FDA releases Food Safety Modernization Act Operational Strategy document, outlining drivers of change in FDA's approach to food safety and operational strategy for implementing that change

Nevin Barich

Nevin Barich

SILVER SPRING, Maryland , May 2, 2014 (press release) – The U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) today is releasing the FSMA Operational Strategy document, outlining broadly the drivers of change in FDA’s approach to food safety and the operational strategy for implementing that change, as mandated and empowered by the FDA Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA).

FSMA is the most sweeping food safety legislation in the US in over 70 years and requires a dramatic shift in approach – to preventing foodborne illness rather than reacting to it. When FSMA was signed in to law in January 2011, FDA initiated a plan for responding to the many mandates within the law. Up until now, we have focused primarily on rulemaking, the development of guidance, and developing new compliance strategies and establishing and implementing protocols to use our new administrative tools.

The next phase of FSMA implementation, in addition to continuing to develop rules and guidance documents, involves developing approaches to achieving industry compliance with the new public health prevention standards, once they are in effect, and implementing a modernized strategic and risk-based industry oversight framework. It is this new oversight framework that serves as the basis for FDA’s Operational Strategy document. The Operational Strategy will focus on how FSMA will advance public health by focusing on prevention, voluntary compliance, risk-based oversight, and expanded collaboration across the food safety community. It will be a launching pad for all food safety efforts moving forward.

The agency has to design methods to promote widespread voluntary industry compliance with the new rules, as well as establish preventive/public health-focused inspection and sampling programs to oversee compliance. In addition, the FDA is developing effective enforcement strategies to be deployed when producers, processors, distributors and importers fail to comply on a voluntary basis.

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