The Government of Canada put up a new
single approach to food inspections for public comments late last week.
When the CFIA was created in 1997, it
brought together food inspection programs from different federal departments
with diverse inspection approaches. While some progress has been made in
bringing these programs together since then, the process is still underway. The
CFIA currently operates the following eight, separate food inspection programs:
If enacted, it would apply to all food commodities whether made in Canada or
imported. The new inspection systems will replace the Canadian Food Inspection
Agency now operates.
Currently CFIA inspection schemes
separately cover meat, dairy, eggs, processed products, imported and
manufactured food, fresh fruits and vegetables, and fish and seafood. The newly
proposed single inspection system is a product of the Conservative Government's
$100 million budget provided to CFIA in 2011 to modernize food safety
inspection in Canada.
In addition to building a consistent
inspection model, this investment is being used to provide better training and
more modern tools to front line food inspectors as well as building additional
capacity in CFIA laboratories. The government previously issued discussion
document, called "The Case for Change" that made the case for a new
inspection system.
The CFIA is seeking comments from the
public including consumers and industry stakeholders until October 31, 2012 on
the following aspects of the proposed draft model:
1.
-A single licensing and
registration requirement for those manufacturing, importing and/or exporting
food for trade outside provincial borders
2.
-More consistent oversight and
inspection across all regulated food commodities
3.
-A scaled approach that adapts
to the size and complexity of businesses
4.
-The distribution of more
information to consumers about compliance and enforcement activities
The government said CFIA is planning
extensive outreach activities on this proposed model with its inspectors,
consumer associations, industry, and federal, provincial and territorial
government counterparts in the fall. The model would continue to be developed
based on feedback that the agency receives.
The CFIA is carrying out a number of
complementary initiatives including a review of the CFIA's regulatory
frameworks and the Safe Food for Canadians Act, tabled in June, which aims to
modernize and strengthen food legislation.
Source: http://www.inspection.gc.ca/about-the-cfia/accountability/inspection-modernization/case-for-change/eng/1337194116466/1337194257540
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