After enactment, FDA sent a July 17, 2002 letter to stakeholders inviting ... FDA also met with industry representatives, consumer groups, federal agencies ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation
Food may be detained if the FDA officer/employee has credible evidence or information such article presents a threat of serious adverse health consequences or death to humans or animals.
The Port Director or someone higher within the agency is mandated to make the decision to detain
Period of detention 20 or 30 days
Shipment may be removed to secure storage but not delivered to the custody of the importer or his agent.
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There was no consultation with the trade community or the usual Congressional committees prior to enactment. The deal was cut during the House and Senate Conference process.
After enactment, FDA sent a July 17, 2002 letter to stakeholders inviting comments regarding implementation. FDA also met with industry representatives, consumer groups, federal agencies and foreign embassies to further solicit comments.
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The basic themes of the comments submitted were
Maintain flexibility when setting the time for notice and keep in mind the modes of transportation, the nature of perishable food and the needs of U.S. businesses which operate near the border
Permit amendments
Integrate Customs and other agencies to avoid duplications
Allow qualified agents to submit prior notices
Provide immediate acknowledgment electronically
Define food
Extend FDAs hours of operation
Comply with international trade obligations
Provide a model of the prior notice screen
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FDA assumes that orders for food are placed at least one day prior to arrival and so a four (4) hour minimum notice period should not cause undue hardship.
FDA wants to know how business operations will change - tomatoes, avocados oranges and similar products are subject to the Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act and must already give one day advance notice so they were basically ignored for purposes of these regulations what type of notice is involved for these ignored products?
Deadline to issue regulations - December 12, 2003
FDA asked for comments on these provisions and others
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Justification for these rules - if a bioterrorism outbreak occurs, prior notice would enhance FDAs ability to respond and prevent entry of related shipments and to facilitate product tracking for containment
Prior notice advises the name of the actual importer and consignee in the U.S.
- what about cargo not cleared?
- what about in-bond cargo?
Prior notice assists in determining the source and cause of problems and in communicating with affected firms
It also assists FDA to use its foreign inspection resources more effectively
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Who must give notice?
U.S. purchasers
U.S. importers
or their agents - brokers are named as
possible agents, but should you?
if in-bond goods - the carrier should submit!
The submitter is responsible for ensuring the
adequacy and accuracy of the prior notice
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Default notice period
- not less than 8 hours and not more than 5 days
Must give notice by noon the calendar day before arrival, includes weekends and holidays
- will FDA operate 24/7?
Factors to consider -
Effect on commerce
Location of the ports
Modes of transportation
Types of food
Other considerations including FDA is to leave enough time to receive, review and then appropriately respond.
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FDA admits it does not have all the Customs ports of entry staffed and claims to need time to respond to the 20,000 prior notices it expects to receive daily.
FDA examined 64 entry packages and determined the applicable time frames by comparing invoice dates with arrival dates.
FDA admits the greatest impact will be on fresh items from Canada and Mexico and so agrees amendments will be needed as all the details may not be known by noon the day before shipment examples, fresh fish (exact species or quantity) or lettuce (exact variety or quantity). Topping off is no longer allowed.
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Prior notice is required for all food
whether or not intended for human consumption
whether or not remaining in the U.S.
- in-bonds eliminated?
- FTZ entries also affected
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Exceptions -
Food individual travelers carry in their luggage for their own use, i.e. not for sale - gift of Swiss chocolates
Food subject to the jurisdiction of the USDA
- Federal Meat Inspection Act
- Poultry Products Inspection Act
- Egg Products Inspection Act
What about liquor? Is the 7 rule obsolete?
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Definitions of concern -
Country of shipment - where loaded onto the conveyance that brings it to the U.S. - what about intermediate destinations?
Food - if an article can be employed for food and non-food uses, the food uses trigger the prior notice requirement.
Originating country - country where the article originates - fresh vs. canned
- fresh what about if bought through third parties? trading houses?
- if canned, where grown? canned?
- seafood - look to the flag of the vessel when caught ignore later processing ?
Port of entry - where the food first arrives - not where it is entered.
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If fail to file prior notice refused admission, e.g. if file untimely or the filing is inaccurate or incomplete refused admission.
If refused admission, the food must be held at the port unless FDA directs it be moved to a secure facility may not store perishables at a bonded warehouse.
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With mixed containers (food and non-food), any food refused admission must be dealt with before the rest of the contents moves.
- what does that do to in-bond cargo?
- what about cleared goods moving elsewhere?
If FDA orders cargo to move, either the carrier or the person giving prior notice must arrange the movement under a custodial bond and notify FDA of the final location. However, the purchaser, owner, importer or consignee may also make arrangements to move the goods and remains responsible for the transportation and storage expenses.
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Refused admission under 801(m)(1) for prior notice problems is not the same as refused admission under 801(a) following entry.
Failure to comply with the prior notice rules is subject to both criminal and civil penalties and is also a prohibited act. Debarment (denial of the right to import) is also possible following a felony conviction.
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If refused admission under 801(m), there is no appeal procedure. The only way the food gets in is to provide the prior notice data and have it approved by FDA.
If prior notice is not satisfied, the food will be sent G.O. and the usual Customs rules then apply, including the right to re-export.
Delivery under a Customs bond is not allowed.
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How To Submit Prior Notice
Through FDAs Prior Notice System
Under development
Will be web-based
October 12, 2003 target completion date
Customs could not modify ACS to accommodate FDAs requirements
Submit through ACE when it is operational
FDA wants comments on -
The extent to which duplicative prior notice information must
be submitted to more than one agency
Ways to minimize any duplicative efforts
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Why a new electronic system?
If none is created, FDA will be overwhelmed
It provides instantaneous confirmation of receipt
It ensures completion, but not accuracy
Legibility is enhanced
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If the new system doesnt work - submit in person, by fax or e-mail to the FDA field office with responsibility over the geographic area where the port of entry (arrival) is located.
If submitting an amendment which changes the port of entry, submit it to the FDA office where the original filing was made, if done manually.
Acknowledgment of prior notice is not an admissibility determination.
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What must be reported?
Each food that is represented by an FDA line or product code must be covered by a prior notice, e.g. four (4) different sizes of canned tuna equates to four (4) prior notices but may be contained in one submission.
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The required data elements
1) Submitter - firm name, address, phone and fax numbers and e-mail address facility registration number if applicable.
2) Type of entry - entry code
ACS entry line number and other Customs identification, e.g. type of entry - warehouse, TIB, in-bond.
3) Location where food is being held including when it will arrive there and who to contact at that location.
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4) Product identity -
Complete FDA product code - provide what can and amend later if dont have all the data by notice deadline
Cant self-blind - know or should know standard.
5) Common or usual market name - entry description
6) Trade or brand name - entry description
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7) Quantity - from smallest package to largest container
FDA wants comments about how often quantity changes occur after the deadline and how significant are those changes.
8) Lot, code or other unique identifier
9) Manufacturer - entry data - seller vs. grower
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10) Grower and location - if known
FDA wants comments on -
- does the act give it flexibility to exempt or otherwise treat differently so-called processed foods produced with products from more than one grower?
- does the term grower include a harvester or collector of wild products, e.g. fish or botanicals?
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11) Originating country - where the article originates
- what does that mean?
- substantial transformation doesnt count!
12) Shipper
13) Country of shipping
14) Anticipated arrival information
Port of entry - first port of arrival
Date and time of arrival
Maybe updated - realistic time frames?
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15) Customs port of entry
16) Anticipated date of entry
17) Importer, owner and consignee
18) Carrier SCAC code - why?
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Amendments Allowed After Filing -
Arrival -
Anticipated location port of entry
Date and time of arrival
Cant change mode of transportation
What about delays?
What about equipment failure?
Window - must update if the arrival changes by more than one (1) hour earlier or more than three (3) hours later!
Only once
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Must transmit at least two hours prior to arrival
- May be limited to certain types of food
- Topping off is now eliminated if it involves food other than that previously transmitted.
- FDA wants comments as to how often topping off occurs and the quantities involved.
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Product Identity
- Last two digits of the product code
- Other product identity changes - variety or species
- Cant change from lettuce to pears
- Cant change root vegetables to carrots
- Carrots have their own product code
- Common, usual, trade or brand names
- Lot or code of identification numbers
- Quantity
- Add grower if previously unknown, but cant change
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Submit the update in the identical fashion as the original - electronic/electronic not electronic/fax.
If fail to update
Refused admission
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For all other changes
Cancel the original prior notice
and
Start all over again!
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Goods refused admission must now be marked UNITED STATES REFUSED ADMISSION
Anyone wanting to return those goods to the U.S. bears the burden of proving they are no longer contaminated
Port shopping is now specifically prohibited
35 Registration
Who must register? Any facility, domestic or foreign, which manufactures, processes, packs or holds food for human or animal consumption in the U.S.
- if a domestic facility, it must register even if its food does not enter interstate commerce
FDA wants comments as to whether the Act extends to domestic facilities and, if so, whether it should require their registration. FDA also wants comments on the types of questions it might provide to domestic facilities to allow them to easily determine if they operate interstate or intrastate.
Deadline is December 12, 2003
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Purpose
To provide FDA with information about the food supply in order to allow it to properly and timely respond to any bioterrorist attack and to allow it to determine the source and cause of such an event and allow the FDA to communicate with potentially affected facilities
FDA wants to be able to track food backward to origin and forward to the consumer
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The owner, operator or agent in charge of a facility must file the registration - currently 125,450 foreign manufacturers are in OASIS
If a U.S. agent is designated to handle the registration, it should have a written agreement with the foreign facility which details the responsibilities of the parties
Transmission must include the name and address of each facility, all trade names if a foreign facility, identify the U.S. agent plus the identity of the general category of the food manufactured, processed, packed or held at the facility
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Exception - if a foreign facility, and the food undergoes further processing or packing by another foreign facility however, if that further processing or packing is de minimis, e.g. attach a label or plastic strip for bottles, then both facilities must be registered
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Excluded - farms (unless manufactures, processes, packs or holds for commercial purposes, compare to make animal feed for use on the farm vs. orange juice sold commercially), restaurants and other retail facilities, nonprofit food establishments and fishing vessels (except those involved in processing) also excluded is foodstuff subject to the Federal Meat Inspection Act, Poultry Products Inspection Act or the Egg Products Inspection Act.
Registration is to done electronically
Changes must be reported timely
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Registration seeks to reach the
last processor
last packager
last packer
last holder
Key - significant activity with respect to the food
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Fishing vessels - if any type of processing is done on board, it must be registered, i.e., handling, storing, preparing, heading, eviscerating, shucking, freezing, changing into different market forms, manufacturing, preserving, packing, labeling, dockside unloading or holding.
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If a facility is regulated by both USDA and FDA, it must register, e.g. makes t.v. dinners with both meat and fish in them.
Facility is defined as one or several buildings all under the same management if under different management separate registration
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Food -
Articles used for food or drink for man or other animals
Chewing gum
Articles used for components of any such articles
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Examples of food
Fruits
Vegetables
Fish
Dairy products
Eggs
Raw agricultural commodities for use as food or components of food
Animal feed, including pet food
Food and feed ingredients and additives, including substances that migrate into food from food packaging and other articles that contact food
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Dietary supplements and dietary ingredients
Infant formula
Beverages, including alcoholic beverages and bottled water 7 rule?
Live food animals such as hogs and elk
Bakery goods
Snack foods
Candy and
Canned foods
Outer packaging is exempt
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Examples of holding facilities
Warehouses
Cold storage facilities
Storage silos
Grain elevators
Liquid storage tanks
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Examples of manufacturing/processing -
making food from one or more ingredients, or synthesizing, preparing, treating, modifying or manipulating food, including food crops or ingredients
Manufacturing and processing overlap - macaroni and cheese
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Examples of packing
placing, putting or repacking a food into different containers without making any change to the form of the food
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U.S. Agent
Must be a live body at a real address, not a P.O. box, mail drop or answering service
Communications from the agent will be treated as coming from the foreign facility
Communications from FDA to the agent will be treated as having been given to the foreign facility
Should have a written agreement from the foreign facility which specifies the responsibilities of the parties
Failure to have proper authorization 18 U.S.C. 1001 violation
Filing is to be done electronically through a link on the FDA website
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Key date - October 12, 2003
Either the new system will be up and running,
or
FDA will advise the address to send paper registration applications
Electronic registration will yield an automatic confirmation number
Updates must be filed within 30 days
No fee but in English
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Name
Full address
Phone and fax numbers
E-mail address
Name and address of parent company
Emergency contact information name, title, office
phone, home phone, cell phone and e-mail address
All trade names used by the facility - brand names?
U.S. agent data - name, address, phone/fax numbers
and e-mail address
General categories of food produced
- see product code builder categories
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Certification at end of submission
The information is true and accurate, and
The individual submitting is authorized
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Optional data categories
Preferred mailing address
Type of activity
Additional food categories, e.g. dietary supplements, etc.
Type of facility, e.g. storage, manufacturing, etc.
Most/all - so dont need to have a list
Approximate dates of operation
All existing registration requirements remain in place
Does FDA have the authority to exempt facilities from registration if they are already registered with another federal agency?
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Failure to register is a prohibited act which can lead to criminal and/or civil enforcement action.
If a felony conviction follows, the party may be debarred, i.e., prohibited from importing.
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If the foreign facility fails to register, any imported food will be refused admission, i.e., held at the port of arrival it may also be moved to secure storage.
When should a registration be considered null and void?
When should a registration be revoked?
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Post-entry registration is allowed but the food stays in-bond until the process is completed.
If no registration is filed, the Customs G.O. provisions apply prior to destruction, the food may be re-exported.
With mixed shipments (food and non-food), the food portion takes priority so the rest of the container cannot move until the food portion is dealt with.
Release due to registration does not guaranty the food may proceed.
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FDAs issuance of a registration number simply confirms the facility is properly registered with FDA any language on a label suggesting FDA approval of the facility is considered misbranding
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Stakeholders
Presidents Council on Food
Secretary of Transportation
Secretary of the Treasury - Homeland Security?
Other relevant federal agencies
The food industry
Consumer and producer groups
Scientific organizations,
and the States
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Shall consult to develop a crisis communication and education strategy with respect to bioterroist threats to the food supply.
The goal is to increase the number of inspections of imported food to detect intentional adulteration of food.
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Debarment results if
Convicted of a felony for conduct related to the importation of food into the U.S.
The person is engaged in a pattern of importing or offering for import adulterated food that presents a threat of serious adverse health consequences or death to humans or animals
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Records
New regulations expected as FDA now has the power to ask for records from any party which manufactures, processes, packs, distributes, receives, holds or imports food.
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Are brokers included under these provisions?
Records to be maintained are those related to manufacturing, processing, packing, transporting, distributing, receiving, holding or importing food
Are the activities of a broker part of distribution? transportation? holding? receiving?
63 THE BIG QUESTIONS
What form will the FDA request for records take?
Written request likely but accompanied by demand for instant production.
What records must be turned over
Just those related to the individual shipment in question?
All shipments for that customer?
What to do if an FDA investigator shows up demanding records?
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Comment deadline for prior notice and registration proposed regulations