Is HACCP enough to keep your plant out of the headlines?



No one wants to wake up to food safety headlines about their plant. But in the past two years, food manufacturers and American consumers alike have faced front-page recalls for produce, meat, nuts, peanut butter, cookie dough and even dairy products.

It is not surprising that consumer confidence in the overall safety of the food supply has dropped dramatically as a result of recent recalls. Food safety is in the news and a hot topic of discussion at most industry forums.

The dairy industry has done an excellent job of producing safe products for many years by following the regulations of the Pasteurized Milk Ordinance. However, dairy products have become a part of the national and global food supply. Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points is recognized as an alternate program under the PMO and is an integral part of the Global Food Safety Institute-recognized food-safety certification programs.

Many of the facilities that have produced and distributed tainted food in recent years have had HACCP programs in place. Did HACCP fail? What can the food industry do to reverse these disturbing trends?

Is pending congressional legislation the solution? Even if the FDA and USDA receive more funding, the responsibility for overseeing more than 40,000 food manufacturers and producers in the United States alone is overwhelming. Regulations alone will not do the job.

Dairy and food processors must assume this responsibility. Processes must be evaluated and parameters established to ensure safe, quality foods. A HACCP program is a natural for this type of self analysis.

HACCP is a global standard for food safety. Developed by Pillsbury in the 1960s and regulated in the United States under 21 CFR 120 and 123, HACCP is an integral part of the GFSI certification programs.

Based on risk assessment, HACCP exerts tight control over highly perishable foods in place of the traditional “hold, test and release” approach.

In retrospect, it has been prerequisite program failures rather than HACCP failures that have produced tainted food. A HACCP plan must be built on a foundation of sanitation standard operating procedures and prerequisite programs that include the following:

• Buildings and equipment maintenance

• Effective cleaning and sanitation programs

• Safe water, steam and ice

• Effective pest-control programs

• Control of toxic materials

• Employee training

• Adherence to Good Manufacturing Practices 

Are you maintaining these SOPs and prerequisites as well as your HACCP plan? HACCP works, but only when these fundamentals are faithfully maintained. It is widely recognized as the global standard for food safety. 


Join Randolph Associates Inc. in Birmingham, Ala., for the following basic training courses: Sanitation Workshop, Nov. 10-12; and Pasteurization Workshop, Dec. 7-10. For registration and additional information, contact Kristy Clark at 205/595-6455 or kristy.clark@raiconsult.com.