LSPedia is assembling a working group to conduct a Food Traceability Pilot in accordance with Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) requirements.
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LSPedia is launching a pilot program to explore and define a critical path toward compliance with the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA).
The regulation was signed into law in 2011 with a compliance deadline for the industry of January 20, 2026. While the requirements of the legislation are clear, the path is anything but as data interoperability and technology standards remain works-in-progress as well as roles and responsibilities of participants at every tier in the global food supply chain.
This program will bring together a working group to discuss and arrive at a set of system-agnostic, actionable findings on how to design, or modify best practices from adjacent industries, solutions to the complex challenges of FSMA compliance to ensure the uninterrupted flow of product to end users in a secure, expedient and compliant manner.
Qualified participants are producers, packagers, manufacturers, distributors, and retailers.
The pilot group will convene in Q3 2024, following which pilot members will meet once a month to discuss objectives, goals, process, technology, trading partner collaboration, standards, and implementations for FSMA compliance.
The Food Safety Modernization Act is a comprehensive overhaul of the United States food safety regulatory framework that aims to ensure the safety of the U.S. food supply by shifting the focus from responding to contamination, to preventing it. The FSMA has seven major regulations, including: Produce Safety Rule, Foreign Supplier Verification Programs, and preventive controls for animal food.
Establishes science-based minimum standards for safe production and harvesting of fresh fruits and vegetables
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Requires that importers perform certain risk-based activities to verify that food imported into the United States has been produced in a manner that meets applicable U.S. safety standards
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The FSMA also includes the following major elements: Inspection and compliance, Imported food safety, Response, and Enhanced partnerships. The FSMA applies to the owner, operator, or agent in charge of a domestic or foreign food facility that manufactures, processes, packs, or holds regulated foods for consumption in the United States.
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Inspection and compliance, Imported food safety, Response, and Enhanced partnerships. The FSMA applies to the owner, operator, or agent in charge of a domestic or foreign food facility that manufactures, processes, packs, or holds regulated foods for consumption in the United States.
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Mandates additional record-keeping requirements for foods on FDA’s FTL
Includes specific food items to which FSMA Section 204 applies.
Represents significant activities in the food supply chain.
Standardized data based on CTE to facilitate traceability.
Unique identifier provided by each lot for tracking the food item.
The food supply chain is complex, sophisticated and global. The FSMA is making an effort to simplify its domestic stakeholder in 4 main categories. It is important to keep in mind that those categories are very broad and that there are exceptions in each of those categories.
Further detail on what each participant in the supply chain is responsible for follows. The FDA is maintaining an up-to-date list of which specific products are required to be tracked.
OneScan is the leading global track-and-trace compliance solution for the supply chain, designed and proven to increase productivity, profitability, and supply chain visibility. LSPedia's seamless, cloud-based compliance solution streamlines the track and trace requirements with little impact on your daily processes.
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