Thursday, November 22, 2012

Do you have a Food Safety Program ?


PrimusLabs program designed for smaller growers

PrimusLabs
A three-pronged program to help small growers meet food safety requirements is in the works at PrimusLabs, with a March rollout planned.

Debra Garrison, director of business development for Santa Maria, Calif.-based PrimusLabs, said the company is working with university extension offices and county Farm Bureau Federation staffs to develop and test the program. She said 10 state agriculture departments are also working on the project.
PrimusLabs at Fresh Summit 2012Coral BeachPrimusLabs staff (from left), Anita Gonsalves, Kiley Harper-Larsen, Debra Garrison and Jaime Logan, discussed food safety programs for all sizes of operations with attendees at the Produce Marketing Association’s Fresh Summit 2012. Garrison said a new program for smaller growers is in the pilot phase, and set to launch in March 2013.“We know a lot of smaller growers don’t have the resources and staff that larger operations have to devote to food safety plans,” Garrison said.
“We also know that there aren’t enough auditors in some regions and those are often where the smaller growers are.”
To address those issues, PrimusLabs is developing the Small Scale Local Farm Food Safety Program. Garrison said it is designed with the locally-grown movement in mind and will target growers with 100 acres or less who sell directly to local chefs, school districts, retailers and foodservice customers.
Teresa Wiemerslage, an outreach educator with the Iowa State University Extension Office, said small growers need the help. She said Nov. 14 that the ISU Extension Office has been in discussions with PrimusLabs about its new program.
About 20 produce growers Wiemerslage has been working with is one group that could benefit from the programs.
“They needed certifications to service an account,” Wiemerslage said. “But a $1,000 audit is not something that is easy for them to swallow.”
The state does not have an auditor on staff, so growers must pay to bring in auditors when they seek certification.
Such scenarios are exactly what the PrimusLabs program is designed to address, Garrison said. The program allows smaller growers to have access to a larger pool of independent third-party contract auditors who should be able to provide audits for a few hundred dollars instead of more than $1,000.
One prong of the program will help university extension programs identify, qualify and train independent third-party contract auditors by targeting graduate students and retired extension agents.
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Source : The Packer, Coral Beach, 11/15/2012 9:17 AM 

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