimicrobial ingredients that are listed in
the FDA monograph for OTC (over the counter) Health-Care Antiseptic Drug
Products as an antiseptic handwash;Pf and
2. [ Comply Consist only of components which
the intended use of each complies ] with one of the following:
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 [ A threshold of
regulation exemption under 21 CFR 170.39 ];Pf
[ or ]
b. [ Comply with and be listed in (i) ] 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;Pf [ or ]
[ (ii) c. A determination of generally
recognized as safe (GRAS). Partial listings of substances with food uses that
are GRAS may be found in ] 21 CFR Part 182 - Substances
Generally Recognized as Safe, 21 CFR 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 in FDA's Inventory of GRAS Notices;Pf
[ and
d. A prior sanction listed under 21 CFR 181;Pf or
e. A Food Contact Notification that is effective;Pf and ]
3. Be applied only to hands that are cleaned as specified
under 12VAC5-421-140.Pf
B. If a hand antiseptic or a hand antiseptic solution used as
a hand dip does not meet the criteria specified in 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;Pf or
2. Limited to situations that involve no direct contact with
food by the bare hands.Pf
C. A 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.Pf
12VAC5-421-190. Maintenance of fingernails.
Food employees shall keep their fingernails trimmed, filed,
and maintained so the edges and surfaces are cleanable and not rough.Pf
Unless wearing intact gloves in good repair, a food employee shall not wear
fingernail polish or artificial nails when working with exposed food.Pf
12VAC5-421-200. Prohibition of jewelry.
While preparing food, food employees shall not wear
jewelry on their arms and hands. This section does not apply to a plain ring
such as a wedding band. Except for a plain ring such as a wedding band,
while preparing food, food employees shall not wear jewelry, including medical
information jewelry on their arms and hands.
12VAC5-421-210. Clean condition of outer clothing.
Food employees shall wear clean outer clothing to prevent
contamination of food, equipment, utensils, linens, and single-service
and single-use articles.
[ Article 4
Hygienic Practices
12VAC5-421-220. Eating, drinking, or using tobacco.
A. Except as specified in subsection B of this section, an
employee shall eat, drink, or use any form of tobacco only in designated areas
where the contamination of exposed food; clean equipment, utensils, and linens;
unwrapped single-service and single-use articles; or other items needing
protection cannot result.
B. A food employee may drink from a closed beverage container
with a straw if the container is handled to prevent contamination of:
1. The employee's hands;
2. The container; and
3. Exposed food; clean equipment, utensils, and linens; and
unwrapped single-service and single-use articles. ]
12VAC5-421-250. Handling of animals prohibited.
A. Except as specified in subsection B of this section, food
employees shall not care for or handle animals that may be present such as
patrol dogs, support service animals, or pets that are allowed
under 12VAC5-421-3310 B 2 through, 3, and 4.Pf
B. Food employees with support service animals
may handle or care for their support service animals and food
employees may handle or care for fish in aquariums or molluscan shellfish or
crustacea in display tanks if they wash their hands as specified under
12VAC5-421-140 and subdivision 3 of 12VAC5-421-160.
12VAC5-421-255. Clean-up of vomiting and diarrheal events.
A food establishment shall have procedures for employees
to follow when responding to vomiting or diarrheal events that involve the
discharge of vomitus or fecal matter onto surfaces in the food establishment.
The procedures shall address the specific actions employees must take to
minimize the spread of contamination and the exposure of employees, consumers,
food, and surfaces to vomitus or fecal matter.Pf
Part III
Food
Article 1
Characteristics
12VAC5-421-260. Safe and unadulterated.
Food shall be safe and unadulterated.Pf
Article 2
Sources, Specifications, and Original Containers and Records
12VAC5-421-270. Compliance with food law.
A. Food shall be obtained from sources that comply with law.P
B. Food prepared in a private home shall not be used or
offered for human consumption in a food establishment unless the home kitchen
is inspected and [ approved regulated ] by the Virginia
Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.P
C. Packaged food shall be labeled as specified in law,
including 21 CFR Part 101, Food Labeling;, 9 CFR Part 317,
Labeling, Marking Devices, and Containers;, and Subpart N of
9 CFR Part 381, Subpart N-Labeling and Containers;, and as
specified under 12VAC5-421-400 and 12VAC5-421-410.Pf
D. Fish, other than molluscan shellfish, that are intended
for consumption in their raw form and allowed as specified under 12VAC5-421-700
D 1 may be offered for sale or service if they are obtained from a supplier
that freezes the fish as specified under 12VAC5-421-730, or frozen on the
premises as specified under 12VAC5-421-730, and records are retained as
specified under 12VAC5-421-740.
D. Fish, other than those specified in 12VAC5-421-730 B,
that are intended for consumption in raw or undercooked form and allowed as
specified in 12VAC5-421-700 D, may be offered for sale or service if they are
obtained from a supplier that freezes fish as specified under 12VAC5-421-730 A;
or if they are frozen on premises as specified under 12VAC5-421-730 A and
records are retained as specified under 12VAC5-421-740.
E. Whole-muscle, intact beef steaks that are intended for
consumption in an undercooked form without a consumer advisory as specified in
12VAC5-421-700 C shall be:
1. Obtained from a food processing plant that, upon request by
the purchaser, packages the steaks and labels them to indicate that they meet
the definition of whole-muscle, intact beef;Pf or
2. Deemed acceptable by the regulatory authority based on
other evidence, such as written buyer specifications or invoices, that
indicates that the steaks meet the definition of whole-muscle, intact beef;Pf
and
3. If individually cut in a food establishment:
a. Cut from whole-muscle intact beef that is labeled by a food
processing plant as specified in subdivision 1 of this subsection or identified
as specified in subdivision 2 of this subsection;Pf
b. Prepared so they remain intact;Pf and
c. If packaged for undercooking in a food establishment,
labeled to indicate that they meet the definition of whole-muscle, intact
beef. as specified in subdivision 1 of this subsection or identified as
specified in subdivision 2 of this subsection.Pf
F. Meat and poultry that are not a ready-to-eat food and are
in a packaged form when offered for sale or otherwise offered for consumption
shall be labeled to include safe handling instructions as specified in law,
including 9 CFR 317.2(l) and 9 CFR 381.125(b).
G. Shell eggs that have not been specifically treated to
destroy all viable Salmonellae shall be labeled to include safe handling
instructions as specified in law, including 21 CFR 101.17(h).
12VAC5-421-280. Food in a hermetically sealed container.
Food in a hermetically sealed container shall be obtained
from a food processing plant that is regulated by the food regulatory agency
that has jurisdiction over the plant.P
12VAC5-421-290. Fluid milk and milk products.
Fluid milk and milk products shall be obtained from sources
that comply with Grade A standards as specified in law.P
12VAC5-421-295. Juice treated.
Prepackaged juice shall:
1. Be obtained from a processor with a HACCP system as
specified in 21 CFR Part 120;Pf
2. Be obtained pasteurized or otherwise treated to attain a
five-log reduction of the most resistant microorganism of public health
significance as specified in 21 CFR 120.24; or.P
3. Bear a warning label as specified in 12VAC5-421-765 and
21 CFR 101.17(g).
12VAC5-421-300. Fish.
A. Fish that are received for sale or service shall be:
1. Commercially and legally caught or harvested;P
or
2. Approved for sale or service by a regulatory authority
agency of competent jurisdiction.P
B. Molluscan shellfish that are recreationally caught shall
not be received for sale or service.P
12VAC5-421-310. Molluscan shellfish.
A. Molluscan shellfish shall be obtained from sources
according to law and the requirements specified in the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Food and Drug Administration,
National Shellfish Sanitation Program Manual of Operations, Part II,
Sanitation of the Harvesting, Processing and Distribution of Shellfish, 1995
Revision (NSSP) Guide for the Control of Molluscan Shellfish, 2013
Revision, (U.S. Food and Drug Administration).P
B. Molluscan shellfish received in interstate commerce
shall be from sources that are listed in the "Interstate Certified
Shellfish Shippers List," updated monthly (U.S. Food and Drug
Administration).P
12VAC5-421-320. Wild mushrooms.
A. Except as specified in subsection B of this section,
mushroom species picked in the wild shall be obtained from sources where
each mushroom is individually inspected and found to be safe by an approved
mushroom identification expert not be offered for sale or service by a
food establishment unless the food establishment has been approved to do so.P
B. This section does not apply to:
1. Cultivated wild mushroom species that are grown, harvested,
and processed in an operation that is regulated by the food regulatory agency
that has jurisdiction over the operation; or
2. Wild mushroom species if they are in packaged form and are
the product of a food processing plant that is regulated by the food regulatory
agency that has jurisdiction over the plant.
12VAC5-421-330. Game animals.
A. If game animals are received for sale or service they
shall be:
1. Commercially raised for food and: a. Raised raised,
slaughtered, and processed under a voluntary inspection program that is conducted
by the state agency that has animal health jurisdiction; or
b. Under a routine inspection program conducted by a
regulatory agency other than the agency that has animal health jurisdiction;
and
c. Raised, slaughtered, and processed according to:
(1) Laws governing meat and poultry as determined by the
agency; and
(2) Requirements that are developed by the agency that has
animal health jurisdiction and the agency that conducts the inspection program
with consideration of factors such as the need for antemortem and postmortem
examination by an approved veterinarian or veterinarian's designee;
2. Under under a voluntary inspection program
administered by the USDA for game animals such as exotic animals including
animals (reindeer, elk, deer, antelope, water buffalo, or bison) that are
"inspected and approved" in accordance with 9 CFR Part 352, Exotic
Animals; Voluntary Inspection, or rabbits that are "inspected and
certified" in accordance with 9 CFR Part 354, Voluntary Inspection of
Rabbits and Edible Products Thereof;
3. 2. As allowed by law, wild game animals that
are live-caught [ are ]:
a. Under a routine inspection program conducted by a
regulatory agency such as the agency that has animal health jurisdiction;P
b. Slaughtered and processed according to:
(1) Laws governing meat and poultry as determined by the
agency that has animal health jurisdiction and the agency that conducts the
inspection program;P and
(2) Requirements that are developed by the agency that has
animal health jurisdiction and the agency that conducts the inspection program
with consideration of factors such as the need for antemortem and postmortem
examination by an approved veterinarian or veterinarian's designee;P
or
4. 3. As allowed by law for field-dressed wild
game animals under a routine inspection program that ensures the animals:
a. Receive a postmortem examination by an approved
veterinarian or veterinarian's designee, or are
b. Are field-dressed and transported according to
requirements specified by the agency that has animal health jurisdiction and
the agency that conducts the inspection programP and
b. c. Are processed according to laws governing
meat and poultry as determined by the agency that has animal health
jurisdiction and the agency that conducts the inspection program.P
B. A game animal shall not be received for sale or service if
it is a species of wildlife that is listed in 50 CFR Part 17, Endangered and
Threatened Wildlife and Plants.
12VAC5-421-340. Temperature.
A. Except as specified in subsection B of this section,
refrigerated, potentially hazardous food time/temperature control for
safety food shall be at a temperature of 41°F (5°C) or below when received.P
B. If a temperature other than 41°F (5°C) for a potentially
hazardous food time/temperature control for safety food is specified
in law governing its distribution, such as laws governing milk, and
molluscan shellfish, and shell eggs, the food may be received at the
specified temperature.
C. Raw shell eggs shall be received in refrigerated equipment
that maintains an ambient air temperature of 45°F (7°C) or less.P
D. Potentially hazardous food [ time/temperature
Time/temperature ] control for safety food that is cooked to a
temperature and for a time specified under 12VAC5-421-700 through, 12VAC5-421-710,
and 12VAC5-421-720 and received hot shall be at a temperature of 135°
(57°C) or above.P
E. A food that is labeled frozen and shipped frozen by a food
processing plant shall be received frozen.Pf
F. Upon receipt, potentially hazardous food time/temperature
control for safety food shall be free of evidence of previous temperature
abuse.Pf
12VAC5-421-350. Additives.
Food shall not contain unapproved food additives or additives
that exceed amounts allowed in 21 CFR Parts 170-180 relating to food
additives; generally recognized as safe (GRAS) or prior sanctioned
substances that exceed amounts allowed in 21 CFR Parts 181-186; substances
that exceed amounts specified in 9 CFR 424.21(b), Subpart C, Approval
of Substances for Use in the Preparation of Products; or pesticide residues
that exceed provisions specified in 40 CFR Part 185 [ , ] Tolerances
for Pesticides in Food [ , ] and exceptions.P
12VAC5-421-360. Shell eggs Eggs.
Shell eggs Eggs shall be received clean and
sound and shall not exceed the restricted egg tolerances for U.S. Consumer
Grade B as specified in United States Standards, Grades, and Weight Classes for
Shell Eggs, AMS 56.200 et seq., administered by the Agricultural Marketing
Service of USDA. Eggs sold pursuant to § 3.2-5305 of the Code of Virginia
are exempt from the restricted egg tolerances for U.S. Consumer Grade B as
specified in United States Standards, Grades, and Weight Classes for Shell
Eggs, AMS 56, effective July 20, 2000, (Agricultural Marketing Service of
USDA).P
12VAC5-421-370. Eggs and milk products, pasteurized.
A. Egg products shall be obtained pasteurized.P
B. Fluid and dry milk and milk products shall:
1. Be obtained pasteurized;P 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.P
D. Cheese shall be obtained pasteurized unless alternative
procedures to pasteurization are provided for specified in the Code
of Federal Regulations CFR, such as 21 CFR Part 133,
Cheeses and Related Cheese Products, for curing certain cheese varieties.P
12VAC5-421-380. Package integrity.
Food packages shall be in good condition and protect the
integrity of the contents so that the food is not exposed to adulteration or
potential contaminants.Pf
12VAC5-421-390. Ice.
Ice for use as a food or a cooling medium shall be made from
[ drinking pure ] water.P
12VAC5-421-400. Shucked shellfish, packaging, and
identification.
A. Raw shucked shellfish shall be obtained in nonreturnable
packages that bear a legible label that identifies the:Pf
1. Name, address, and certification number of the shucker,
packer, or repacker of the molluscan shellfish;Pf and
2. The "sell by" or "best if used by" date
for packages with a capacity of less than one-half gallon (1.87 (1.89
L) or the date shucked for packages with a capacity of one-half gallon (1.87
(1.89 L) or more.Pf
B. A package of raw shucked shellfish that does not bear a
label or which that bears a label which 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.
12VAC5-421-410. Shellstock identification.
A. Shellstock shall be obtained in containers bearing legible
source identification tags or labels that are affixed by the harvester and
each a dealer that depurates, ships, or reships the shellstock, as
specified in the National Shellfish Sanitation Program (NSSP) Guide for
the Control of Molluscan Shellfish, 2013 Revision, (U.S. Food and Drug
Administration) and that list include the following information:Pf
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. 1. The dealer's name and address, and the
certification number assigned by the shellfish control authority,.Pf
b. 2. The original shipper's certification
number including the abbreviation of the name of the state or country in
which the shellfish are harvested, assigned by the shellfish control
authority.Pf
c. The same information as specified for a harvester's tag
under subdivisions 1 b through d of this subsection, and 3. The harvest
date, or if depurated, the date of depuration processing, or if wet stored, the
original harvest date and the final harvest date.Pf
4. If wet stored or depurated, the wet storage or
depuration cycle or lot number. The wet storage lot number shall begin with the
letter "w."Pf
5. The harvest area, including the initials of the state of
harvest.Pf
6. The type and quantity of shellstock.Pf
d. 7. 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."Pf
8. All shellstock intended for raw consumption shall
include a consumer advisory using the statement from 12VAC5-421-930 C, or an equivalent
statement.
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.
12VAC5-421-430. Molluscan shellfish; original container.
A. Except as specified in subsections B and, C,
and D of this section, molluscan shellfish shall 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 12VAC5-421-410 and recorded as specified under 12VAC5-421-440;
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 12VAC5-421-400 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 12VAC5-421-400 and
12VAC5-421-900 A and B 1 through 5;
2. The labeling information as specified under 12VAC5-421-400
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 D 2 of this section are maintained for 90 days; and
4. The shellfish are protected from contamination.
12VAC5-421-440. Shellstock; maintaining identification.
A. Except as specified under subdivision 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.Pf
B. The date when the last shellstock from the container is
sold or served shall be recorded on the tag or label.Pf
C. The identity of the source of shellfish shellstock
that are sold or served shall be maintained by retaining shellstock tags or
labels for 90 calendar days from the date that is recorded on the tag or label
as specified in subsection B of this section, by:Pf
1. Using an approved recordkeeping system that keeps the tags
or labels in chronological order correlated to the date that is recorded on the
tag or label, as specified under subsection B of this section;Pf
and
2. If shellstock are removed from its tagged or labeled
container:
a. Preserving source identification by using a recordkeeping
system as specified under subdivision C 1 of this section,Pf
and
b. Ensuring that shellstock from one tagged or labeled
container are not commingled with shellstock from another container with different
certification numbers, different harvest dates, or different growing areas as
identified on the tag or label before being ordered by the consumer.Pf
Article 3
Protection from Contamination after Receiving
12VAC5-421-450. Preventing contamination.
A. Food employees shall wash their hands as specified under
12VAC5-421-140.
B. Except when washing fruits and vegetables as specified
under 12VAC5-421-510 or as specified in subsection subsections D and
E of this section, food employees shall not contact exposed, ready-to-eat
food with their bare hands and shall use suitable utensils such as deli tissue,
spatulas, tongs, single-use gloves, or dispensing equipment.P
C. Food employees shall minimize bare hand and arm contact
with exposed food that is not in a ready-to-eat form.Pf
D. Subsection B of this section does not apply to a food
employee who contacts exposed, ready-to-eat food with bare hands at the time
the ready-to-eat food is being added as an ingredient to food that:
1. Contains a raw animal food and is to be cooked in the
food establishment to heat all parts of the food to the minimum temperatures
specified in [ subsection A or B of ] 12VAC5-421-700 or
[ in ] 12VAC5-421-710; or
2. Does not contain a raw animal food but is to be cooked
in the food establishment to heat all parts of the food to a temperature of at
least 145°F (63°C).
D. E. Food employees not serving a highly
susceptible population may contact exposed, ready-to-eat food with their bare
hands if:
1. The permit holder 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
12VAC5-421-2230, 12VAC5-421-2280, 12VAC5-421-2310, 12VAC5-421-3020,
12VAC5-421-3030, and 12VAC5-421-3045 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 12VAC5-421-80, 12VAC5-421-90, and 12VAC5-421-100
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 12VAC5-421-80 A.;
b. Documentation that food employees and conditional employees
acknowledge their responsibilities as specified under 12VAC5-421-80 E and F,;
and
c. Documentation that the person in charge acknowledges the
responsibilities as specified under 12VAC5-421-80 B, C, and D, and 12VAC5-421-90
and 12VAC5-421-100;
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 12VAC5-421-140,;
c. When to wash their hands as specified under 12VAC5-421-160,;
d. Where to wash their hands as specified under 12VAC5-421-170,;
e. Proper fingernail maintenance as specified under
12VAC5-421-190,;
f. Prohibition of jewelry as specified under 12VAC5-421-200,;
and
g. Good hygienic practices as specified under 12VAC5-421-220
and 12VAC5-421-230;
5. Documentation that hands are washed before food preparation
and as necessary to prevent cross-contamination by food employees as specified
under 12VAC5-421-130, 12VAC5-421-140, 12VAC5-421-160, and through
12VAC5-421-170 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
12VAC5-421-180,;
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 subdivision
D subdivisions 1 through 6 of this section subsection
are not followed.
12VAC5-421-460. Preventing contamination when tasting.
A food employee shall not use a utensil more than once to
taste food that is to be sold or served.P
12VAC5-421-470. Packaged and unpackaged food - separation,
packaging, and segregation.
A. Food shall be protected from cross contamination by:
1. Separating Except as specified in subdivision 1 c
of this subsection, separating raw animal foods during storage,
preparation, holding, and display from:
a. Raw ready-to-eat food including other raw animal food such
as fish for sushi or molluscan shellfish, or other raw ready-to-eat food such
as [ fruits and ] vegetables,P and
b. Cooked ready-to-eat food;.P
c. Frozen, commercially processed, and packaged raw animal
food may be stored or displayed with or above frozen, commercially processed
and packaged, ready-to-eat food.
2. Except when combined as ingredients, separating types of
raw animal foods from each other such as beef, fish, lamb, pork, and poultry
during storage, preparation, holding, and display by:
a. Using separate equipment for each type,P
or arranging
b. Arranging each type of food in equipment so that
cross contamination of one type with another is prevented,P
and
b. c. Preparing each type of food at different
times or in separate areas;P
3. Cleaning equipment and utensils as specified under
12VAC5-421-1780 A and sanitizing as specified under 12VAC5-421-1900;
4. Except as specified in subsection B of this section and
12VAC5-421-810 B 2, storing the food in packages, covered containers, or
wrappings;
5. Cleaning hermetically sealed containers of food of visible
soil before opening;
6. Protecting food containers that are received packaged
together in a case or overwrap from cuts when the case or overwrap is opened;
7. Storing damaged, spoiled, or recalled food being held in
the food establishment as specified under 12VAC5-421-3150; and
8. Separating fruits and vegetables, before they are washed as
specified under 12VAC5-421-510 from ready-to-eat food.
B. Subdivision A 4 of this section does not apply to:
1. Whole, uncut, raw fruits and vegetables and nuts in the
shell, that require peeling or hulling before consumption;
2. Primal cuts, quarters, or sides of raw meat or slab bacon
that are hung on clean, sanitized hooks or placed on clean, sanitized racks;
3. Whole, uncut, processed meats such as country hams, and
smoked or cured sausages that are placed on clean, sanitized racks;
4. Food being cooled as specified under 12VAC5-421-810 B 2; or
5. Shellstock.
12VAC5-421-480. Food storage containers; identified with common
name of food.
Working containers holding food or food ingredients that
are removed from their original packages for use in the food establishment, such
as cooking oils, flour, herbs, potato flakes, salt, spices, and sugar, shall be
identified with the common name of the food (in English and the common language
of the food workers) except that containers holding food that can be readily
and unmistakably recognized such as dry pasta need not be identified. Except
for containers holding food that can be readily and unmistakably recognized
such as dry pasta, working containers holding food or food ingredients that are
removed from their original packages for use in the food establishment, such as
cooking oils, flour, herbs, potato flakes, salt, spices, and sugar shall be
identified with the common name of the food.
12VAC5-421-490. Pasteurized eggs; substitute for shell raw
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 [ bearnaise béarnaise ] sauce, mayonnaise, meringue,
[ eggnog, ice cream, ] and egg-fortified beverages that are
not:P
1. Cooked as specified in 12VAC5-421-700 A 1 or 2;P
or
2. Included in 12VAC5-421-700 D.P
12VAC5-421-500. Protection from unapproved additives.
A. Food, as specified in 12VAC5-421-350, shall be protected
from contamination that may result from the addition of:
1. Unsafe or unapproved food or color additives;P
and
2. Unsafe or unapproved levels of approved food and color
additives.P
B. A food employee shall 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;P or
2. Except for grapes, serve or sell food specified under
subdivision B 1 of this section that is treated with sulfiting agents before
receipt by the food establishment.P
12VAC5-421-510. Washing fruits and vegetables.
A. Raw fruits and vegetables shall be thoroughly washed in
water to remove soil and other contaminants before being cut, combined with
other ingredients, cooked, served, or offered for human consumption in ready-to-eat
form except as specified in subsection B of this section and except that whole,
raw fruits and vegetables that are intended for washing by the consumer before
consumption need not be washed before they are sold. Except as specified
in subsection B of this section and except for whole, raw fruits and vegetables
that are intended for washing by the consumer before consumption, raw fruits
and vegetables shall be thoroughly washed in water to remove soil and other
contaminants before being cut, combined with other ingredients, cooked, served,
or offered for human consumption in ready-to-eat form.
B. Fruits and vegetables may be washed by using chemicals as
specified under 12VAC5-421-3390.
C. Devices used for onsite generation of chemicals meeting
the requirements specified in 21 CFR 173.315 shall be used in accordance with
the manufacturer's instructions.Pf
12VAC5-421-520. Ice used as exterior coolant, prohibited as
ingredient.
After use as a medium for cooling the exterior surfaces of
food such as melons or fish, packaged foods such as canned beverages, or
cooling coils and tubes of equipment, ice shall not be used as food.P
12VAC5-421-540. Food contact with equipment and utensils.
Food shall only contact surfaces of:
1. Equipment and utensils that are cleaned as specified under
12VAC5-421-1770 through 12VAC5-421-1870 [ , ] and sanitized as
specified under 12VAC5-421-1880 through [ 12VAC5-421-1885, ]
12VAC5-421-1890 and 12VAC5-421-1900;P or
2. Single-service and single-use articles.;P
or
3. Linens, such as cloth napkins, as specified under
12VAC5-421-560 that are laundered as specified under 12VAC5-421-1920 C.P
12VAC5-421-550. In-use utensils, between-use storage.
During pauses in food preparation or dispensing, food
preparation and dispensing utensils shall be stored:
1. Except as specified under subdivision 2 of this section, in
the food with their handles above the top of the food and the container;
2. In food that is not potentially hazardous time/temperature
control for safety food with their handles above the top of the food within
containers or equipment that can be closed, such as bins of sugar, flour, or
cinnamon;
3. On a clean portion of the food preparation table or cooking
equipment only if the in-use utensil and the food-contact surface of the food
preparation table or cooking equipment are cleaned and sanitized at a frequency
specified under 12VAC5-421-1780 and 12VAC5-421-1890;
4. In running water of sufficient velocity to flush
particulates to the drain, if used with moist food such as ice cream or mashed
potatoes;
5. In a clean, protected location if the utensils, such as ice
scoops, are used only with a food that is not potentially hazardous time/temperature
control for safety food; or
6. In a container of water if the water is maintained at a
temperature of at least 135°F (57°C) and the container is cleaned at a
frequency specified under 12VAC5-421-1780 D 7.
[ 12VAC5-421-560. Linens and napkins, use limitation.
Linens and, such as cloth napkins, shall not be
used in contact with food unless they are used to line a container for the
service of foods and the linens and napkins are replaced each time the
container is refilled for a new customer. ]
12VAC5-421-570. Wiping cloths; used for one purpose use
limitation.
A. Cloths in-use for wiping food spills 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 in-use for wiping counters and other equipment
surfaces shall be:
1. Held between uses in a chemical sanitizer solution at a
concentration specified in 12VAC5-421-3380; and
2. Laundered daily as specified under 12VAC5-421-1920 D.
C. Cloths in-use for wiping surfaces in contact with raw
animal foods shall be kept separate from other cloths used for other purposes.
D. 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. 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.
12VAC5-421-580. Gloves; use limitation.
A. If used, single-use gloves shall be used for only one task
such as working with ready-to-eat food or with raw animal food, used for no
other purpose, and discarded when damaged or soiled, or when interruptions
occur in the operation.P
B. Except as specified in subsection C of this section,
slash-resistant gloves that are used to protect the hands during operations
requiring cutting shall be used in direct contact only with food that is
subsequently cooked as specified under 12VAC5-421-700 through 12VAC5-421-760
such as frozen food or a primal cut of meat.
C. Slash-resistant gloves may be used with ready-to-eat food
that will not be subsequently cooked if the slash-resistant gloves have a
smooth, durable, and nonabsorbent outer surface; or if the slash-resistant
gloves are covered with a smooth, durable, nonabsorbent glove, or a single-use
glove.
D. Cloth gloves shall not be used in direct contact with food
unless the food is subsequently cooked as required under 12VAC5-421-700 through
12VAC5-421-760 such as frozen food or a primal cut of meat.
12VAC5-421-600. Refilling returnables.
[ A. Except as specified in subsections B through E
of this section, empty containers returned to a food establishment for cleaning
and refilling with food shall be cleaned and refilled in a regulated food
processing plant.P
A. B. ] A take-home food container
returned to a food establishment [ shall not may ] be
refilled at a food establishment with a potentially hazardous [ time/temperature
control for safety ] food [ . if the food
container is:
1. Designed and constructed for reuse and in accordance with
the requirements specified in 12VAC5-421-960 through 12VAC5-421-1435;P
2. One that was initially provided by the food
establishment to the consumer, either empty or filled with food by the
establishment, for the purpose of being returned for reuse;
3. Returned to the food establishment by the consumer after
use;
4. Subject to the following steps before being refilled
with food;
a. Cleaned as specified in 12VAC5-421-1770 through
12VAC5-421-1860,
b. Sanitized as specified in 12VAC5-421-1885, 12VAC5-421-1890,
and 12VAC5-421-1900;P and
c. Visually inspected by a food employee to verify that the
container, as returned, meets the requirements specified in 12VAC5-421-960
through 12VAC5-421-1435;P and
C. A take-home food container returned to a food establishment
may be refilled at a food establishment with beverage if:
1. The beverage is not a time/temperature control for
safety food;
2. The design of the container, the rinsing equipment, and
the nature of the beverage, when considered together, allow effective cleaning
at home or in the food establishment;
3. Facilities before rinsing or refilling returned
containers with fresh, hot water that is under pressure and not recirculated
are provided as part of the dispensing system;
4. The consumer-owned container returned to the food
establishment for refilling is refilled for sale or service only to the same
consumer; and
5. The container is refilled by:
a. An employee of the food establishment; or
b. The owner of the container if the beverage system includes
a contamination-free transfer process as specified in subdivisions 1, 2, and 4
of 12VAC5-421-1230. ]
[ B. Except as specified in subsection C of this
section, a take-home food container refilled with food that is not ] potentially
hazardous [ time/temperature control for safety food shall
be cleaned as specified under 12VAC5-421-1870.
C. Personal D. Consumer-owned, personal ]
take-out beverage containers, such as thermally insulated bottles, nonspill
coffee cups, and promotional beverage glasses, may be refilled by
employees or the consumer if refilling is a contamination-free process as
specified under subdivisions 1, 2, and 4 of 12VAC5-421-1230.
[ E. Consumer-owned containers that are not
food-specific may be filled at a water vending machine or system. ]
12VAC5-421-630. Vended potentially hazardous time/temperature
control for safety food; original container.
Potentially hazardous Time/temperature control for
safety food dispensed through a vending machine shall be in the package in
which it was placed at the food establishment or food processing plant at which
it was prepared.
12VAC5-421-650. Food display.
Except for nuts in the shell and whole, raw fruits and
vegetables that are intended for hulling, peeling, or washing by the consumer before
consumption, food on display shall be protected from contamination by the use
of packaging; counter, service line, or salad bar food guards; display cases;
or other effective means.P
12VAC5-421-670. Consumer self-service operations.
A. Raw, unpackaged animal food, such as beef, lamb, pork,
poultry, and fish shall not be offered for consumer self-service.P
This subsection does not apply to:
1. Consumer self-service of ready-to-eat foods at buffets or
salad bars that serve foods such as sushi or raw shellfish;
2. Ready-to-cook individual portions for immediate cooking and
consumption on the premises such as consumer-cooked meats or consumer-selected
ingredients for Mongolian barbecue; or
3. Raw, frozen, shell-on shrimp or lobster.
B. Consumer self-service operations for ready-to-eat foods
shall be provided with suitable utensils or effective dispensing methods that
protect the food from contamination.Pf
C. Consumer self-service operations such as buffets and salad
bars shall be monitored by food employees trained in safe operating procedures.Pf
12VAC5-421-680. 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 shall not be offered as food for human
consumption.P
B. Except as specified in subdivision 8 of 12VAC5-421-950, a
container of food that is not potentially hazardous (time/temperature
control for safety food) time/temperature control for safety food
may be 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
12VAC5-421-700. 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:P
a. Raw shell eggs that are broken and prepared in
response to a consumer's order and for immediate service;P
and
b. Except as specified under subdivisions A 2 and 3 and subsection
subsections B and C of this section, fish and meat, including game
animals commercially raised for food as specified under 12VAC5-421-330 A 1
and game animals under a voluntary inspection program as specified under
12VAC5-421-330 A 2 1;P
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, mechanically tenderized meats, and injected meats; the
following if they are comminuted: fish, meat, game animals commercially raised
for food as specified under 12VAC5-421-330 A 1, and game animals under a
voluntary inspection program as specified under 12VAC5-421-330 A 2 1;
and raw eggs that are not prepared as specified under subdivision 1 a of this
subsection:P
Minimum
|
Temperature
°F (°C)
|
Time
|
145 (63)
|
3 minutes
|
150 (66)
|
1 minute
|
158 (70)
|
<1 second (instantaneous)
|
3. 165°F (74°C) or above for 15 seconds for poultry, [ baluts, ]
wild game animals as specified under 12VAC5-421-330 A 3 2,
stuffed fish, stuffed meat, stuffed pasta, stuffed poultry, stuffed ratites, or
stuffing containing fish, meat, or poultry, or ratites.P
B. Whole meat roasts including beef, corned beef, lamb, pork,
and cured pork roasts such as ham shall be cooked:
1. 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;Pf 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 1
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.P
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 12VAC5-421-270 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 [ upon request or consumer selection ]
in a ready-to-eat form if:
1. (i) As specified under subdivisions 3 a and b of
12VAC5-421-950 the food establishment serves a population that is not a highly
susceptible population and (ii) the;
2. The food, if served or offered for service by consumer
selection from a children's menu, does not contain comminuted meat;Pf
and
3. The consumer is informed as specified under
12VAC5-421-930 that to ensure its safety, the food should be cooked as
specified under subsections subsection A or B of this section; or
2. 4. The regulatory authority grants a variance
from subsection A or B of this section as specified in 12VAC5-421-3570 based on
a HACCP plan that:
a. Is submitted by the permit holder and approved as specified
under 12VAC5-421-3570;
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 ].
12VAC5-421-710. Microwave cooking.
Raw animal foods cooked in a microwave oven shall be:
1. Rotated or stirred throughout or midway during cooking to
compensate for uneven distribution of heat;
2. Covered to retain surface moisture;
3. Heated to a temperature of at least 165°F (74°C) in all
parts of the food;P and
4. Allowed to stand covered for two minutes after cooking to
obtain temperature equilibrium.
12VAC5-421-720. Plant food cooking for hot holding.
Fruits and vegetables that are cooked for hot holding shall
be cooked to a temperature of 135°F (57°C).Pf
12VAC5-421-725. Noncontinuous cooking.
Raw animal foods that are cooked using a noncontinuous
cooking process shall be:
1. Subject to an initial heating process that is no longer
than 60 minutes in duration;P
2. Immediately after initial heating, cooled according to
the time and temperature requirements specified for cooked time/temperature
control for safety food under 12VAC5-421-800 A;P
3. After cooling, held frozen or cold, as specified for
time/temperature control for safety food under 12VAC5-421-820 A 2;P
4. Prior to sale or service, cooked using a process that
heats all parts of the food to a temperature [ and for a time ]
as designated in 12VAC5-421-700 A, B, and C;P
5. Cooled according to the time and temperature parameters
specified for cooked time/temperature control for safety food under
12VAC5-421-800 A if not [ either ] hot held as
specified under 12VAC5-421-820 A 1, served immediately, or held using time as a
public health control as specified under 12VAC5-421-850 after complete
[ cooking cooling ];P and
6. Prepared and stored according to written procedures
that:
a. Have obtained prior approval from the regulatory
authority;Pf
b. Are maintained in the food establishment and are made
available to the regulatory authority upon request;Pf
c. Describe how the requirements specified under
subdivisions 1 through 5 of this section are to be monitored and documented by
the permit holder and the corrective actions to be taken if the requirements
are not met;Pf
d. Describe how the foods, after initial heating, but prior
to complete [ cooling cooking ], are to
be marked or otherwise identified as foods that must be cooked as specified
under subdivision 4 of this section prior to being offered for sale or service;Pf
and
e. Describe how the foods, after initial heating but prior
to cooking as specified in subdivision 4 of this section, are to be separated
from ready-to-eat foods as specified under 12VAC5-421-470 A.Pf
12VAC5-421-730. 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 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;P
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;P 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.P
B. Subsection A of this section does not apply to:
1. Molluscan shellfish, including the shucked adductor
muscle of scallops;
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., or
4. Fish eggs that have been removed from the skein and
rinsed.
12VAC5-421-740. Records, creation and retention.
A. Except as specified in 12VAC5-421-730 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.Pf
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 12VAC5-421-730 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 12VAC5-421-730 B 3, a written
agreement or statement from the supplier or aquaculturist stipulating that the
fish were raised and fed as specified in 12VAC5-421-730 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.Pf
[ 12VAC5-421-755. Preparation for immediate
service.
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. ]
12VAC5-421-760. 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) 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.P
B. Except as specified under subsection C of this section, potentially
hazardous food (time/temperature control for safety 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.P
C. Ready-to-eat [ time/temperature control for safety ]
food [ taken from a that has been ] commercially
processed [ , hermetically sealed container, or from an intact package
from and packaged in ] 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) [ when being reheated ]
for hot holding.P
D. Reheating for hot holding as specified under subsections A
through, B, and C of this section shall be done rapidly and the
time the food is between 41°F (5°C) and the temperatures specified under
subsections A through, B, and C of this section may not exceed
two hours.P
E. Remaining unsliced portions of meat roasts that are cooked
as specified under 12VAC5-421-700 B may be reheated for hot holding using the
oven parameters and minimum time and temperature conditions specified under
12VAC5-421-700 B.
Article 5
Limitation of Growth of Organisms of Public Health Concern
12VAC5-421-765. Treating juice.
Juice packaged in a food establishment shall be:
1. Treated under a HACCP plan as specified in subdivisions
2 through 5 of 12VAC5-421-3630 to attain a five-log reduction, which is
equal to a 99.999% reduction, of the most resistant microorganism of public
health significance;P or
2. Labeled, if not treated to yield a five-log reduction of
the most resistant microorganism of public health significance:Pf
a. As specified under 12VAC5-421-900;Pf and
b. As specified in 21 CFR 101.17(g) with the [ phrase
following ], "WARNING: This product has not been pasteurized
and, therefore, may contain harmful bacteria that can cause serious illness in
children, the elderly, and persons with weakened immune systems."Pf
12VAC5-421-780. Potentially hazardous Time/temperature
control for safety food, slacking.
Frozen potentially hazardous food (time/temperature
control for safety 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
2. At any temperature if the food remains frozen.
12VAC5-421-790. Thawing.
A. Except as specified in subdivision 4 of this section
subsection, potentially hazardous food (time/temperature control for
safety 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
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
d. For a period of time that does not allow thawed portions of
a raw animal food requiring cooking as specified under 12VAC5-421-700 A or B to
be above 41°F (5°C) for more than four hours including:
(1) The time the food is exposed to the running water and the
time needed for preparation for cooking; or
(2) The time it takes under refrigeration to lower the food
temperature to 41°F (5°C);
3. As part of a cooking process if the food that is frozen is:
a. Cooked as specified under 12VAC5-421-700 A or B or
12VAC5-421-710; 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.
B. Reduced oxygen packaged fish that bears a label
indicating that it is to be kept frozen until time of use shall be removed from
the reduced oxygen environment:
1. Prior to its thawing under refrigeration as specified
[ under in ] subdivision A 1 of this section.
2. Prior to, or immediately upon completion of, its thawing
using procedures specified in subdivision A 2 of this section.
12VAC5-421-800. Cooling.
A. Cooked potentially hazardous food (time/temperature
controlled for safety food) time/temperature control for safety food
shall be cooled:
1. Within two hours, from 135°F (57°C) to 70°F (21°C);P
and
2. Within a total of six hours from 135°F (57°C) to 41°F (5°C)
or less.P
B. Potentially hazardous food (time/temperature control
for safety food) Time/temperature control for safety food shall be
cooled within four hours to 41°F (5°C) or less if prepared from ingredients at
ambient temperature, such as reconstituted foods and canned tuna.P
C. Except as specified in subsection D of this section, a potentially
hazardous food (time/temperature control for safety 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
12VAC5-421-340 B, shall be cooled within four hours to 41°F (5°C) or less.P
D. Raw shell eggs shall be received as specified under
12VAC5-421-340 C and immediately placed in refrigerated equipment that
maintains an ambient air temperature of 45°F (7°C) or less.P
12VAC5-421-810. Cooling methods.
A. Cooling shall be accomplished in accordance with the time
and temperature criteria specified under 12VAC5-421-800 by using one or more of
the following methods based on the type of food being cooled:
1. Placing the food in shallow pans;Pf
2. Separating the food into smaller or thinner portions;Pf
3. Using rapid cooling equipment;Pf
4. Stirring the food in a container placed in an ice water
bath;Pf
5. Using containers that facilitate heat transfer;Pf
6. Adding ice as an ingredient;Pf or
7. Other effective methods.Pf
B. When placed in cooling or cold holding equipment, food
containers in which food is being cooled shall be:
1. Arranged in the equipment to provide maximum heat transfer
through the container walls; and
2. Loosely covered, or uncovered if protected from overhead
contamination as specified under 12VAC5-421-610 A 2, during the cooling period
to facilitate heat transfer from the surface of the food.
12VAC5-421-820. Potentially hazardous Time/temperature
control for safety 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 12VAC5-421-850 [and
except as specified in subsections B and C of this section], potentially
hazardous food (time/temperature control for safety 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 under 12VAC5-421-700 B or reheated as
specified in 12VAC5-421-760 E may be held at a temperature of 130°F (54°C) or
above;P or
2. At 41°F (5°C) or less.P
B. Shell eggs 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.P
C. Potentially hazardous food (time/temperature control
for safety 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 12VAC5-421-1230.P
12VAC5-421-830. Ready-to-eat, potentially hazardous food
time/temperature control for safety food; date marking.
A. Except when packaging food using a reduced oxygen
packaging method as specified under 12VAC5-421-870, and except as specified in
subsections D and E of this section, refrigerated ready-to-eat potentially
hazardous food (time/temperature control for safety 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 when held at a
temperature of 41°F (5°C) or less for a maximum of seven days. The day of
preparation shall be counted as day 1.Pf
B. Except as specified in subsections D through, E,
and F of this section, refrigerated ready-to-eat, potentially hazardous
food (time/temperature control for safety 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:Pf
1. The day the original container is opened in the food
establishment shall be counted as day 1;Pf and
2. The day or date marked by the food establishment shall not
exceed a manufacturer's use-by "use by" date if the
manufacturer determined the use-by "use by" date based
on food safety.Pf
C. A refrigerated, ready-to-eat, potentially hazardous
food (time/temperature control for safety food) 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) time/temperature
control for safety food that is subsequently combined with additional
ingredients or portions of food shall retain the date marking of the
earliest-prepared or first-prepared ingredient.Pf
D. A date marking system that meets the criteria 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) 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 or day by which the food must be consumed on the
premises, sold, or discarded as specified under subsection B of this section;
or
4. Using calendar dates, days of the week, color-coded marks,
or other effective marking methods, provided that the marking system is
disclosed to the 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. Subsections A and B of this section do not apply to
shellstock.
F. G. Subsection B of this section does not
apply to the following foods prepared and packaged by a food processing plant
inspected by a regulatory authority:
1. Deli salads, such as ham salad, seafood salad, chicken
salad, egg salad, pasta salad, potato salad, and macaroni salad, manufactured
in accordance with 21 CFR Part 110 Current good manufacturing practice in
manufacturing, packing or holding 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 cheese
related 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 that 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.
12VAC5-421-840. Ready-to-eat, potentially hazardous time/temperature
control for safety food; disposition.
A. A food specified under 12VAC5-421-830 A or B shall be
discarded if it:
1. Exceeds either of the temperature and time [ combinations
combination ] specified in 12VAC5-421-830 A, except time that the
product is frozen;P
2. Is in a container or package that does not bear a date or
day;P or
3. Is [ appropriately inappropriately ]
marked with a date or day that exceeds a temperature and time combination as
specified in 12VAC5-421-830 A.P
[ B. Refrigerated, ready-to-eat,
time/temperature control for safety food prepared in a food establishment and
dispensed through a vending machine with an automatic shutoff control shall be
disgarded if it exceeds a temperature and time combination as specified in
12VAC5-421-830 A.P ]
12VAC5-421-850. Time as a public health control.
A. Except as specified under subsection D of this section, if
time without temperature control is used as the public health control for a
working supply of potentially hazardous food (time/temperature control for
safety food) time/temperature control for safety food before cooking
or for ready-to-eat potentially hazardous food (time/temperature control for
safety food) time/temperature control for safety food that is
displayed or held for sale or service, written procedures shall be prepared in
advance, maintained in the food establishment, and made available to the regulatory
authority upon request that specify:Pf
1. Methods of compliance with subdivisions B 1 through,
2, and 3 or C 1 through 5 of this section;Pf and
2. Methods of compliance with 12VAC5-421-800 for food that is
prepared, cooked, and refrigerated before time is used as a public health
control.Pf
B. If time without temperature control is used as the public
health control up to a maximum of four hours:
[ 1. 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;P
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;P
[ 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;P
and
[ 3. 4. ] The food in unmarked
containers or packages, or marked to exceed a four-hour limit shall be
discarded.P
C. If time without temperature control is used as the public
health control up to a maximum of six hours:
1. The food shall have an initial temperature of 41ºF (5ºC) or
less when removed from temperature control and the food temperature may not
exceed 70ºF (21ºC) within a maximum time period of six hours;P
2. The food shall be monitored to ensure the warmest portion
of the food does not exceed 70ºF (21ºC) during the six-hour period, unless an
ambient air temperature is maintained that ensures the food does not exceed
70ºF (21ºC) during the six-hour holding period;P
3. The food shall be marked or otherwise identified to
indicate:Pf
a. The time when the food is removed from 41ºF (5ºC) or less cold-holding
temperature control,Pf and
b. The time that is six hours past the point in time when the
food is removed from 41ºF (5ºC) or less cold-holding temperature control;Pf
4. The food shall be:
a. Discarded if the temperature of the foods exceeds 70ºF
(21ºC);P or
b. Cooked and served, served at any temperature if
ready-to-eat, or discarded within a maximum of six hours from the point in time
when the food is removed from 41ºF (5ºC) or less cold-holding temperature
control;P and
5. The food in unmarked containers or packages, or marked with
a time that exceeds the six-hour limit shall be discarded.P
D. A food establishment that serves a highly susceptible
population may not use time as specified under subsections subsection
A, B, or C of this section as the public health control for raw eggs.
12VAC5-421-860. Variance requirement.
A food establishment shall obtain a variance from the
regulatory authority as specified in 12VAC5-421-3570 and 12VAC5-421-3580
before:Pf
1. Smoking food as a method of food preservation rather than
as a method of flavor enhancement; Pf
2. Curing food;Pf
3. Using food additives or adding components such as vinegar:Pf
a. As a method of food preservation rather than as a method of
flavor enhancement;Pf or
b. To render a food so that it is not potentially hazardous
a time/temperature control for safety food; Pf
4. Packaging time/temperature control for safety food
using a reduced oxygen packaging method except as specified under
12VAC5-421-870 where a barrier to Clostridium botulinum in addition to
refrigeration exists where the growth of and toxin formation by
Clostridium botulinum and the growth of Listeria monocytogenes are controlled
as specified under 12VAC5-421-870;Pf
5. Operating a molluscan shellfish life-support system display
tank used to store [ and or ] display shellfish that
are offered for human consumption;Pf
6. Custom processing animals that are for personal use as food
and not for sale or service in a food establishment;Pf
7. Sprouting seeds or beans;Pf or
8. Preparing food by another method that is determined by the
regulatory authority to require a variance.Pf
12VAC5-421-870. Reduced oxygen packaging; without a
variance, criteria.
A. Except for a food establishment that obtains a variance as
specified under 12VAC5-421-860 [ 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) 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.P
B. A Except as specified under subsection F of this
section, a food establishment that packages potentially hazardous food
(time/temperature control for safety food) time/temperature control for
safety food using a reduced oxygen method shall have a HACCP plan that
contains the following information specified under subdivisions 3 and 4 of
12VAC5-421-3630 D:Pf
1. Identifies food to be packaged;Pf
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:Pf
a. Has an Aw of 0.91 or less,Pf
b. Has a pH of 4.6 or less,Pf
c. Is a meat or poultry product cured as 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,Pf or
d. Is a food with a high level of competing organisms such as
raw meat or, raw poultry;, or raw vegetables
[ .; ]Pf
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:Pf
a. Maintain food at 41°F (5°C) or below,Pf
and
b. Discard the food if within 14 30
calendar days of its packaging [ if ] it [ is ]
not served for on-premises consumption, or consumed if served or sold for
off-premises consumption;Pf
4. Limits the refrigerated shelf life to no more than 14
30 calendar days from packaging to consumption, except the time the
product is maintained frozen, or the original manufacturer's "sell
by" or "use by" date, whichever occurs first;P
5. Includes operational
procedures that:
a. Prohibit contacting [ ready-to-eat ] food
with bare hands [ as specified in 12VAC5-421-450 B ],Pf
b. Identify a designated work area and the method by which:Pf
(1) Physical barriers or methods of separation of raw foods
and ready-to-eat foods minimize cross contamination,Pf and
(2) Access to the processing equipment is limited to
responsible trained personnel familiar with the potential hazards of the
operation,Pf and
c. Delineate cleaning and sanitization procedures for food
contact surfaces; andPf
6. Describes the training program that ensures that the
individual responsible for the reduced oxygen packaging operation understands
the:Pf
a. Concepts required for safe operation,Pf
b. Equipment and facilities,Pf and
c. Procedures specified under subdivision B 5 of this section
and subdivisions 3 and 4 of 12VAC5-421-3630 D.; andPf
7. Is provided to the regulatory authority prior to
implementation as specified under 12VAC5-421-3620 [ B ].
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.P
D. Except as specified in subsection subsections
C and F of this section, a food establishment may package that
packages [ time/temperature control for safety ] food
using a cook-chill or sous-vide process without obtaining a variance if shall:
1. The food establishment implements Provide to the
regulatory authority prior to implementation a HACCP plan that contains the
information as specified under subdivisions 3 and 4 of 12VAC5-421-3630 D:;Pf
2. The Ensure the food is:
a. Prepared and consumed on the premises, or prepared and
consumed off the premises but within the same business entity with no
distribution or sale of the bagged product to another business entity or the
consumer,;Pf
b. Cooked to heat all parts of the food to a temperature and
for a time as specified under [ subsections A, B, and C of ]
12VAC5-421-700, [ subsections A, B, and C of this section];P
c. Protected from contamination [ before and ]
after cooking as specified in 12VAC5-421-450 through [ 12VAC5-421-690
12VAC5-421-765 ],;P
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),;P
e. Cooled to 41°F (5°C) in the sealed package [ or bag ]
as specified under 12VAC5-421-800, and subsequently:P
(1) Cooled to 34°F (1°C) within 48 hours of reaching 41°F
(5°C) and held at that temperature until consumed or discarded within 30 days
after the date of preparation, packaging;P
(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 Held at 41°F (5°C) or less for no more
than 72 hours seven days, at which time the food must be consumed
or discarded;P or
(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;P or
(4) (3) Held frozen with no shelf-life
restriction while frozen until consumed or used [ .; ]P
f. Held in a refrigeration unit that is equipped with an
electronic system that continuously monitors time and temperature and is
visually examined for proper operation twice daily,;Pf
g. If transported off-site off site to a
satellite location of the same business entity, equipped with verifiable
electronic monitoring devices to ensure that times and temperatures are
monitored during transportation,;Pf and
h. Labeled with the product name and the date packaged;Pf
and
3. The Maintain 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,Pf
and
b. Held for six months;Pf and
4. Written Implement 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 ].Pf
E. A Except as specified under subsection F of this
section, a food establishment may package that packages
cheese using a reduced oxygen packaging method without obtaining a variance
if it shall:
1. Limits Limit 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;P
2. Has Have a HACCP plan that contains the
information specified in subdivisions 3 and 4 of 12VAC5-421-3630 D
and as specified under subdivisions B 1, B 3 a, B 5, and B 6 of this
section;Pf
3. Except as specified under subdivision B 2, B 3 b, and B
4, complies with subsection B of this section;
4. Labels 3. Label the package on the principal
display panel with a "use by" date that does not exceed 30 days
[ from its packaging ] or the original manufacturer's
"sell by" or "use by" date, whichever [ comes occurs ]
first;Pf and
5. Discards 4. Discard the reduced oxygen
packaged cheese if it is not sold for off-premises consumption or consumed
within 30 calendar days of its packaging.Pf
F. A HACCP plan is not required when a food establishment
uses a reduced oxygen packaging method to package [ TCS
time/temperature control for safety ] food that is always:
1. Labeled with the production time and date.
2. Held at 41°F [ (5°C) ] or less
during refrigerated storage [ .; and ]
3. Removed from its [ package
packaging ] in the food establishment within 48 hours after
packaging.
Article 6
Food Identity, Presentation, and On-Premises Labeling
12VAC5-421-880. Standards of identity.
Packaged food shall comply with standard of identity
requirements in 21 CFR Parts 131-169 and 9 CFR Part 319 - Definitions
and Standards of Identity or Composition, and the general requirements in
21 CFR Part 130 - Food Standards: General and 9 CFR Part 319,
Subpart A - General.
12VAC5-421-900. Food labels.
A. Food packaged in a food establishment, shall be labeled as
specified in accordance with all applicable laws and regulations, 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
[ and sub-ingredients ] in descending order of predominance by
weight, including a declaration of artificial [ color or flavor colors,
artificial flavors, ] and chemical preservatives, if contained in the
food;
3. An accurate declaration of the [ net ]
quantity of contents;
4. The name and place of business of the manufacturer, packer,
or distributor;
5. The name of the food source for each major food allergen
contained in the food unless the food source is already part of the common or
usual name of the respective ingredient;Pf
6. Except as exempted in the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic
Act § 403(Q)(3) - through (5), nutrition labeling as specified in
21 CFR Part 101 - Food Labeling, and 9 CFR Part 317, Subpart
B - Nutrition Labeling; and
7. For any salmonid fish containing canthaxanthin [ or
astaxanthin ] as a color additive, the labeling of the bulk fish
container, including a list of ingredients, displayed on the retail container
or by other written means, such as a counter card, that discloses the use of
canthaxanthin [ or astaxanthin ].
C. Bulk food that is available for consumer self-dispensing
shall be prominently labeled with the following information in plain view of
the consumer:
1. The manufacturer's or processor's label that was provided
with the food; or
2. A card, sign, or other method of notification that includes
the information specified under subdivisions B 1, 2 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.
12VAC5-421-930. [ Consumption Consumer advisory:
consumption ] of animal [ products foods ]
that are raw, undercooked, or not otherwise processed to eliminate pathogens.
A. Except as specified in 12VAC5-421-700 C and D 4 and
under 12VAC5-421-950 C, if an animal food such as beef, eggs, fish,
lamb, pork, poultry, or shellfish is served or sold raw, undercooked, or
without otherwise being processed to eliminate pathogens, either in
ready-to-eat form or as an ingredient in another ready-to-eat food, the permit
holder shall inform consumers of the significantly increased risk of consuming
such foods by way of a disclosure and reminder, as specified in subsections B
and C of this section, using brochures, deli case or menu advisories, label
statements, table tents, placards, or other effective written means.Pf
B. Disclosure shall include:
1. A description of the animal-derived foods, such as
"oysters on the half shell (raw oysters)," "raw-egg Caesar
salad," and "hamburgers (can be cooked to order)";Pf
or
2. Identification of the animal-derived foods by asterisking
them to a footnote that states that the items are served raw or undercooked, or
contain (or may contain) raw or undercooked ingredients.Pf
C. Reminder shall include
asterisking the animal-derived foods requiring disclosure to a footnote that
states:
1. "Regarding the safety of these items, written
information is available upon request";Pf
2. "Consuming raw or undercooked meats, poultry, seafood,
shellfish, or eggs may increase your risk of foodborne illness";Pf
or
3. "Consuming raw or undercooked meats, poultry, seafood,
shellfish, or eggs may increase your risk of foodborne illness, especially if
you have certain medical conditions."Pf
Article 7
Contaminated Food
12VAC5-421-940. Discarding unsafe, adulterated, or contaminated
food.
A. A food that is unsafe, adulterated, or not from an
approved source as specified under 12VAC5-421-270 through 12VAC5-421-330 shall
be rendered unusable and discarded.P
B. Ready-to-eat food that may have been contaminated by an
employee who has been restricted or excluded as specified under 12VAC5-421-90
shall be rendered unusable and discarded.P
C. Food that is contaminated by food employees, consumers, or
other persons through contact with their hands, bodily discharges, such as
nasal or oral discharges, or other means shall be rendered unusable and
discarded.P
Article 8
Special Requirements for Highly Susceptible Populations
12VAC5-421-950. Pasteurized foods, prohibited reservice, 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 this paragraph only, children who are
age nine 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, (Juices that have not been specifically processed to prevent,
reduce or eliminate the presence of pathogens) or a packaged juice
or beverage containing juice, that bears a warning label as specified
under subdivision 2 of 12VAC5-421-765 shall may not be served or
offered for sale;P and
c. Unpackaged juice that is prepared on the premises for
service or sale in a ready-to-eat form shall be processed under a HACCP plan
that contains the information specified in subdivisions 2 through 5 of
12VAC5-421-3630 and as specified under [ in ] 21 CFR
120.24, Process controls.P
2. Pasteurized shell eggs or egg products shall be
substituted for raw shell eggs in the preparation of:P
a. Foods such as Caesar salad, hollandaise or biarnaise
Bearnaise sauce, mayonnaise, meringue, eggnog, ice cream, and
egg-fortified beverages;P and
b. Except as specified in subdivision 6 of this section,
recipes in which more than one egg is broken and the eggs are combined.P
3. The following foods shall 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;P
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;P and
c. Raw seed sprouts.P
4. Food employees shall not contact ready-to-eat food as
specified in 12VAC5-421-450 B and E.P
5. Time only, as the public health control as specified under
12VAC5-421-850 D, may not be used for raw eggs.P
6. Subdivision 2 b of this section does not apply if:
a. The raw eggs are combined immediately before cooking for
one consumer's serving at a single meal, cooked as specified under
12VAC5-421-700 A 1, and served immediately, such as an omelet, soufflé, or
scrambled eggs;
b. The raw eggs are combined as an ingredient immediately
before baking and the eggs are thoroughly cooked to a ready-to-eat form, such
as a cake, muffin, or bread; or
c. The preparation of the food is conducted under a HACCP plan
that:
(1) Identifies the food to be prepared;
(2) Prohibits contacting ready-to-eat food with bare hands;
(3) Includes specifications and practices that ensure:
(a) Salmonella Enteritidis growth is controlled before and
after cooking; and
(b) Salmonella Enteritidis is destroyed by cooking the eggs
according to the temperature and time specified in 12VAC5-421-700 A 2;
d. Contains the information specified under subdivision 4 of
12VAC5-421-3630 including procedures that:
(1) Control cross contamination of ready-to-eat food with raw
eggs; and
(2) Delineate cleaning and sanitization procedures for
food-contact surfaces; and
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 re-served as specified under 12VAC5-421-680 B 1 and 2.
8. Foods may not be re-served under the following conditions:
[ 1. a. ] Any food served to patients
or clients who are under contact precautions in medical isolation or
quarantine, or protective environment isolation may not be re-served to others
outside.
[ 2. b. ] Packages of food from any
patients, clients, or other consumers should not be re-served to persons in
protective environment isolation
Part IV
Equipment, Utensils, and Linens
Article 1
Materials for Construction and Repair
12VAC5-421-960. Multiuse, characteristics.
Materials that are used in the construction of utensils and
food-contact surfaces of equipment shall not allow the migration of deleterious
substances or impart colors, odors, or tastes to food and under normal use
conditions shall be:P
1. Safe;P
2. Durable, corrosion-resistant, and nonabsorbent;
3. Sufficient in weight and thickness to withstand repeated
warewashing;
4. Finished to have a smooth, easily cleanable surface; and
5. Resistant to pitting, chipping, crazing, scratching,
scoring, distortion, and decomposition.
12VAC5-421-980. Lead, 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:P
Utensil Category
|
Ceramic Article Description
|
Maximum Lead
mg/L
|
Beverage Mugs, Cups, Pitchers
|
Coffee Mugs
|
0.5
|
Large Hollowware
(excluding pitchers)
|
Bowls > 1.1 Liter
(1.16 Quart)
|
1.0
|
Small Hollowware
(excluding cups and mugs
|
Bowls <1.1 Liter
(1.16 Quart)
|
2.0
|
Flat tableware
|
Plates, Saucers
|
3.0
|
B. Pewter alloys containing lead in excess of 0.05% may not
be used as a food contact surface.P
C. Solder and flux containing lead in excess of 0.2% may not
be used as a food contact surface.
12VAC5-421-990. Copper, use limitation.
A. Except as specified in subsections B and C of this
section, copper and copper alloys such as brass shall not be used in contact
with a food that has a pH below 6 such as vinegar, fruit juice, or wine or for
a fitting or tubing installed between a backflow prevention device and a
carbonator.P
B. Copper and copper alloys may be used in contact with beer
brewing ingredients that have a pH below 6 in the prefermentation and
fermentation steps of a beer brewing operation such as a brewpub or
microbrewery.
C. Copper and copper alloys may be used in contact with apple
butter and molasses [ ingredients ] that have a pH below 6
[ in the preparation of these items provided the contact time is less
than 24 hours. during the typical processing times (i.e., mixing,
cooking, and cooling) for these products, as long as laboratory analysis does
not reveal excessive levels of copper or other heavy metals in the finished
product. Apple butter and molasses may not be held or stored in copper or
copper alloys for time periods any longer than the typical processing times for
these products ].
12VAC5-421-1000. Galvanized metal, use limitation.
Galvanized metal shall not be used for utensils or
food-contact surfaces of equipment that are used in contact with acidic food.P
12VAC5-421-1070. Single-service and single-use,
characteristics.
A. Materials that are used to make single-service and
single-use articles shall not:
1. Allow the migration of deleterious substances;P
or
2. Impart colors, odors, or tastes to food.
B. Materials that are used to make single-service and
single-use articles shall be safe and clean.:
1. Safe,P and
2. Clean.
12VAC5-421-1090. Food temperature measuring devices.
Food temperature measuring devices shall not have sensors or
stems constructed of glass, except that thermometers with glass sensors or
stems that are encased in a shatterproof coating such as candy thermometers may
be used.P
12VAC5-421-1100. Food-contact surfaces; cleanability.
[ A. ] Multiuse food-contact surfaces shall
be:
1. Smooth;Pf
2. Free of breaks, open seams, cracks, chips, [ inclusions, ]
pits, and similar imperfections;Pf
3. Free of sharp internal angles, corners, and crevices;Pf
4. Finished to have smooth welds and joints;Pf
and
5. [ Accessible Except as specified in
subsection B of this section, accessible ] for cleaning and inspection
by one of the following methods:
a. Without being disassembled,;Pf
b. By disassembling without the use of tools,;Pf
or
c. By easy disassembling with the use of handheld tools
commonly available to maintenance and cleaning personnel such as screwdrivers,
pliers, open-end wrenches, and Allen wrenches.Pf
[ B. Subdivision A 5 of this section does not apply
to cooking oil storage tanks, distribution lines for cooking oils, or beverage
syrup lines or tubes. ]
12VAC5-421-1110. CIP equipment.
A. CIP equipment shall meet the characteristics specified
under 12VAC5-421-1100 and shall be designed and constructed so that:
1. Cleaning and sanitizing solutions circulate throughout a
fixed system and contact all interior food-contact surfaces,Pf
and
2. The system is self-draining or capable of being completely
drained of cleaning and sanitizing solutions.
B. CIP equipment that is not designed to be disassembled for
cleaning shall be designed with inspection access points to ensure that all
interior food-contact surfaces throughout the fixed system are being
effectively cleaned.
12VAC5-421-1180. Temperature measuring devices; food.
A. Food temperature measuring devices that are scaled only in
Fahrenheit or dually scaled in Fahrenheit and Celsius shall be scaled in 2°F
increments and accurate to ±2°F in the intended range of use.Pf
B. Food temperature measuring devices that are scaled only in
Celsius shall be scaled in 1°C increments accurate to ±1°C in the intended
range of use.Pf
12VAC5-421-1190. Temperature measuring devices; ambient air and
water.
A. Ambient air and water temperature measuring devices that
are scaled in Fahrenheit or dually scaled in Fahrenheit and Celsius and
shall be designed to be easily readable and scaled in 3°F increments and
accurate to ±3°F in the intended range of use.Pf
B. Ambient air and water temperature measuring devices that
are scaled only in Celsius shall be scaled in 1.5°C increments and accurate to
±1.5°C in the intended range of use.Pf
12VAC5-421-1230. 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) time/temperature control for
safety food in homogenous liquid form is maintained outside of the
temperature control requirements as specified in 12VAC5-421-820 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;P and
b. Conform to the requirements for this equipment as specified
in NSF/ANSI 18-2006 Manual Food and Beverage Dispensing Equipment, 2012,
(NSF International).P
12VAC5-421-1240. Vending machine, vending stage closure.
The dispensing compartment of a vending machine including a
machine that is designed to vend prepackaged snack food that is not potentially
hazardous time/temperature control for safety food such as chips,
party mixes, and pretzels shall be equipped with a self-closing door or cover
if the machine is:
1. 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
2. Available for self-service during hours when it is not
under the full-time supervision of a food employee.
12VAC5-421-1300. Molluscan shellfish tanks.
A. Except as specified under subsection B of this section,
molluscan shellfish life support system display tanks shall not be used to
display shellfish that are offered for human consumption and shall be
conspicuously marked so that it is obvious to consumers that the shellfish are
for display only.P
B. Molluscan shellfish life-support system display tanks that
are used to store and display shellfish that are offered for human consumption
shall be operated and maintained in accordance with a variance granted by the
regulatory authority as specified in 12VAC5-421-3570 and a HACCP plan that:Pf
1. Is submitted by the permit holder and approved as specified
under 12VAC5-421-3580;Pf and
2. Ensures that:
a. Water used with fish other than molluscan shellfish does
not flow into the molluscan tank;Pf
b. The safety and quality of the shellfish as they were
received are not compromised by the use of the tank;Pf and
c. The identity of the source of the shellstock is retained as
specified under 12VAC5-421-440.Pf
12VAC5-421-1310. Vending machines, automatic shutoff.
A. A machine vending potentially hazardous food
(time/temperature control for safety 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 can not cannot
maintain food temperatures as specified under Part III (12VAC5-421-260 et seq.)
of this chapter;P 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.P
B. When the automatic shutoff within a machine vending potentially
hazardous food (time/temperature control for safety food) time/temperature
control for safety food is activated:
1. In a refrigerated vending machine, the ambient temperature
shall not exceed 41°F (5°C) for more than 30 minutes immediately after the
machine is filled, serviced, or restocked;P or
2. In a hot holding vending machine, the ambient temperature
shall not be less than 135°F (57°C) for more than 120 minutes immediately after
the machine is filled, serviced, or restocked.P
12VAC5-421-1320. Temperature measuring devices.
A. In a mechanically refrigerated or hot food storage unit,
the sensor of a temperature measuring device shall be located to measure the
air temperature or a simulated product temperature in the warmest part of a
mechanically refrigerated unit and in the coolest part of a hot food storage
unit.
B. Except as specified in subsection C of this section, cold
or hot holding equipment used for potentially hazardous food time/temperature
control for safety food shall be designed to include and shall be equipped
with at least one integral or affixed temperature measuring device that is
located to allow easy viewing of the device's temperature display.
C. Subsection B of this section does not apply to equipment
for which the placement of a temperature measuring device is not a practical
means for measuring the ambient air surrounding the food because of the design,
type, and use of the equipment, such as calrod units, heat lamps, cold plates, bainmaries
bains-marie, steam tables, insulated food transport containers, and
salad bars.
D. Temperature measuring devices shall be designed to be
easily readable.
E. Food temperature measuring devices and water temperature
measuring devices on warewashing machines shall have a numerical scale, printed
record, or digital readout in increments no greater than 2°F or 1°C in the
intended range of use.Pf
12VAC5-421-1350. Warewashing machines, temperature measuring
devices.
A warewashing machine shall be equipped with a temperature
measuring device that indicates the temperature of the water:
1. In each wash and rinse tank;Pf and
2. As the water enters the hot water sanitizing final rinse
manifold or in the chemical sanitizing solution tank.Pf
12VAC5-421-1360. Manual warewashing equipment, heaters and
baskets.
If hot water is used for sanitization in manual warewashing
operations, the sanitizing compartment of the sink shall be:
1. Designed with an integral heating device that is capable of
maintaining water at a temperature not less than 171°F (77°C);Pf
and
2. Provided with a rack or basket to allow complete immersion
of equipment and utensils into the hot water.Pf
12VAC5-421-1370. Warewashing machines, sanitizer level
indicator automatic dispensing of detergents and sanitizers.
A. A warewashing machine installed after March 1, 2002, shall
be equipped to:
1. Automatically dispense detergents and sanitizers;Pf
and
2. Incorporate a visual means to verify that detergents and
sanitizers are delivered or a visual or audible alarm to signal if the
detergents and sanitizers are not delivered to the respective washing and
sanitizing cycles.Pf
B. Existing warewashing equipment shall be upgraded or
replaced to meet the requirements of subsection A of this section.Pf
12VAC5-421-1435. Food equipment, certification and
classification.
Food equipment that is certified or classified for
sanitation by an American National Standards Institute (ANSI)-accredited
certification program is deemed to comply with the requirements of Articles 1
(12VAC5-421-960 et seq.) and 2 (12VAC5-421-1080 et seq.) of this part.
Article 3
Numbers and Capacities
12VAC5-421-1450. Cooling, heating, and holding capacities.
Equipment for cooling and heating food, and holding cold and
hot food, shall be sufficient in number and capacity and capable of
providing to provide food temperatures as specified under Part III (12VAC5-421-260
et seq.) of this chapter.Pf
12VAC5-421-1460. Manual warewashing, sink compartment
requirements.
A. Except as specified in subsection C of this section, a
sink with at least three compartments shall be provided for manually washing,
rinsing, and sanitizing equipment and utensils.Pf
B. Sink compartments shall be large enough to accommodate
immersion of the largest equipment and utensils. If equipment or utensils are
too large for the warewashing sink, a warewashing machine or alternative
equipment as specified in subsection C of this section shall be used.Pf
C. Alternative manual warewashing equipment may be used when
there are special cleaning needs or constraints and its use is approved.
Alternative manual warewashing equipment may include:
1. High-pressure detergent sprayers;
2. Low-pressure or line-pressure spray detergent
foamers;
3. Other task-specific cleaning equipment;
4. Brushes or other implements;
5. [ 2-compartment Two-compartment ]
sinks as specified under subsections D and E of this section; or
6. Receptacles that substitute for the compartments of a
multicompartment sink.
D. Before a [ 2-compartment two-compartment ]
sink is used:
1. The permit holder shall have its use approved; and
2. The permit holder shall limit the number of kitchenware
items cleaned and sanitized in the two-compartment sink and shall limit
warewashing to batch operations for cleaning kitchenware such as between
cutting one type of raw meat and another or cleanup at the end of a shift, and
shall:
a. (i) Make up the cleaning and sanitizing solutions
immediately before use and drain them immediately after use, and (ii) use a detergent-sanitizer
to sanitize and apply the detergent-sanitizer in accordance with the
manufacturer's label instructions and as specified under 12VAC5-421-1710; or
b. A hot water sanitization immersion step shall be used as
specified under subdivision 3 of 12VAC5-421-1860.
E. A [ 2-compartment two-compartment ]
sink shall not be used for warewashing operations where cleaning and sanitizing
solutions are used for a continuous or intermittent flow of kitchenware or
tableware in an ongoing warewashing process.
12VAC5-421-1500. Utensils, consumer self-service.
A food dispensing utensil shall be available for each
container displayed at a consumer self-service unit such as a buffet or salad
bar.Pf
12VAC5-421-1510. Food temperature measuring devices.
A. Food temperature measuring devices shall be provided and
readily accessible for use in ensuring attainment and maintenance of food
temperatures as specified under Part III (12VAC5-421-260 et seq.) of this
chapter.Pf
B. A temperature measuring device with a suitable
small-diameter probe that is designed to measure the temperature of thin masses
shall be provided and readily accessible to accurately measure the temperature
in thin foods such as meat patties and fish fillets.Pf
12VAC5-421-1520. Temperature measuring devices, manual and
mechanical warewashing.
A. In manual warewashing operations, a temperature
measuring device shall be provided and readily accessible for frequently
measuring the washing and sanitizing temperatures.
B. In hot water mechanical warewashing operations, an
irreversible registering temperature indicator shall be provided and readily
accessible for measuring the utensil surface temperature.
12VAC5-421-1530. Sanitizing solutions, testing devices.
A test kit or other device that accurately measures the
concentration in mg/L (ppm) of sanitizing solutions shall be provided and
readily accessible for use.Pf
12VAC5-421-1535. Cleaning agents and sanitizers,
availability.
A. Cleaning agents that are used to clean equipment and
utensils as specified under Article 6 (12VAC5-421-1770 et seq.) of this part
shall be provided and available for use during all hours of operation.
B. Except for chemical sanitizers that are generated on
site at the time of use, chemical sanitizers that are used to sanitize equipment
and utensils as specified under Article 6 shall be provided and available for
use during all hours of operation.
12VAC5-421-1630. Warewashing equipment, cleaning agents.
When used for warewashing, the wash compartment of a sink,
mechanical warewasher, or wash receptacle of alternative manual warewashing
equipment as specified in 12VAC5-421-1460 C, shall contain a wash solution of
soap, detergent, acid cleaner, alkaline cleaner, degreaser, abrasive cleaner,
or other cleaning agent according to the cleaning agent manufacturer's label
instructions.Pf
12VAC5-421-1650. Manual warewashing equipment, wash solution
temperature.
The temperature of the wash solution in manual warewashing
equipment shall be maintained at not less than 110°F (43°C) or the temperature
specified on the cleaning agent manufacturer's label instructions.Pf
12VAC5-421-1660. Mechanical warewashing equipment, wash
solution temperature.
A. The temperature of the wash solution in spray type
warewashers that use hot water to sanitize shall not be less than:
1. For a stationary rack, single temperature machine, 165°F
(74°C);Pf
2. For a stationary rack, dual temperature machine, 150°F
(66°C);Pf
3. For a single tank, conveyor, dual temperature machine,
160°F (71°C);Pf or
4. For a multitank, conveyor, multitemperature machine, 150°F
(66°C).Pf
B. The temperature of the wash solution in spray-type
warewashers that use chemicals to sanitize shall not be less than 120°F (49°C).Pf
12VAC5-421-1670. Manual warewashing equipment, hot water
sanitization temperatures.
If immersion in hot water is used for sanitizing in a manual
operation, the temperature of the water shall be maintained at 171°F (77°C) or
above.P
12VAC5-421-1680. Mechanical warewashing equipment, hot water
sanitization temperatures.
A. Except as specified in subsection B of this section, in a
mechanical operation, the temperature of the fresh hot water sanitizing rinse
as it enters the manifold shall not be more than 194°F (90°C), or less than:
Pf
1. For a stationary rack, single temperature machine, 165°F
(74°C);Pf or
2. For all other machines, 180°F (82°C).Pf
B. The maximum temperature specified under subsection A of
this section does not apply to the high pressure and temperature systems with
wand-type, hand-held, spraying devices used for the in-place cleaning and
sanitizing of equipment such as meat saws.
12VAC5-421-1700. Manual and mechanical warewashing equipment,
chemical sanitization - temperature, pH, concentration, and hardness.
A chemical sanitizer used in a sanitizing solution for a
manual or mechanical operation at exposure contact times
specified under subdivision 3 of 12VAC5-421-1900 A 3 shall be
listed in 40 CFR 180.940 [ Sanitizing solutions ], shall be
used in accordance with the [ EPA-approved manufacturer's EPA-registered ]
label use instructions,P and shall be used as follows:
1. A chlorine solution shall have a minimum temperature based
on the concentration and pH of the solution as listed in the following chart;P
Minimum
Concentration
|
Minimum
Temperature
|
mg/L (ppm)
|
pH 10 or less
°F (°C)
|
pH 8 or less
°F (°C)
|
25-49
|
120 (49)
|
120 (49)
|
50-99
|
100 (38)
|
75 (24)
|
100
|
55 (13)
|
55 (13)
|
2. An iodine solution shall have a:
a. Minimum temperature of 75°F (24°C) 68°F (20°C);P
b. pH of 5.0 or less or a pH no higher than the level for
which the manufacturer specifies the solution is effective;P
and
c. Concentration between 12.5 mg/L (ppm) and 25 mg/L (ppm);P
3. A quaternary ammonium compound solution shall:
a. Have a minimum temperature of 75°F (24°C);P
b. Have a concentration as specified under 40 CFR 180.940 and
as indicated by the manufacturer's use directions included in the labeling;P
and
c. Be used only in water with 500 mg/L hardness or less or in
water having a hardness no greater than specified by the manufacturer's label;P
4. If another solution of a chemical specified under
subdivisions 1, 2 and 3 of this section is used, the permit holder shall
demonstrate to the regulatory authority that the solution achieves sanitization
and the use of the solution shall be approved;P or
5. If a chemical sanitizer other than chlorine, iodine, or a
quaternary ammonium compound is used, it shall be applied in accordance with
the manufacturer's use directions included in the labeling EPA-registered
label use instructions;P and
6. If a chemical sanitizer is generated by a device located
on site at the food establishment it shall be used as specified in subdivisions
1 through 4 of this section and shall be produced by a device that:
a. Complies with regulation as specified in §§ 2(q)(1) and
12 of the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA),P
b. Complies with 40 CFR 152.500 and 40 CFR 156.10,P
c. Displays the EPA device manufacturing facility
registration number on the device,Pf and
d. Is operated and maintained in accordance with
manufacturer's instructions.Pf
12VAC5-421-1720. Warewashing equipment, determining chemical
sanitizer concentration.
Concentration of the sanitizing solution shall be accurately
determined by using a test kit or other device.Pf
12VAC5-421-1730. Good repair and calibration.
A. Utensils shall be maintained in a state of repair or
condition that complies with the requirements specified under Articles 1
(12VAC5-421-960 et seq.) and 2 (12VAC5-421-1080 et seq.) of this part or shall
be discarded.
B. Food temperature measuring devices shall be calibrated in
accordance with manufacturer's specifications as necessary to ensure their
accuracy.Pf
C. Ambient air temperature, water pressure, and water
temperature measuring devices shall be maintained in good repair and be
accurate within the intended range of use.
12VAC5-421-1740. Single-service and single-use articles,
required use.
A food establishment without facilities specified under
Articles 6 (12VAC5-421-1770 et seq.) and 7 (12VAC5-421-1880 [ (12VAC5-421-1890
(12VAC5-421-1885 ] et seq.) of this part for cleaning and
sanitizing kitchenware and tableware shall provide only single-use kitchenware,
single-service articles, and single-use articles for use by food employees and
single-service articles for use by consumers.P
Article 6
Cleaning of Equipment and Utensils
12VAC5-421-1770. Equipment, food-contact surfaces, nonfood-contact
non-food-contact surfaces, and utensils.
A. Equipment food-contact surfaces and utensils shall be
clean to sight and touch.Pf
B. The food-contact surfaces of cooking equipment and pans
shall be kept free of encrusted grease deposits and other soil accumulations.
C. Nonfood-contact Non-food-contact surfaces of
equipment shall be kept free of an accumulation of dust, dirt, food residue,
and other debris.
12VAC5-421-1780. Equipment food-contact surfaces and utensils.
A. Equipment food-contact surfaces and utensils shall be
cleaned:
1. Except as specified in subsection B of this section, before
each use with a different type of raw animal food such as beef, fish, lamb,
pork, or poultry;P
2. Each time there is a change from working with raw foods to
working with ready-to-eat foods;P
3. Between uses with raw fruits and vegetables and with potentially
hazardous food time/temperature control for safety food;P
4. Before using or storing a food temperature measuring
device;P and
5. At any time during the operation when contamination may
have occurred.P
B. Subdivision A 1 of this
section does not apply if the food contact surface or utensil is in contact
with a succession of different [ raw animal foods types of raw
meat and poultry ] each requiring a higher cooking temperature as
specified under 12VAC5-421-700 than the previous [ food, such as
preparing raw fish followed by cutting raw poultry on the same cutting board
type ].
C. Except as specified in
subsection D of this section, if used with potentially hazardous food time/temperature
control for safety food, equipment food-contact surfaces and utensils shall
be cleaned throughout the day at least every four hours.P
D. Surfaces of utensils and
equipment contacting potentially hazardous food time/temperature
control for safety food may be cleaned less frequently than every four
hours if:
1. In storage, containers of potentially hazardous food
time/temperature control for safety food and their contents are
maintained at temperatures specified under Part III (12VAC5-421-260 et seq.) of
this chapter and the containers are cleaned when they are empty;
2. Utensils and equipment are
used to prepare food in a refrigerated room or area that is maintained at one
of the temperatures in the following chart and (i) the utensils and equipment
are cleaned at the frequency in the following chart that corresponds to the
temperature; and (ii) the cleaning frequency based on the ambient temperature
of the refrigerated room or area is documented in the food establishment:
Temperature
|
Cleaning Frequency
|
41°F (5.0°C) or less
|
24 hours
|
>41°F - 45°F
(>5.0°C - 7.2°C)
|
20 hours
|
>45°F - 50°F
(>7.2°C - 10.0°C)
|
16 hours
|
>50°F - 55°F
(>10.0°C - 12.8°C)
|
10 hours
|
3. Containers in serving situations such as salad bars, delis,
and cafeteria lines hold ready-to-eat potentially hazardous food time/temperature
control for safety food that is maintained at the temperatures specified
under Part III, are intermittently combined with additional supplies of the
same food that is at the required temperature, and the containers are cleaned
at least every 24 hours;
4. Temperature measuring devices are maintained in contact
with food, such as when left in a container of deli food or in a roast, held at
temperatures specified under Part III;
5. Equipment is used for storage of packaged or unpackaged food
such as a reach-in refrigerator and the equipment is cleaned at a frequency
necessary to preclude accumulation of soil residues;
6. The cleaning schedule is approved based on consideration
of:
a. Characteristics of the equipment and its use;
b. The type of food involved;
c. The amount of food residue accumulation; and
d. The temperature at which the food is maintained during the
operation and the potential for the rapid and progressive multiplication of
pathogenic or toxigenic microorganisms that are capable of causing foodborne
disease; or
7. In-use utensils are intermittently stored in a container of
water in which the water is maintained at 135°F (57°C) or more and the utensils
and container are cleaned at least every 24 hours or at a frequency necessary
to preclude accumulation of soil residues.
E. Except when dry cleaning methods are used as specified
under 12VAC5-421-1810, surfaces of utensils and equipment contacting food that
is not potentially hazardous time/temperature control for safety food
shall be cleaned:
1. At any time when contamination may have occurred;
2. At least every 24 hours for iced tea dispensers and
consumer self-service utensils such as tongs, scoops, or ladles;
3. Before restocking consumer self-service equipment and
utensils such as condiment dispensers and display containers;
4. [ Equipment At a frequency specified by the
manufacturer or absent manufacturer specifications, at a frequency necessary to
preclude accumulation of soil or mold. To include equipment ] such as
ice bins and beverage dispensing nozzles and enclosed components of equipment
such as ice makers, [ cooking oil storage tanks and distribution lines, ]
beverage and syrup dispensing lines or tubes, coffee bean grinders, and
water vending equipment [ :
a. At a frequency specified by the manufacturer; or
b. Absent manufacturer specifications, at a frequency
necessary to preclude accumulation of soil or mold ].
12VAC5-421-1810. Dry cleaning.
A. If used, dry cleaning methods such as brushing, scraping,
and vacuuming shall contact only surfaces that are soiled with dry food
residues that are not potentially hazardous time/temperature control
for safety food.
B. Cleaning equipment used in dry cleaning food-contact
surfaces shall not be used for any other purpose.
12VAC5-421-1870. Returnables, cleaning for refilling. (Repealed.)
A. Except as specified in subsections B and C of this
section, returned empty containers intended for cleaning and refilling with
food shall be cleaned and refilled in a regulated food processing plant.
B. A food-specific container for beverages may be refilled
at a food establishment if:
1. Only a beverage that is not a potentially hazardous food
is used as specified under 12VAC5-421-600 A;
2. The design of the container and of the rinsing equipment
and the nature of the beverage, when considered together, allow effective
cleaning at home or in the food establishment;
3. Facilities for rinsing before refilling returned
containers with fresh, hot water that is under pressure and not recirculated
are provided as part of the dispensing system;
4. The consumer-owned container returned to the food
establishment for refilling is refilled for sale or service only to the same
consumer; and
5. The container is refilled by: an employee of the food
establishment, or the owner of the container if the beverage system includes a
contamination-free transfer process that can not be bypassed by the container
owner.
C. Consumer-owned containers that are not food-specific
may be filled at a water vending machine or system.
[ Article 7
Sanitization of Equipment and Utensils
12VAC5-421-1885. Food-contact surfaces and utensils.
Equipment food-contact surfaces and utensils shall be
sanitized. ]
[ Article 7
Sanitization of Equipment and Utensils ]
12VAC5-421-1890. Before use after cleaning.
Utensils and food-contact surfaces of equipment shall be
sanitized before use after cleaning.P
12VAC5-421-1900. Hot water and chemical.
After being cleaned, equipment food-contact surfaces and
utensils shall be sanitized in:
1. Hot water manual operations by immersion for at least 30
seconds as specified under 12VAC5-421-1670;P
2. Hot water mechanical operations by being cycled through
equipment that is set up as specified under 12VAC5-421-1610, 12VAC5-421-1680,
and 12VAC5-421-1690 and achieving a utensil surface temperature of 160°F (71°C)
as measured by an irreversible registering temperature indicator;P
or
3. Chemical manual or mechanical operations, including the
application of sanitizing chemicals by immersion, manual swabbing, brushing, or
pressure spraying methods, using a solution as specified under 12VAC5-421-1700.
Contact times shall be consistent with those on EPA-registered label use
instructions by providing:
a. Except as specified under subdivision 3 b of this section, an
exposure a contact time of at least 10 seconds for a chlorine
solution specified under subdivision 1 of 12VAC5-421-1700 A;P
b. An exposure A contact time of at least 7
seconds for a chlorine solution of 50 mg/L that has a pH of 10 or less and a
temperature of at least 100°F (38°C) or a pH of 8 or less and a temperature of
at least 75°F (24°C);P
c. An exposure A contact time of at least 30
seconds for other chemical sanitizing solutions;P or
d. An exposure A contact time used in
relationship with a combination of temperature, concentration, and pH that,
when evaluated for efficacy, yields sanitization as defined in 12VAC5-421-10.P
12VAC5-421-1920. Specifications Laundering frequency
for linens, cloth gloves, napkins, and wiping cloths.
A. Linens that do not come in direct contact with food shall
be laundered between operations if they become wet, sticky, or visibly soiled.
B. Cloth gloves used as specified in 12VAC5-421-580 D shall
be laundered before being used with a different type of raw animal food such as
beef, lamb, pork, and fish.
C. Linens and napkins that are used as specified under
12VAC5-421-560 and cloth napkins shall be laundered between each use.
D. Wet wiping cloths shall be laundered daily.
E. Dry wiping cloths shall be laundered as necessary to
prevent contamination of food and clean serving utensils.
12VAC5-421-2040. Preset tableware.
A. Tableware Except as specified in subsection B of
this section, tableware that is preset shall be protected from
contamination by being wrapped, covered, or inverted.
B. When Preset tableware is preset, may
be exposed, unused settings shall be if:
1. Removed Unused settings are removed when a
consumer is seated; or
2. Cleaned and sanitized before further use if the settings
are Settings not removed when a consumer is seated are cleaned
and sanitized before further use.
12VAC5-421-2045. Rinsing equipment and utensils after
cleaning and sanitizing.
After being cleaned and sanitized, equipment and utensils
shall not be rinsed before air drying or used unless:
1. The rinse is applied directly from a potable water
supply by a warewashing machine that is maintained and operated as specified
under Articles 2 (12VAC5-421-1080 et seq.) and 5 (12VAC5-421-1570) of this
part; and
2. The rinse is applied only after the equipment and
utensils have been sanitized by the application of hot water or by the
application of a chemical sanitizer solution whose EPA-registered label use
instructions call for rinsing off the sanitizer after it is applied in a
commercial warewashing machine.
Part V
Water, Plumbing, and Waste
Article 1
Water
12VAC5-421-2050. Approved system.
Drinking Pure water shall be obtained from an
approved source that is water system defined as:
1. A public water system waterworks constructed,
maintained, and operated in compliance with 12VAC5-590;P
or
2. A nonpublic water system that is private well
constructed, maintained, and operated according to law in compliance
with 12VAC5-630.P
12VAC5-421-2060. System flushing and disinfection.
A drinking An approved water system shall be
flushed and disinfected before being placed in service after
construction, repair, or modification and after an emergency situation, such as
a flood, that may introduce contaminants to the system. A sample shall be
collected from the water system and the results of the analysis shall be total
coliform negative prior to placing the water system into service.P
12VAC5-421-2070. Bottled drinking water.
Bottled drinking water used or sold in a food establishment
shall be obtained from approved sources in accordance with 21 CFR Part 129 -Processing
and Bottling of Bottled drinking water.P
12VAC5-421-2080. Quality Pure water standards.
Except as specified under 12VAC5-421-2090:
1. Water from a public water system waterworks
shall meet the applicable water quality and quantity standards found
in the Virginia Waterworks Regulations (12VAC5-590) accordance with
12VAC5-590;P and
2. Water from a nonpublic water system private well
shall meet the bacteriological water quality standards found
in the Virginia Waterworks Regulations (12VAC5-590) accordance with
12VAC5-630-370 [ and not exceed 10 mg/L of nitrate (as N) ].P
12VAC5-421-2090. Nondrinking Nonpotable water.
A. A nondrinking nonpotable water supply shall
be used only if its use is approved by the regulatory authority.P
B. Nondrinking Nonpotable water shall be used
only for nonculinary purposes such as air conditioning, nonfood equipment
cooling, fire protection, and irrigation.P
12VAC5-421-2100. Sampling.
Except when used as specified under 12VAC5-421-2090, water
Water from a nonpublic water system private well shall be
sampled and tested at least annually and as required by state water quality
regulations for nitrate and total coliform.
1. If nitrate [ (as N), which is
reported as "N" on the test results, ] exceeds 10 mg/L,
the owner shall notify the regulatory authority.Pf
2. If a sample is total coliform positive, the positive
culture medium shall be further analyzed to determine if E. coli is present.
The owner shall notify the regulatory authority within two days from when the
owner is notified of the coliform positive test result.Pf
3. If E. coli is present, the owner shall notify the
regulatory authority.Pf
12VAC5-421-2110. Sample report.
The most recent All sample report reports
for the nonpublic water system private well shall be retained on
file in the food establishment or the report shall be maintained as
specified by state water quality regulations for a minimum of five years
and be made available to the regulatory authority upon request.
12VAC5-421-2120. Capacity.
A. The approved water source and system capacity
shall be of sufficient capacity to meet the maximum daily water demands and
the peak hourly water demands of the food establishment.Pf
B. Hot water generation and distribution systems shall be
sufficient to meet the peak hot water demands throughout the food
establishment.Pf
12VAC5-421-2130. Pressure.
Water under pressure shall be provided to all fixtures,
equipment, and nonfood equipment that are required to use water except that
water supplied as specified under subdivisions 1 and 2 of 12VAC5-421-2160 to a
temporary food establishment or in response to a temporary interruption of a
water supply need not be under pressure.Pf
12VAC5-421-2150. Distribution, delivery, and retention
system. (Repealed.)
Water shall be received from the source through the use
of:
1. An approved public water main; or
2. One or more of the following that shall be constructed,
maintained, and operated according to law:
a. Nonpublic water main, water pumps, pipes, hoses,
connections, and other appurtenances,
b. Water transport vehicles, and
c. Water containers.
12VAC5-421-2160. Alternative water supply.
Water meeting the requirements specified under
12VAC5-421-2050 through 12VAC5-421-2130 shall be made available for a mobile
facility, for a temporary food establishment without a permanent water supply,
and for a food establishment with a temporary interruption of its water supply
through:
1. A supply of containers of commercially bottled drinking
water;Pf
2. One or more closed portable water containers;Pf
3. An enclosed vehicular water tank;Pf
4. An on-premises water storage tank;Pf or
5. Piping, tubing, or hoses connected to an adjacent
approved source system in a manner approved by the department.Pf
Article 2
Plumbing System
12VAC5-421-2170. Approved materials.
A. A plumbing system and hoses conveying water shall be
constructed and repaired with approved materials according to law.P
B. A water filter shall be made of safe materials.P
12VAC5-421-2180. Approved system and cleanable fixtures.
A. A plumbing system shall be designed, constructed, and
installed according to law.P
B. A plumbing fixture such as a handwashing lavatory, toilet,
or urinal shall be easily cleanable.
12VAC5-421-2190. Handwashing sink, water temperature, and flow.
A. A handwashing sink shall be equipped to provide water at a
temperature of at least 100°F (38°C) through a mixing valve or combination
faucet.Pf
B. A steam mixing valve shall not be used at a handwashing
sink.
C. A self-closing, slow-closing, or metering faucet shall
provide a flow of water for at least 15 seconds without the need to reactivate
the faucet.
D. An automatic handwashing facility shall be installed in
accordance with manufacturer's instructions.
12VAC5-421-2200. Backflow prevention, air gap.
An air gap between the water supply inlet and the flood level
rim of the plumbing fixture, equipment, or nonfood equipment shall be at least
twice the diameter of the water supply inlet and shall not be less than 1
one inch (25 mm).P
12VAC5-421-2210. Backflow prevention device, design standard.
A backflow or backsiphonage prevention device installed on a
water supply system shall comply with the Virginia Uniform Statewide
Building Code (13VAC5-63) for construction, installation, maintenance,
inspection, and testing for that specific application and type of device.P
12VAC5-421-2230. Handwashing sinks, numbers, and capacities.
A. Except as specified in subsection B [ and C ]
of this section, at least one handwashing sink, or the number of handwashing
sinks necessary for their convenient use by employees in areas specified under
12VAC5-421-2280, and not fewer than the number of handwashing sinks required by
law shall be provided.Pf
B. If approved and capable of removing the [ multiple ]
types of soils encountered in the food operations [ involved ],
automatic handwashing facilities may be substituted for handwashing sinks in a
food establishment [ with that has ] at
least one handwashing sink.
B. C. If approved, when food exposure is
limited and handwashing 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.
12VAC5-421-2250. Service sink.
A. At least one service sink or one curbed cleaning
facility equipped with a floor drain shall be provided and conveniently located
for the cleaning of mops or similar wet floor cleaning tools and for the
disposal of mop water and similar liquid waste.
B. Toilets and urinals shall not be used as a service sink
for the disposal of mop water and similar liquid waste.
12VAC5-421-2260. Backflow prevention device, when required.
A plumbing system shall be installed to preclude backflow of
a solid, liquid, or gas contaminant into the water supply system at each point
of use at the food establishment, including on a hose bibb (threaded faucet) if
a hose is attached or on a hose bibb if a hose is not attached and backflow
prevention is required by law by:
1. Providing an air gap as specified under 12VAC5-421-2200;P
or
2. Installing an approved backflow prevention device as
specified under 12VAC5-421-2210.P
12VAC5-421-2270. Backflow prevention device, carbonator.
A. If not provided with an air gap as specified under
12VAC5-421-2200, a double check valve with an intermediate vent preceded by a
screen of not less than 100 mesh to 1 inch (100 mesh to 25.4mm) shall be
installed upstream from a carbonating device and downstream from any copper in
the water supply line.P
B. A single or double dual check valve attached
to the carbonator need not be of the vented type if an air gap or vented
backflow prevention device has been otherwise provided approved
as specified under subsection A of this section.
12VAC5-421-2280. Handwashing sinks, location.
A handwashing sink shall be located:
1. To be readily accessible for allow convenient
use by employees in food preparation, food dispensing, and warewashing areas;Pf
and
2. In, or immediately adjacent to, toilet rooms.Pf
12VAC5-421-2310. Using a handwashing sink.
A. A handwashing sink shall be maintained so that it is
accessible at all times for employee use.Pf
B. A handwashing sink shall not be used for purposes other
than handwashing.Pf
C. An automatic handwashing facility shall be used in
accordance with manufacturer's instructions.Pf
12VAC5-421-2320. Prohibiting a cross connection.
A. Except as specified in 9 CFR 308.3(d) for firefighting,
a A person shall not create a cross connection by connecting a pipe
or conduit between the drinking water system and a nondrinking water system or
a water system of unknown quality.P
B. The piping of a nondrinking water system shall be durably
identified so that it is readily distinguishable from piping that carries
drinking water.Pf
12VAC5-421-2330. Scheduling inspection and service for a water
system device.
A device such as a water treatment device or backflow
preventer shall be scheduled for inspection and service, in accordance with
manufacturer's instructions and as necessary to prevent device failure based on
local water conditions, and records demonstrating inspection and service shall
be maintained by the person in charge.Pf
12VAC5-421-2340. Water reservoir of fogging devices, cleaning.
A. A reservoir that is used to supply water to a device such
as a produce fogger shall be:
1. Maintained in accordance with manufacturer's
specifications;P and
2. Cleaned in accordance with manufacturer's specifications or
according to the procedures specified under subsection B of this section,
whichever is more stringent.P
B. Cleaning procedures shall include at least the following
steps and shall be conducted at least once a week:
1. Draining and complete disassembly of the water and aerosol
contact parts;P
2. Brush-cleaning the reservoir, aerosol tubing, and discharge
nozzles with a suitable detergent solution;P
3. Flushing the complete system with water to remove the
detergent solution and particulate accumulation;P and
4. Rinsing by immersing, spraying, or swabbing the reservoir,
aerosol tubing, and discharge nozzles with at least 50 mg/L (ppm) hypochlorite
solution.P
12VAC5-421-2350. System maintained in good repair.
A plumbing system shall be (i) repaired according to lawP
and (ii) maintained in good repair.
Article 3
Mobile Water Tank and Mobile Food Establishment Water Tank
12VAC5-421-2360. Approved Mobile water tank
[ approved ] materials.
Materials that are used in the construction of a mobile water
tank, mobile food establishment water tank, and appurtenances shall be:
1. Safe;P
2. Durable, corrosion resistant, and nonabsorbent; and
3. Finished to have a smooth, easily cleanable surface.
12VAC5-421-2420. Hose, construction and identification.
A hose used for conveying drinking potable
water from a water tank shall be:
1. Safe;P
2. Durable, corrosion resistant, and nonabsorbent;
3. Resistant to pitting, chipping, crazing, scratching,
scoring, distortion, and decomposition;
4. Finished with a smooth interior surface; and
5. Clearly and durably identified as to its use if not
permanently attached.
12VAC5-421-2430. Filter, compressed air.
A filter that does not pass oil or oil vapors shall be
installed in the air supply line between the compressor and drinking potable
water system when compressed air is used to pressurize the water tank system.P
12VAC5-421-2460. System flushing and disinfection.
A water tank, pump, and hoses shall be flushed and sanitized
before being placed in service after construction, repair, modification, and
periods of nonuse.P
12VAC5-421-2490. Tank, pump, and hoses, dedication.
A. Except as specified in subsection B of this section, a
water tank, pump, and hoses used for conveying drinking water shall be used for
no other purpose.P
B. Water tanks, pumps, and hoses approved for liquid foods
may be used for conveying drinking water if they are cleaned and sanitized
before they are used to convey water.
12VAC5-421-2520. Backflow prevention.
A. Except as specified in subsections B, 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.P
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.
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 meters) of a trapped floor drain and the machine
outlet is connected to the inlet side of a properly vented floor drain trap.
D. If allowed by law, a warewashing or culinary sink may have
a direct connection.
12VAC5-421-2540. Conveying sewage.
Sewage shall be conveyed to the point of disposal through an
approved sanitary sewage system or other system, including use of sewage
transport vehicles, waste retention tanks, pumps, pipes, hoses, and connections
that are constructed, maintained, and operated according to law.P
12VAC5-421-2550. Removing mobile food establishment wastes.
Sewage No public health hazard or nuisance shall
result when sewage and other liquid wastes shall be are
removed from a mobile food establishment at an approved waste servicing area or
by a permitted sewage transport vehicle in such a way that a public
health hazard or nuisance is not created.Pf
12VAC5-421-2570. Approved sewage disposal system.
Sewage shall be disposed through an approved facility that
is:
1. A public sewage treatment plant;P or
2. An individual sewage disposal system that is sized,
constructed, maintained, and operated according to law the State
Board of Health's regulations promulgated pursuant to Chapter 6
(§ 32.1-163 et seq.) of Title 32 of the Code of Virginia, including
12VAC5-610, 12VAC5-613, and 12VAC5-640.P
12VAC5-421-2990. Private homes and living or sleeping quarters,
use prohibition.
A private home, a room used as living or sleeping quarters,
or an area directly opening into a room used as living or sleeping quarters
shall not be used for conducting food establishment operations.P
Article 3
Numbers and Capacities
12VAC5-421-3020. Handwashing cleanser, availability.
Each handwashing sink or group of two adjacent handwashing
sinks shall be provided with a supply of hand cleaning liquid, powder, or bar
soap.Pf
12VAC5-421-3030. Hand drying provision.
Each handwashing sink or group of adjacent handwashing sinks
shall be provided with:
1. Individual, disposable towels;Pf
2. A continuous towel system that supplies the user with a
clean towel; orPf
3. A heated-air hand drying device.;Pf or
4. A hand drying device that employs an air-knife system
that delivers high-velocity, pressurized air at ambient temperatures.Pf
12VAC5-421-3070. Toilet tissue, availability.
A supply of toilet tissue shall be available at each toilet.Pf
12VAC5-421-3150. Distressed merchandise, segregation and
location.
Products that are held by the permit holder for credit,
redemption, or return to the distributor, such as damaged, spoiled, or recalled
products, shall be segregated and held in designated areas that are separated
from food, equipment, utensils, linens, and single-service and single-use
articles.Pf
12VAC5-421-3210. Cleaning maintenance tools, preventing
contamination.
Food preparation sinks, handwashing lavatories, and
warewashing equipment shall not be used for the cleaning of maintenance tools,
the preparation or holding of maintenance materials, or the disposal of mop
water and similar liquid wastes.Pf
12VAC5-421-3270. Controlling pests.
The presence of insects, rodents, and other pests shall be
controlled to minimize their presence on the premises by:
1. Routinely inspecting incoming shipments of food and
supplies;
2. Routinely inspecting the premises for evidence of pests;
3. Using methods, if pests are found, such as trapping devices
or other means of pest control as specified under 12VAC5-421-3360,
12VAC5-421-3440, and 12VAC5-421-3450;Pf and
4. Eliminating harborage conditions.
12VAC5-421-3310. Prohibiting animals.
A. Except as specified in subsections B and C of this
section, live animals shall not be allowed on the premises of a food establishment.Pf
B. Live animals may be allowed in the following situations if
the contamination of food; clean equipment, utensils, and linens; and unwrapped
single-service and single-use articles cannot result:
1. Edible fish or decorative fish in aquariums, shellfish or
crustacea on ice or under refrigeration, and shellfish and crustacea in display
tank systems;
2. Patrol dogs accompanying police or security officers in
offices and dining, sales, and storage areas, and sentry dogs running loose in
outside fenced areas;
3. In areas that are not used for food preparation and that
are usually open for customers, such as dining and sales areas, service animals
that are controlled by the disabled employee or person, if a health or
safety hazard will not result from the presence or activities of the service
animal;
4. Pets in the common dining areas of institutional care
facilities such as nursing homes, assisted living facilities, group homes, or
residential care facilities, and food establishment bed and breakfast facilities
at times other than during meals if:
a. Effective partitioning and self-closing doors separate the
common dining areas from food storage or food preparation areas;
b. Condiments, equipment, and utensils are stored in enclosed
cabinets or removed from the common dining areas when pets are present; and
c. Dining areas including tables, countertops, and similar
surfaces are effectively cleaned before the next meal service; [ and ]
5. In areas that are not used for food preparation, storage,
sales, display, or dining, in which there are caged animals or animals that are
similarly restricted, such as in a variety store that sells pets or a tourist
park that displays animals [ .; and ]
6. Dogs in outdoor dining areas if:
a. The outdoor dining area is not fully enclosed with floor
to ceiling walls and is not considered a part of the interior physical
facility.
b. The outdoor dining area is equipped with an entrance
that is separate from the main entrance to the food establishment and the
separate entrance serves as the sole means of entry for patrons accompanied by
dogs.
c. A sign stating that dogs are allowed in the outdoor
dining area is posted at each entrance to the outdoor dining area in such a
manner as to be clearly observable by the public.
[ d. A sign within the outdoor dining area
stating the requirements as specified in subdivisions 6 e, 6 f, and 6 g of this
subsection is provided in such a manner as to be clearly observable by the
public.
d. e. ] Food and water provided
to dogs is served using equipment that is not used for service of food to
persons or is served in single-use articles.
[ e. f. ] Dogs are not
allowed on chairs, seats, benches, or tables.
[ f. g. ] Dogs are
kept on a leash or within a pet carrier and under the control of an adult at
all times.
[ g. h. ] Establishment
provides effective means for cleaning up dog vomitus and fecal matter.
[ h. A sign within the outdoor dining area stating
the requirements as specified in subdivisions 6 d, e, and f of this subsection
is provided in such a manner as to be clearly observable by the public. ]
C. Live or dead fish bait may be stored if contamination of
food; clean equipment, utensils, and linens; and unwrapped single-service and
single-use articles can not cannot result.
D. In bed and breakfast facilities serving 18 or fewer
customers, live animals shall be allowed in the facility but shall not be fed
using the same equipment or utensils that are used to feed humans.
Part VII
Poisonous or Toxic Materials
Article 1
Labeling and Identification
12VAC5-421-3320. Original containers - identifying information,
prominence.
Containers of poisonous or toxic materials and personal care
items shall bear a legible manufacturer's label.Pf
12VAC5-421-3330. Working containers - common name.
Working containers used for storing poisonous or toxic
materials such as cleaners and sanitizers taken from bulk supplies shall be
clearly and individually identified with the common name of the material.Pf
Article 2
Operational Supplies and Applications
12VAC5-421-3340. Storage, separation.
Poisonous or toxic materials shall be stored so they can
not cannot contaminate food, equipment, utensils, linens, and
single-service and single-use articles by:
1. Separating the poisonous or toxic materials by spacing or
partitioning; [ andP P and ]
2. Locating the poisonous or toxic materials in an area that
is not above food, equipment, utensils, linens, and single-service or
single-use articles. This subsection does not apply to equipment and utensil
cleaners and sanitizers that are stored in warewashing areas for availability
and convenience if the materials are stored to prevent contamination of food,
equipment, utensils, linens, and single-service and single-use articles;
and,.P
3. Detergents, sanitizers, related cleaning or drying
agents and caustics, acids, polishes and other chemicals shall be stored
separately from insecticides and rodenticides.
12VAC5-421-3350. Presence and use restriction.
A. Only those poisonous or toxic materials that are required
for the operation and maintenance of a food establishment, such as for the
cleaning and sanitizing of equipment and utensils and the control of insects
and rodents, shall be allowed in a food establishment.Pf
B. Subsection A of this section does not apply to packaged
poisonous or toxic materials that are for retail sale.
12VAC5-421-3360. Conditions of use.
Poisonous or toxic materials shall be:
1. Used according to:
a. Law and this chapter,;
b. Manufacturer's use directions included in labeling, and,
for a pesticide, manufacturer's label instructions that state that use is
allowed in a food establishment,;P
c. The conditions of certification, if certification is
required, for use of the pest control materials,;P and
d. Additional conditions that may be established by the
regulatory authority; and.P
2. Applied so that:
a. A hazard to employees or other persons is not constituted,;P
and
b. Contamination including toxic residues due to drip, drain,
fog, splash, or spray on food, equipment, utensils, linens, and
single-service and single-use articles is prevented, and for a restricted-use
pesticide, this is achieved by:P
(1) Removing the items, covering the items with impermeable
covers, or taking other appropriate preventive actions,;P
and
(2) Cleaning and sanitizing equipment and utensils after the
application.P
3. A restricted use pesticide shall be applied only by an
applicator certified as defined in 7 USC § 136(e) (Federal Insecticide,
Fungicide and Rodenticide Act), or a person under the direct supervision of a
certified applicator.Pf
12VAC5-421-3370. Poisonous or toxic material containers.
A container previously used to store poisonous or toxic
materials shall not be used to store, transport, or dispense food.P
12VAC5-421-3380. Sanitizers, criteria.
Chemical sanitizers, including chemical sanitizing
solutions generated on site, and other chemical antimicrobials applied to
food-contact surfaces shall meet:
1. Meet the requirements specified in 40 CFR 180.940,P
or
2. Meet the requirements as specified in 40 CFR
180.2020.P
12VAC5-421-3390. Chemicals for washing fruits and vegetables,
criteria.
A. Chemicals, including those generated on site,
used to wash or peel raw, whole fruits and vegetables shall meet the
requirements specified in 21 CFR 173.315:
1. Be an approved food additive listed for this intended
use in 21 CFR 173,P or
2. Be generally recognized as safe (GRAS) for this intended
use,P or
3. Be the subject of an effective food contact notification
for this intended use (only effective for the manufacturer or supplier
identified in the notification),P and
4. Meet the requirements in the 40 CFR Part 156.P
B. Ozone as an antimicrobial agent used in the treatment,
storage, and processing of fruits and vegetables in a food establishment shall
meet the requirements specified in 21 CFR 173.368.P
12VAC5-421-3400. Boiler water additives, criteria.
Chemicals used as boiler water additives shall meet the
requirements specified in 21 CFR 173.310.P
12VAC5-421-3410. Drying agents, criteria.
Drying agents used in conjunction with sanitization shall:
1. Contain only components that are listed as one of the
following:
a. Generally recognized as safe for use in food as specified
in 21 CFR Part 182 - Substances Generally Recognized as Safe, or 21 CFR
Part 184 - Direct Food Substances Affirmed as Generally Recognized as Safe,P
b. Generally recognized as safe for the intended use as
specified in 21 CFR Part 186 - Indirect Food Substances Affirmed as
Generally Recognized as Safe,P
c. Generally recognized as safe for the intended use as
determined by experts qualified in scientific training and experience to
evaluate the safety of substances added, directly or indirectly, to food as
described in 21 CFR 170.30, P
d. Subject of an effective Food Contact Notification as
described in the Federal Food Drug and Cosmetic Act (FFDCA) § 409(h),P
c. e. Approved for use as a drying agent under a
prior sanction specified in 21 CFR Part 181 - Prior-Sanctioned Food
Ingredients, as specified in the Federal Food Drug and Cosmetic Act
(FFDCA) § 201(s)(4),P
d. f. Specifically regulated as an indirect food
additive for use as a drying agent as specified in 21 CFR Parts 175- through
178,P or
e. g. Approved for use as a drying agent under
the threshold of regulation process established by 21 CFR 170.39 -
Threshold of Regulation for Substances Used in Food-contact Articles;P
and
2. When sanitization is with chemicals, the approval required
under subdivisions subdivision 1 c e or e g
of this section or the regulation as an indirect food additive required under
subdivision 1 d f of this section, shall be specifically for use
with chemical sanitizing solutions.P
12VAC5-421-3420. Lubricants - incidental food contact,
criteria.
Lubricants shall meet the requirements specified in 21 CFR
178.3570 if they are used on food-contact surfaces, on bearings and gears
located on or within food-contact surfaces, or on bearings and gears that are
located so that lubricants may leak, drip, or be forced into food or onto
food-contact surfaces.P
12VAC5-421-3430. Restricted use pesticides, criteria.
Restricted use pesticides specified under subdivision 3 of
12VAC5-421-3360 C shall meet the requirements specified in 40 CFR
[ Part ] 152, Subpart I - Classification of Pesticides.P
12VAC5-421-3440. Rodent bait stations.
Rodent bait shall be contained in a covered, tamper-resistant
bait station.P
12VAC5-421-3450. Tracking powders, pest control, and
monitoring.
A. [ A Except as specified in subsection B of
this section, a ] tracking powder pesticide shall not be used in a
food establishment.P
B. If used, a nontoxic tracking powder such as talcum or
flour shall not contaminate food, equipment, utensils, linens, and
single-service and single-use articles.
12VAC5-421-3460. Medicines - restriction and storage.
A. 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.Pf
B. Medicines that are in a food establishment for the
employees' use shall be labeled as specified under 12VAC5-421-3320 and located
to prevent the contamination of food, equipment, utensils, linens, and
single-service and single-use articles.P
12VAC5-421-3470. Refrigerated medicines, storage.
Medicines belonging to employees or to children in a day care
center that require refrigeration and are stored in a food refrigerator shall
be:
1. Stored in a package or container and kept inside a covered,
leakproof container that is identified as a container for the storage of
medicines;P and
2. Located so they are inaccessible to children.P
12VAC5-421-3480. First aid supplies, storage.
First aid supplies that are in a food establishment for the
employees' use shall be:
1. Labeled as specified under 12VAC5-421-3320;Pf
and
2. Stored in a kit or a container that is located to prevent
the contamination of food, equipment, utensils, and linens, and single-service
and single-use articles.P
Article 3
Stock and Retail Sale
12VAC5-421-3500. Storage and display, separation.
Poisonous or toxic materials shall be stored and displayed
for retail sale so they can not cannot contaminate food,
equipment, utensils, linens, and single-service and single-use articles by:
1. Separating the poisonous or toxic materials by spacing or
partitioning;P and
2. Locating the poisonous or toxic materials in an area that
is not above food, equipment, utensils, linens, and single-service or
single-use articles.P
12VAC5-421-3590. Disposition of a variance request.
A. The commissioner may grant the variance request and if
If the commissioner proposes to deny the variance he shall provide the
owner an opportunity to an informal hearing fact-finding conference
as provided in § 2.2-4019 of the Code of Virginia. Following this opportunity
for an informal hearing fact-finding conference the commissioner
may reject any application for a variance by sending a rejection notice to the
applicant. The rejection notice shall be in writing and shall state the reasons
for the rejection. A rejection notice constitutes a case decision.
B. If the commissioner proposes to grant a variance request
submitted pursuant to this part, the applicant shall be notified in writing of
this decision. Such notice shall identify the variance, the food establishment
involved, and shall specify the period of time for which the variance will be
effective. Such notice shall provide that the variance will be terminated when
the food establishment comes into compliance with the applicable regulation and
may be terminated upon a finding by the commissioner that the food
establishment has failed to comply with any requirements or schedules issued in
conjunction with the variance. The effective date of the variance shall be as
noted in the variance letter.
C. All variances granted to any food establishment may not
be transferable unless otherwise stated. Each variance shall be attached to the
permit to which it is granted. Each variance is revoked when the permit to
which it is attached is revoked operate and posted prominently in a
conspicuous place for public view.
D. No owner or permit holder may challenge the terms or
conditions of a variance after 30 calendar days have elapsed from the receipt
of the variance.
E. Each variance shall be posted prominently in a
conspicuous place for public view and in close proximity to the permit to which
it relates. Each variance is revoked when the permit to which it operate
is attached is revoked, suspended, or if the permit is not
revalidated or renewed expired.
Article 2
Plan Submission and Approval
12VAC5-421-3600. Facility and operating plans - when plans
are required.
A permit applicant or permit holder shall submit to the
regulatory authority properly prepared plans and specifications for review and
approval before:
1. The construction of a food establishment;Pf
2. The conversion of an existing structure for use as a food
establishment;Pf or
3. The remodeling of a food establishment or a change of type
of food establishment or food operation as specified under [ 12VAC5-421-3710 ]
C [ subdivision 3 of 12VAC-421-3700 ] if the regulatory
authority determines that plans and specifications are necessary to ensure
compliance with this regulation this chapter.Pf
[ 12VAC5-421-3620. When a HACCP plan is required.
A. Before engaging in an activity that requires a HACCP plan,
a permit applicant or permit holder shall submit to the regulatory authority
for approval a properly prepared HACCP plan as specified under 12VAC5-421-3630
and the relevant provisions of this chapter if:
1. Submission of a HACCP plan is required according to law;
2. A variance is required as specified under 12VAC5-421-860,
12VAC5-421-1300 B, or 12VAC5-421-700 D 2 4; or
3. The regulatory authority determines that a food preparation
or processing method requires a variance based on a plan submittal specified
under 12VAC5-421-3610, an inspectional finding, or a variance request.
B. A permit applicant or permit holder shall have a
properly prepared HACCP plan Before engaging in reduced oxygen packaging
without a variance as specified under 12VAC5-421-870, a permit applicant
or permit holder shall submit a properly prepared HACCP plan to the regulatory
authority. ]
12VAC5-421-3630. Contents of a HACCP plan.
For a food establishment that is required under
12VAC5-421-3620 to have a HACCP plan, the plan and specifications shall
indicate the permit applicant or permit holder shall submit to the
regulatory authority a properly prepared HACCP plan that includes:
1. General information such as the name of the permit
applicant or permit holder, the food establishment address, and contact
information;Pf
1. 2. A categorization of the types of potentially
hazardous foods time/temperature control for safety food that are
specified in the menu such as soups and sauces, salads, and bulk, solid foods
such as meat roasts, or of other foods that are specified by the regulatory
authority is to be controlled under the HACCP plan;Pf
2. 3. A flow diagram by specific food or
category type identifying critical control points and providing information on
the following or chart for each specific food or category type that
identifies:Pf
a. Each step in the process,Pf
b. The hazards and controls for each step in the flow
diagram or chart,Pf
c. The steps that are critical control points,Pf
a. Ingredients d. The ingredients, materials,
and equipment used in the preparation of that food,Pf and
b. e. Formulations or recipes that delineate
methods and procedural control measures that address the food safety concerns
involved;Pf
3. Food employee and supervisory training plan that
addresses the food safety issues of concern.
4. A statement of standard operating procedures for the
plan under consideration including clearly identifying A critical
control point summary for each specific food or category type that clearly
identifies:
a. Each critical control point,;Pf
b. The critical limits for each critical control point,;Pf
c. The method and frequency for monitoring and controlling
each critical control point by the food employee designated by the person in
charge,;Pf
d. The method and frequency for the person in charge to
routinely verify that the food employee is following standard operating
procedures and monitoring critical control points,;Pf
e. Action to be taken by the person in charge if the critical
limits for each critical control point are not met,;Pf
and
f. Records to be maintained by the person in charge to
demonstrate that the HACCP plan is properly operated and managed;Pf and
5. Supporting documents such as;
a. Food employee and supervisory training plan addressing
food safety issues;Pf
b. Copies of blank records forms that are necessary to
implement a HACCP plan;Pf
c. Additional scientific data or other information, as
required by the regulatory authority supporting the determination that food
safety is not compromised by the proposal.Pf
5. Additional scientific data or other information, as
required by the regulatory authority, supporting the determination that food
safety is not compromised by the proposal.
6. Any other information required by the regulatory
authority.
12VAC5-421-3670. Application procedure, submission 30
calendar days before proposed opening.
An applicant seeking to operate a nontemporary food
establishment shall submit an application for a permit at least 30 calendar
days before the date planned for opening a food establishment or at least 30
calendar days before the expiration date of the current permit for an
existing facility. An applicant seeking to operate a temporary food establishment
shall submit an application for a permit at least 10 calendar days before the
date planned for opening the temporary food establishment.
12VAC5-421-3700. Contents of the application.
The application shall include:
1. The name, mailing address, telephone number, and signature
of the person applying for the permit and the name, mailing address, and
location of the food establishment;
2. Information specifying whether the food establishment is
owned by an association, corporation, individual, partnership, or other legal
entity;
3. A statement specifying whether the food establishment:
a. Is mobile or stationary and temporary or permanent; and
b. Is an operation that includes one or more of the following:
(1) Prepares, offers for sale, or serves potentially
hazardous food time/temperature control for safety food:
(a) Only to order upon a consumer's request;
(b) In advance in quantities based on projected consumer
demand and discards food that is not sold or served at an approved frequency;
or
(c) Using time as the public health control as specified under
12VAC5-421-850;
(2) Prepares potentially hazardous food time/temperature
control for safety food in advance using a food preparation method that
involves two or more steps which may include combining potentially hazardous
time/temperature control for safety food ingredients; cooking; cooling;
reheating; hot or cold holding; freezing; or thawing;
(3) Prepares food as specified under subdivision 3 b (2) of
this section for delivery to and consumption at a location off the premises of
the food establishment where it is prepared;
(4) Prepares food as specified under subdivision 3 b (2) of
this section for service to a highly susceptible population;
(5) Prepares only food that is not [ potentially
hazardous time/temperature control for safety food ]; or
(6) Does not prepare, but offers for sale only prepackaged
food that is not potentially hazardous time/temperature control for
safety food;
4. The name, title, address, and telephone number of the
person directly responsible for the food establishment;
5. The name, title, address, and telephone number of the
person who functions as the immediate supervisor of the person specified under
subdivision 4 of this section such as the zone, district, or regional
supervisor;
6. The names, titles, and addresses of:
a. The persons comprising the legal ownership as specified
under subdivision 2 of this section including the owners and officers; and
b. The local resident agent if one is required based on the
type of legal ownership;
7. A statement signed by the applicant that:
a. Attests to the accuracy of the information provided in the
application; and
b. Affirms that the applicant will:
(1) Comply with this chapter; and
(2) Allow the regulatory authority access to the establishment
as specified under 12VAC5-421-3820 and to the records specified under
12VAC5-421-440 and 12VAC5-421-2330 and subdivision 4 of 12VAC5-421-3630; and
8. Other information required by the regulatory authority.
12VAC5-421-3770. Suspension Summary suspension of
a permit.
The director may summarily suspend without a
hearing a permit to operate a restaurant if the director finds the
continued operation constitutes a substantial and imminent threat to the public
health, except the director may summarily suspend the permit of a
temporary restaurant as addressed under 12VAC5-421-3870. Upon receipt of such
notice that a permit is suspended, the permit holder shall cease food
operations immediately and begin corrective action.
Whenever a permit is suspended, the holder of the permit or
the person in charge shall be notified in writing by certified mail or by hand
delivery. Upon service of notice that the permit is immediately suspended, the
former permit holder shall be given an opportunity for a hearing an
informal fact-finding conference in accordance with § 2.2-4019 of the Code
of Virginia. The request for a hearing an informal fact-finding
conference shall be in writing. The written request shall be filed with the
local department by the former holder of the permit. If written request for a
hearing an informal fact-finding conference is not filed within 10
working days, the suspension is sustained. Each holder of a suspended permit
shall be afforded an opportunity for an informal hearing fact-finding
conference, within three working days of receipt of a request for the hearing
informal fact-finding conference. The director may end the suspension at
any time if the reasons for the suspension no longer exist.
12VAC5-421-3780. Revocation of a permit.
The director may, after providing an opportunity for a
hearing an informal fact-finding conference in accordance with
§ 2.2-4019 of the Code of Virginia, revoke a permit for flagrant or
continuing violation of any of the requirements of this part.
Prior to revocation, the director shall notify in writing
the holder of the permit, or the person in charge, of the specific reason for
which the permit is to be revoked. The permit shall be revoked at the end of
the 15 days following service of such notice unless a written request for a
hearing is filed before then with the director from which the permit was
obtained. If no request for a hearing is filed within the 15 day period, the
revocation of the permit shall be final.
Article 4
Inspection and Correction of Violations
12VAC5-421-3800. Periodic inspection.
Food establishments shall be inspected by the designee of the
director. Inspections of the food establishments shall be performed as often as
necessary for the enforcement of this part in accordance with the following:
1. Except as specified in subdivisions 2 and 3 of this
section, the regulatory authority shall inspect a food establishment at least
once every six months.
2. The regulatory authority may increase the interval between
inspections beyond six months if:
a. The food establishment is fully operating under an approved
and validated HACCP plan as specified under 12VAC5-421-3630;
b. The food establishment is assigned a less frequent
inspection frequency based on a written an established risk-based
inspection schedule that is being uniformly applied throughout the jurisdiction
Commonwealth and at least once every six months the establishment is
contacted by telephone or other means by the regulatory authority to ensure
that the establishment manager and the nature of the food operation are not
changed updated annually upon reissuance of the annual permit; or
c. The establishment's operation involves only coffee service
and other unpackaged or prepackaged food that is not potentially hazardous
time/temperature control for safety food, such as carbonated beverages
and snack food such as chips, nuts, popcorn, and pretzels.
3. The regulatory authority shall periodically inspect throughout
its permit period a temporary food establishment that prepares, sells,
or serves unpackaged potentially hazardous food and that during its
permit period, unless the Virginia Department of Health develops a written
risk-based plan for adjusting the frequency of inspections of temporary food
establishments that is uniformly applied throughout the Commonwealth.
a. Has improvised rather than permanent facilities or
equipment for accomplishing functions such as handwashing, food preparation and
protection, food temperature control, warewashing, providing drinking water,
waste retention and disposal, and insect and rodent control; or
b. Has inexperienced food employees.
12VAC5-421-3810. Performance-based and [ priority-based
risk-based ] inspections.
Within the parameters specified in 12VAC5-421-3800, the
regulatory authority shall prioritize, and conduct more frequent inspections
based upon its assessment of a food establishment's history of compliance with
this chapter and the establishment's potential as a vector of foodborne illness
by evaluating:
1. Past performance for nonconformance with this chapter or
HACCP plan requirements that are critical priority items or priority
foundation items;
2. Past performance for numerous or repeat violations of this
chapter or HACCP plan requirements that are noncritical core items;
3. Past performance for complaints investigated and found to
be valid;
4. The hazards associated with the particular foods that are
prepared, stored, or served;
5. The type of operation including the methods and extent of
food storage, preparation, and service;
6. The number of people served; and
7. Whether the population served is a highly susceptible
population.
12VAC5-421-3815. Competency of environmental health
specialists.
A. An authorized representative of the commissioner
who inspects a food establishment or conducts plan review for compliance with
this chapter shall have the knowledge, skills, and ability to adequately
perform the required duties. For the purposes of this section, competency
shall be demonstrated when an environmental health specialist meets the
training and standardization requirements specified in the Virginia Department
of Health Procedures for Certification and Standardization of Retail Food
Protection Staff, 2014, (VDH, Division of Food and Environmental Services).
B. The regulatory authority shall ensure that authorized
representatives who inspect a food establishment or conduct plan review for
compliance with this chapter have access to training and continuing education
as needed to properly identify violations and apply this chapter.
12VAC5-421-3860. Documenting information and observations.
The regulatory authority 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 as specified under 12VAC5-421-3700, inspection date, and other
information such as type of water supply and sewage disposal, status of the
permit, 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 permit holder
including:
a. Failure of the person in charge to demonstrate the
knowledge of foodborne illness prevention, application of HACCP principles, and
the requirements of this chapter specified under 12VAC5-421-60;
b. Failure of food employees, conditional employees,
and the person in charge to demonstrate their knowledge of their
responsibility to report a disease or medical condition as specified under
12VAC5-421-80 B and D;
c. Nonconformance with [ critical priority ]
items [ or priority foundation items ] of this chapter;
d. Failure of the appropriate food employees to demonstrate
their knowledge of, and ability to perform in accordance with, the procedural,
monitoring, verification, and corrective action practices required by the
regulatory authority as specified under 12VAC5-421-60;
e. Failure of the person in charge to provide records required
by the regulatory authority for determining conformance with a HACCP plan as
specified under subdivision 4 f of 12VAC5-421-3630; and
f. Nonconformance with critical limits of a HACCP plan.
12VAC5-421-3910. Imminent health hazard, ceasing operations and
reporting.
A. Except as specified in subsection B of this section, a
permit holder shall immediately discontinue operations and notify the
regulatory authority if an imminent health hazard may exist because of an
emergency such as a fire, flood, extended interruption of electrical or water
service, sewage backup, misuse of poisonous or toxic materials, onset of an
apparent foodborne illness outbreak, gross insanitary occurrence or condition,
or other circumstance that may endanger public health.P
B. A permit holder need not discontinue operations in an area
of an establishment that is unaffected by the imminent health hazard.
12VAC5-421-3930. Critical violation, timely Timely
correction.
A. Except as specified in subsection B of this section, a
permit holder shall at the time of inspection correct a critical violation
of priority item or priority foundation item in this chapter and
implement corrective actions for a HACCP plan provision that is not in
compliance with its critical limit. Pf
B. Considering the nature of the potential hazard involved
and the complexity of the corrective action needed, the regulatory authority
may agree to or specify a longer time frame timeframe, not to
exceed 10 calendar days:
1. 72 hours after the inspection, for the permit
holder to correct critical violations priority items; or
2. 10 calendar days after the inspection for the permit
holder to correct priority foundation items or HACCP plan deviations.
12VAC5-421-3940. Verification and documentation of correction.
A. After observing at the time of inspection a correction of
a critical violation or deviation priority item or priority
foundation item, the regulatory authority shall enter the violation observation
and information about the corrective action on the inspection report.
B. As specified under 12VAC5-421-3930 B, after receiving
notification that the permit holder has corrected a critical violation priority
item or priority foundation item or a HACCP plan deviation, or at
the end of the specified period of time, the regulatory authority shall verify
correction of the violation, document the information on an inspection
report, and enter the report in the regulatory authority's records.
12VAC5-421-3950. Noncritical violation Core item,
time frame timeframe for correction.
A. Except as specified in subsection B of this section, the
permit holder shall correct noncritical violations core items by
a date and time agreed to or specified by the regulatory authority but no later
than 90 calendar days after the inspection.
B. The regulatory authority may approve a compliance schedule
that extends beyond the time limits specified under subsection A of this
section if a written schedule of compliance is submitted by the permit holder
and no health hazard exists or will result from allowing an extended schedule
for compliance.
12VAC5-421-3960. Examination for condemnation of food.
Food may be examined or sampled by the department as often as
necessary for enforcement of this chapter. Also, the department may, upon
written notice to the owner or permit holder or person in charge impound any
food which it believes is in violation of Part III (12VAC5-421-260 et seq.)
or any other section of this chapter. The department shall tag, label, or
otherwise identify any food subject to impoundment. No food under conditions
specified in the impoundment shall be used, served or moved from the
establishment. The department shall permit storage of the food under conditions
specified in the impoundment unless storage is not possible without risk to the
public health in which case immediate destruction shall be ordered and
accomplished by the owner or permit holder or person in charge. The
impoundment shall state that a request for a hearing an informal
fact-finding conference may be filed within 10 days and that if no hearing
conference is requested, the food shall be destroyed by the owner or
permit holder or person in charge. A hearing shall be held The
department shall hold an informal fact-finding conference if so requested,
and on the basis of evidence produced at the hearing, the impoundment may be
vacated, or the owner or permit holder or person in charge of the food may be
directed by written order in writing by the director to denature
or destroy such food or to bring it into compliance with the provisions of this
chapter.
12VAC5-421-3970. Enforcement of regulation.
A. This chapter shall be enforced by the State Board of
Health and the State Health Commissioner, as executive officer of the board.
B. The directors are appointed by the board and commissioner
as duly designated officers and are responsible for the implementation and
enforcement of this chapter.
C. All food establishments shall operate in compliance with
the requirements set forth in this chapter and shall not operate without a
valid permit.
D. The commissioner shall be vested with all the authority of
the board when it is not in session, subject to such rules and regulations as
may be prescribed by the board.
E. Pursuant to the authority granted in §§ 32.1-26 and 35.1-6
of the Code of Virginia, the commissioner may issue orders to require any owner
or permit holder or other person to comply with the provisions of these
regulations this chapter. The order may require the following:
1. The immediate cessation and correction of the violation;
2. Appropriate remedial action to ensure that the violation
does not continue or recur;
3. The submission of a plan to prevent future violations;
4. The submission of an application for a variance; and
5. Any other corrective action deemed necessary for proper
compliance with the regulations.
F. Before the issuance of an order, the commissioner must
comply with the requirements of § 35.1-6 of the Code of Virginia.
G. All orders issued pursuant to 12VAC5-421-3970 C shall
become effective not less than 15 days after mailing a copy thereof by
certified mail to the last known address of the owner or permit holder or
person violating these regulations. Violation of an order is a Class 3
misdemeanor. See § 35.1-7 of the Code of Virginia.
H. F. The commissioner may act as the agent of
the board to enforce all effective orders and these regulations this
chapter. Should any owner or permit holder fail to comply with any
effective order or these regulations this chapter, the
commissioner may:
1. Institute a proceeding to revoke the owner's or permit
holder's permit in accordance with 12VAC5-421-3780;
2. Request the attorney for the Commonwealth to bring a
criminal action;
3. Request the Attorney General to bring an action for civil
penalty, injunction, or other appropriate remedy; or
4. Do any combination of the above.
I. G. Not exclusive means of enforcement.
Nothing contained in 12VAC5-421-3970 this section shall be
interpreted to require the commissioner to issue an order prior to seeking
enforcement of any regulations or statute through an injunction, mandamus or
criminal prosecution.
J. H. Hearings Proceedings before
the commissioner or his designee shall include any of the following forms
depending on the nature of the controversy and the interests of the parties
involved.
1. Informal hearings fact-finding conferences.
An informal hearing fact-finding conference is a meeting with a
district or local health department with the district or local health director
presiding and held in conformance with § 2.2-4019 of the Code of Virginia.
2. Adjudicatory hearing. The adjudicatory hearing is a formal,
public adjudicatory proceeding before the commissioner, or his designated
hearing officer a hearing officer as defined by § 2.2-4001 of the
Code of Virginia, and held in conformance with § 2.2-4020 of the Code of
Virginia.
12VAC5-421-3980. Request for hearing informal fact-finding
conference.
A request for an informal hearing fact-finding
conference shall be made by sending the request in writing to the district
or local health department in the locality where the food establishment is
located. Requests for hearings an informal fact-finding conference
shall cite the reason(s) reason or reasons for the hearing
request and shall cite the section(s) section or sections of these
regulations this chapter involved and must be received within 30
days of the decision by the department that lead to the hearing request.
12VAC5-421-3990. Hearing as a matter of right. (Repealed.)
Any owner or permit holder or named party whose rights,
duties, or privileges have been, or may be affected by any case decision of the
board or its subordinates in the administration of these regulations shall have
a right to both informal and adjudicatory hearings. The commissioner may
require participation in an informal hearing before granting the request for a
full adjudicatory hearing. Exception: No person other than an owner shall have
the right to an adjudicatory hearing to challenge the issuance of a permit to
operate unless the person can demonstrate at an informal hearing that the
minimum standards contained in these regulations have not been applied and that
he will be injured in some manner by the issuance of the permit.
12VAC5-421-4000. Appeals.
A. Any appeal from a denial of a permit to operate a
food establishment must be made in writing and received by the department
within 30 days after service of the final order in the case decision denial.
In the event that service of a case decision upon a party is accomplished by
mail, three days shall be added to the 30-day period. Notice shall be
consistent with Part 2A of the Rules of the Supreme Court of Virginia.
1. Any request for hearing on the denial of an application
for a variance pursuant to 12VAC5-421-3590 A must be made in writing and
received within sixty days of receipt of the denial notice.
2. Any request for a variance must be made in writing and
received by the department prior to the denial of the food establishment
permit, or within 60 days after such denial.
3. In the event a person applies for a variance within the
60-day period provided by subdivision 2 of this section, the date for appealing
the denial of the permit, pursuant to subdivision 1 of this section, shall
commence from the date on which the department acts on the request for a
variance.
4. B. Pursuant to the Administrative Process
Act (§ 2.2-4000 et seq. of the Code of Virginia) an aggrieved owner or permit
holder may appeal a final case decision of the commissioner to an appropriate
circuit court.
NOTICE: The following
forms used in administering the regulation were filed by the agency. The forms
are not being published; however, online users of this issue of the Virginia
Register of Regulations may click on the name of a form with a hyperlink to
access it. The forms are also available from the agency contact or may be
viewed at the Office of the Registrar of Regulations, General Assembly
Building, 2nd Floor, Richmond, Virginia 23219.
FORMS (12VAC5-421)
Foodservice Establishment Inspection Report, EHS-152 (rev.
9/95).
Foodservice Critical Procedures Report, EHS-153 (rev.
9/95).
Food
Establishment Inspection Report Form - Cover Page (eff. 2016)
Food
Establishment Inspection Report Form - Narrative Page with Temperatures (eff.
2016)
Food
Establishment Inspection Report Form - Narrative Page (eff. 2016)
DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE (12VAC5-421)
National Shellfish Sanitation Program Manual of
Operations, Part II, Sanitation of the Harvesting, Processing and Distribution
of Shellfish, 1995 Revision, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
Public Health Service, Food and Drug Administration
Approved
Drug Products with Therapeutic Equivalence Evaluations, 34th Edition, 2014,
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
Grade
"A" Pasteurized Milk Ordinance, 2013 Revision, 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 (NSSP) Guide for the Control of Molluscan Shellfish,
2013 Revision, 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
18-2012 Manual Food and Beverage Dispensing Equipment, 2012, NSF
International, 789 North Dixboro Road, P.O. Box 130140, Ann Arbor, MI
48113-0140, www.nsf.org
Standards
for Accreditation of Food Protection Manager Certification Programs, April
2012, Conference for Food Protection, 30 Elliott Court, Martinsville, IN
46151-1331
United
States Standards, Grades, and Weight Classes for Shell Eggs, AMS-56, effective
July 20, 2000, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Marketing Service,
Poultry Programs, STOP 0259, Room 3944-South, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW,
Washington, DC 20250-0259
VDH
Procedures for Certification and Standardization of Retail Food Protection
Staff Workbook, 2014, Virginia Department of Health, Division of Food and
Environmental Services, 109 Governor Street, 5th Floor, Richmond, VA 23219
VA.R. Doc. No. R16-2701; Filed June 2, 2016, 5:27 p.m.