Implementation of the Food and Drug Administration Food Safety Modernization Act Amendments to the Reportable Food Registry Provisions of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 16698-16704 [2014-06614]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 58 / Wednesday, March 26, 2014 / Proposed Rules
Commission’s swap data reporting rules. I
commend the cross-divisional data team’s
effort to fix our reporting rules and enhance
the Commission’s ability to use its data. I
hope that the data team and the Commission
will carefully evaluate market participants’
comments and recommendations and
develop workable solutions to improve our
data reporting regime.
At the same time, I urge market
participants to carefully review the
Commission’s questions, submit their
comments, and alert the Commission to other
data reporting issues that have not been
included in this request for comment. This
comment period is a critical step in the
Commission’s effort to improve its data
utilization. I encourage all market
participants to help the Commission improve
its data reporting regime.
[FR Doc. 2014–06426 Filed 3–25–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6351–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Dated: March 21, 2014.
Bernadette Dunham,
Director, Center for Veterinary Medicine.
Food and Drug Administration
21 CFR Part 573
[FR Doc. 2014–06623 Filed 3–25–14; 8:45 am]
[Docket No. FDA–2014–F–0296]
BILLING CODE 4160–01–P
DSM Nutritional Products; Filing of
Food Additive Petition (Animal Use)
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION:
The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) is announcing
that DSM Nutritional Products has filed
a petition proposing that the food
additive regulations be amended to
provide for the safe use of 25hydroxyvitamin D3 in feed for turkeys.
DATES: Submit either electronic or
written comments on the petitioner’s
request for categorical exclusion from
preparing an environmental assessment
or environmental impact statement by
April 25, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Submit electronic
comments to: https://
www.regulations.gov. Submit written
comments to the Division of Dockets
Management (HFA–305), Food and Drug
Administration, 5630 Fishers Lane, Rm.
1061, Rockville, MD 20852.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Isabel W. Pocurull, Center for Veterinary
Medicine, Food and Drug
Administration, 7519 Standish Pl.,
Rockville, MD 20855, 240-453-6853.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Under the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
(section 409(b)(5) (21 U.S.C. 348(b)(5)),
notice is given that a food additive
petition (FAP 2279) has been filed by
DSM Nutritional Products, 45
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
SUMMARY:
16:14 Mar 25, 2014
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
Notice of petition.
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Waterview Blvd., Parsippany, NJ 07054.
The petition proposes to amend Title 21
of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR)
in part 573 Food Additives Permitted in
Feed and Drinking Water of Animals (21
CFR part 573) to provide for the safe use
of 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 in feed for
turkeys.
The petitioner has requested a
categorical exclusion from preparing an
environmental assessment or
environmental impact statement under
21 CFR 25.32(r). Interested persons may
submit either electronic or a single copy
of written comments regarding this
request for categorical exclusion to the
Division of Dockets Management (see
DATES and ADDRESSES). Identify
comments with the docket number
found in brackets in the heading of this
document. Received comments may be
seen in the Division of Dockets
Management between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.,
Monday through Friday.
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21 CFR Chapter I
[Docket No. FDA–2013–N–0590]
RIN 0910–AG97
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
Advance notice of proposed
rulemaking.
ACTION:
The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) is issuing this
advance notice of proposed rulemaking
(ANPRM) to solicit comments, data, and
information to assist the Agency in
implementing the FDA Food Safety
Modernization Act (FSMA), which
added new provisions to the Reportable
Food Registry (RFR) requirements of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
(the FD&C Act). Under the new
provisions, FDA may require a
responsible party to also submit to FDA
‘‘consumer-oriented’’ information
regarding certain reportable foods,
including information necessary to
SUMMARY:
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Submit either electronic or
written comments by June 9, 2014.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by Docket No. FDA–2013–N–
0590 or Regulatory Information Number
(RIN) number 0910–AG97, by any of the
following methods:
DATES:
Electronic Submissions
Submit electronic comments in the
following way:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Written Submissions
Implementation of the Food and Drug
Administration Food Safety
Modernization Act Amendments to the
Reportable Food Registry Provisions
of the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act
AGENCY:
enable a consumer to accurately identify
whether the consumer is in possession
of a reportable food. FDA must prepare
and publish on FDA’s Internet Web site
a one-page summary of the consumeroriented information that can be easily
printed by a grocery store for the
purposes of consumer notification. A
grocery store that sold a reportable food
that is the subject of an FDA one-page
summary, and that is part of a chain of
establishments with 15 or more physical
locations, is required to prominently
display the FDA one-page summary, or
the information from the summary,
within 24 hours after the one-page
summary is published on FDA’s Web
site, through a method identified by
FDA. FDA is seeking input on topics
including consumer-oriented
information submissions, consumer
notifications, posting consumer
notifications in grocery stores, and
grocery stores subject to the new
requirements.
Sfmt 4702
Submit written submissions in the
following ways:
• Mail/Hand delivery/Courier (for
paper submissions): Division of Dockets
Management (HFA–305), Food and Drug
Administration, 5630 Fishers Lane, Rm.
1061, Rockville, MD 20852.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the Agency name and
Docket No. FDA–2013–N–0590 and RIN
0910–AG97 for this advance notice of
proposed rulemaking. All comments
received may be posted without change
to https://www.regulations.gov, including
any personal information provided. For
additional information on submitting
comments, see the ‘‘Comments’’ heading
of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section of this document.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments received, go to https://
www.regulations.gov and insert the
docket number(s), found in brackets in
the heading of this document, into the
‘‘Search’’ box and follow the prompts
and/or go to the Division of Dockets
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Management, 5630 Fishers Lane, Rm.
1061, Rockville, MD 20852.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ted
Elkin, Center for Food Safety and
Applied Nutrition (HFS–008), Food and
Drug Administration, 5100 Paint Branch
Pkwy., College Park, MD 20740, 240–
402–2428; or April Hodges, Center for
Veterinary Medicine (HFV–230), Food
and Drug Administration, 7519 Standish
Pl., Rockville, MD 20855, 240–276–
9237.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
I. Background
A. The Reportable Food Registry
Section 1005 of the Food and Drug
Administration Amendments Act of
2007 (FDAAA) (Pub. L. 110–085)
amended the FD&C Act by creating
section 417 entitled ‘‘Reportable Food
Registry’’ (21 U.S.C. 350(f)). Under
section 1005 of FDAAA, FDA
established the RFR, an electronic portal
that is used to submit mandatory and
voluntary reports to FDA regarding
‘‘reportable foods.’’ A ‘‘reportable food’’
is an article of food (other than dietary
supplements or infant formula) for
which there is a reasonable probability
that the use of, or exposure to, such
article of food will cause serious adverse
health consequences or death to humans
or animals (see section 201(ff) of the
FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 321(ff)) and section
417(a)(2) of the FD&C Act). Subject to
certain exceptions, a ‘‘responsible
party’’ is required to submit a report to
FDA through the RFR, as soon as
practicable, but in no case later than 24
hours after determining that an article of
food is a reportable food (see section
417(d) of the FD&C Act). Under section
417(a)(1) of the FD&C Act, a
‘‘responsible party’’ with respect to an
article of food is defined as ‘‘a person
that submits the registration under
section 415(a) [of the FD&C Act (21
U.S.C. 350d)] for a food facility that is
required to register under section 415(a),
at which such article of food is
manufactured, processed, packed, or
held.’’ The FD&C Act specifies that the
term ‘‘person’’ includes individuals,
partnerships, corporations, and
associations (section 201(e) of the FD&C
Act). A Federal, State, or local public
health official may submit a report
about a reportable food to FDA through
the RFR (section 417(d)(3) of the FD&C
Act).
Several terms are used to describe the
RFR system as a whole, as well as its
components. Reportable food reports are
submitted through the Department of
Health and Human Services Safety
Reporting Portal at https://
www.safetyreporting.hhs.gov/, which
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we refer to in this document as ‘‘the
Safety Reporting Portal’’ or ‘‘SRP.’’ The
term ‘‘Registry’’ refers to the database
maintained by FDA to catalogue reports
that have been submitted through the
Safety Reporting Portal, and that Agency
review has determined to be reports for
foods that meet the standard for
‘‘reportable foods.’’ The terms
‘‘Reportable Food Registry’’ and ‘‘RFR’’
refer to the system as a whole. This
terminology is consistent with terms
FDA uses in its annual reports on the
RFR. (See ‘‘The Reportable Food
Registry: A New Approach to Targeting
Inspection Resources and Identifying
Patterns of Adulteration: First Annual
Report: September 8, 2009–September 7,
2010’’ (January 2011); ‘‘The Reportable
Food Registry: Targeting Inspection
Resources and Identifying Patterns of
Adulteration: Second Annual Report:
September 8, 2010–September 7, 2011’’
(April 2012); and ‘‘The Reportable Food
Registry: Targeting Inspection Resources
and Identifying Patterns of Adulteration:
Third Annual Report: September 8,
2011–September 7, 2012’’ (April 2013),
available at https://www.fda.gov/
ReportableFoodRegistry).
The RFR reporting requirements cover
reportable foods that are not under the
exclusive jurisdiction of the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, which
include human food (except infant
formula and dietary supplements) and
animal food/feed (including pet food)
regulated by FDA. (Other mandatory
reporting systems exist for infant
formula and dietary supplements.1)
Submissions through the Safety
Reporting Portal provide early warning
to FDA about potential serious public
health risks related to reportable foods
and increase the speed with which the
Agency and its partners at the State and
local levels can investigate and take
appropriate action, including ensuring
that reportable foods are removed from
commerce when necessary.
FDA’s RFR does not receive
reportable food reports from consumers
through the Safety Reporting Portal.
Instead, FDA has established other
reporting forms for receiving and
responding to consumer emergencies,
complaints, questions, and concerns
about FDA-regulated foods. (See, e.g.,
1 A manufacturer, packer, or distributor of a
dietary supplement whose name appears on the
label of a dietary supplement marketed in the
United States must submit to FDA any report
received of a serious adverse event associated with
such dietary supplement when used in the United
States, accompanied by a copy of the dietary
supplement’s label, under section 761 of the FD&C
Act (21 U.S.C. 379aa–1). Infant formula
manufacturers must comply with notification
requirements for violative infant formula in 21 CFR
107.240.
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‘‘Your Guide to Reporting Problems to
FDA’’ at https://www.fda.gov/
ForConsumers/ConsumerUpdates/
ucm095859.htm).
Reportable food reports submitted by
responsible parties or public health
officials, such as Federal, State, or local
public health officials, are categorized
and tracked by FDA. The initial report
concerning a reportable food that FDA
generally receives from either a
responsible party or a public health
official is designated as the primary
report for that reportable food. All other
reports subsequently received from a
responsible party (i.e., either by an
immediate previous source (upstream)
or an immediate subsequent recipient
(downstream)) of a reportable food for
which a primary report has been
submitted are designated as subsequent
reports. After consultation with the
responsible party that submitted an
initial report, FDA may require such
responsible party to amend the initial
report to include contact information for
certain parties directly linked in the
supply chain (section 417(d)(6)(A) of the
FD&C Act). This type of report, which
corrects or adds to an initial report, is
an amended report. The responsible
party may also provide corrections or
add new information to a report at any
time voluntarily. FDA may also require
a responsible party that has submitted
an initial report to notify the immediate
previous source (upstream) or the
immediate subsequent recipient
(downstream) of the food for which the
responsible party has submitted an
initial report, if FDA deems necessary
(see section 417(d)(6)(B) of the FD&C
Act). If another responsible party, such
as the immediate previous source or
immediate subsequent recipient of the
food, receives a notification regarding a
food for which an initial report has been
submitted, FDA may require such
responsible party to submit a report to
FDA regarding that reportable food (see
section 417(d)(7) of the FD&C Act). This
type of report, as indicated previously,
is a subsequent report as it contains
additional information regarding the
reportable food from a responsible party
other than the responsible party that
submitted the initial report. If a
responsible party receives a notification
with respect to a food and the
responsible party has already submitted
an initial report or subsequent report to
FDA with respect to such food, the
responsible party is required to amend
such report to include contact
information for certain parties directly
linked in the supply chain and provide
the unique report number(s) issued
through the Safety Reporting Portal for
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report(s) (by which FDA is able to link
reports about the reportable food and
identify the supply chain) for such
reportable food (see section 417(d)(8) of
the FD&C Act).
After reports are submitted to FDA
through the Safety Reporting Portal,
FDA reviews and assesses the
information for purposes of identifying
reportable foods, entering information
into the Registry, issuing an alert as
FDA deems necessary, and exercising
other existing food safety authorities to
protect the public health (see sections
417(b)(2) and (c) of the FD&C Act).
Due to the potential for confusion, it
is important to explain that there are
key differences between FDA’s RFR and
food recall programs. Generally, FDA’s
food recall program has been the
primary channel of food product safety
communication between FDA,
consumers, and others in the supply
chain. The RFR is a separate program,
and its general purpose has been to
provide a ‘‘reliable mechanism to track
patterns of adulteration in food . . . [to]
support efforts by the [FDA] to target
limited inspection resources to protect
the public health’’ (Pub. L. 110–085,
section 1005(a)(4)). Where the food
recall program would, in part, gather
and communicate information helpful
to consumers who may encounter a
recalled food, such as safe product
disposal instructions, the RFR gathers
information to identify and track a
reportable food in the supply chain. The
FSMA amendments to section 417 of the
FD&C Act will give the RFR a greater
role in informing the public in the event
of a potential public health emergency.
B. FSMA Amendments to the Reportable
Food Registry
On January 4, 2011, FSMA (Pub. L.
111–353) was signed into law. FSMA
generally amended the FD&C Act to
provide for a modernized, preventionbased food safety system. FSMA
amended section 417 of the FD&C Act,
which governs the RFR, in relevant part
by adding paragraphs (f), (g), and (h)
(Pub. L. 111–353, 124 Stat. 3885, 3951–
3953). Section 417(f), as amended by
FSMA, provides that, within 18 months
after the date of enactment of FSMA, the
Secretary of Health and Human Services
(the Secretary) (and by delegation, FDA)
may require a responsible party to
submit to FDA ‘‘consumer-oriented
information’’ regarding a reportable food
with the exception of fruits and
vegetables that are raw agricultural
commodities. The consumer-oriented
information must include the following:
(1) A description of the article of food;
(2) affected product identification codes,
such as the Universal Product Code
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(UPC), stock keeping unit (SKU), or lot
or batch numbers sufficient for the
consumer to identify the article of food;
(3) contact information for the
responsible party; and (4) any other
information FDA determines is
necessary to enable a consumer to
accurately identify whether such
consumer is in possession of the
reportable food (section 417(f)(4) of the
FD&C Act). Section 417(g)(1) of the
FD&C Act, as amended by FSMA,
requires FDA to prepare the consumeroriented information described in
section 417(f) as a standardized onepage summary, and publish the onepage summary on FDA’s Web site in a
format that can be easily printed by a
grocery store for purposes of consumer
notification.
A grocery store that is part of a chain
of establishments with 15 or more
physical locations (‘‘chain grocery
store’’) that sold a reportable food that
is the subject of a one-page summary
published on FDA’s Web site must
notify consumers by: (1) Prominently
displaying the one-page summary or
information from such summary,
through a method described in section
417(h)(2) of the FD&C Act, no later than
24 hours after the one-page summary is
published on FDA’s Web site, and (2)
maintain the display for 14 days
(section 417(h)(1) of the FD&C Act). The
chain grocery store must also include in
the consumer notification the date and
time that the one-page summary was
posted on the FDA’s Web site (section
417(g)(2) of the FD&C Act).
Section 417(h)(2) of the FD&C Act, as
amended by FSMA, requires that,
within 1 year after the date of enactment
of FSMA, FDA develop and publish ‘‘a
list of acceptable conspicuous locations
and manners’’ from which a chain
grocery store must select at least one
method for displaying a consumer
notification about the reportable food.
Section 417(h)(2) provides that the list
of acceptable conspicuous locations and
manners must include the following:
• ‘‘Posting the notification at or near
the register;’’
• ‘‘Providing the location of the
reportable food;’’
• ‘‘Providing targeted recall
information given to customers upon
purchase of food;’’ and
• ‘‘Other such prominent and
conspicuous locations and manners
utilized by grocery stores as of the date
of the enactment of [FSMA (i.e., as of
January 4, 2011)] to provide notice of
such recalls to consumers as considered
appropriate by the Secretary.’’
While sections 417(f) and 417(h)(2) of
the FD&C Act include statutory
deadlines within 18 and 12 months of
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the enactment of FSMA, respectively,
FDA is issuing this ANPRM, rather than
a notice of proposed rulemaking, to
solicit further input from the public
regarding issues related to the FSMA
amendments to section 417 of the FD&C
Act. As discussed in the paragraphs that
follow, FDA believes that the
information it obtains through this
ANPRM will assist the Agency in
implementing and efficiently enforcing
the FSMA amendments to section 417 of
the FD&C Act.
II. June 6, 2011, Public Meeting and
Request for Comments
On May 26, 2011, FDA issued a
Federal Register notice announcing a
public meeting scheduled for June 6,
2011, entitled ‘‘FDA Food Safety
Modernization Act: Focus on
Inspections and Compliance’’ (FSMA
public meeting notice) and requesting
comments (76 FR 30727). The purpose
of the public meeting was to provide
interested persons an opportunity to
discuss implementation of inspections
and compliance under FSMA, and to
give the public an opportunity to
provide information and share views to
inform FDA’s FSMA implementation
strategies related to, among other things,
implementation of the new provisions
in section 417 of the FD&C Act. The
FSMA public meeting notice presented
the following questions related to the
FSMA amendments to section 417 of the
FD&C Act:
• What information is necessary to
enable a consumer to accurately identify
whether the consumer is in possession
of a reportable food?
• What methods could best be used
by grocery stores to inform consumers of
information to enable them to identify
whether they possess a reportable food?
• Are there other approaches to
getting key information in the hands of
consumers in real time that FDA should
also consider pursuing?
• Who should FDA consider to be a
grocery store subject to the consumer
notification requirement in section
417(h) of the FD&C Act?
• What methods are grocery stores
currently using to provide notice of food
recalls to consumers?
At the public meeting, FDA provided
opportunities for individuals to make
presentations during an open public and
Webcast comment session. A transcript
of FDA’s remarks at the opening session,
the open public and Webcast comment
session, and the listening session is
available on FDA’s Web site at (https://
www.fda.gov/Food/
GuidanceRegulation/FSMA/
ucm255954.htm). No public comments
regarding the FSMA amendments to
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section 417 of the FD&C Act were
received during the public meeting
sessions. Stakeholders were given other
opportunities to express their views
during breakout sessions focused on
specific topics, including a session on
section 417 of the FD&C Act. These
sessions were not recorded.
In the FSMA public meeting notice,
FDA also requested comments, and
noted that electronic or written
comments could be submitted to the
Division of Dockets Management
regardless of whether commenters
attended the public meeting. FDA
opened Docket No. FDA–2011–N–0366
for public comments. In response to this
request, FDA received three comments.
The comments were from trade
associations and a consumer group.
These comments are discussed in
section III.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
III. Issues and Requests for Data and
Information
As noted previously, FDA only
received three comments regarding the
FSMA amendments to section 417 of the
FD&C Act. While these comments
provided useful input, additional input
from the public would assist the Agency
in implementing and efficiently
enforcing the FSMA amendments to
section 417 of the FD&C Act. In addition
to the issues described in the FSMA
public meeting notice, there are several
other issues related to the new
requirements in section 417 for which
FDA believes further comment, data,
and information would be helpful to the
Agency in implementing and enforcing
the new requirements. As discussed in
the paragraphs that follow, FDA is
soliciting input regarding what
information responsible parties should
be required to provide to the Agency in
consumer-oriented information
submissions for reportable foods to
enable consumers to accurately identify
whether they possess such foods, as
specified in section 417(f)(4) of the
FD&C Act (FDA ‘‘may require a
responsible party to submit to [FDA]
consumer-oriented information
regarding a reportable food, which shall
include . . . any other information
[FDA] determines is necessary to enable
a consumer to accurately identify
whether such consumer is in possession
of the reportable food.’’). FDA
anticipates that additional input from
the public, including consumers and
stakeholders, regarding what
information would allow consumers to
determine whether they possess
reportable foods will be critical in
FDA’s implementation of section 417(f)
of the FD&C Act.
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FDA is also soliciting input regarding
manners and locations used by grocery
stores to provide food recall information
to consumers, as specified in section
417(h)(2) of the FD&C Act (FDA ‘‘shall
develop and publish a list of acceptable
conspicuous locations and manners,
from which grocery stores shall select at
least one, for providing the notification
required in [section 417(h)(1) of the
FD&C Act] . . . [which] shall include
. . . other such prominent and
conspicuous locations and manners
utilized by grocery stores as of the date
of the enactment of [FSMA] to provide
notice of such recalls to consumers
. . .’’). There may be several manners
and locations in which grocery stores
provide or have provided food recall
information to consumers. Further,
grocery stores and consumers can
provide more information to FDA
regarding these manners and locations,
including the advantages and
disadvantages of particular approaches.
In addition, FDA is soliciting
information regarding potential impacts
to and costs incurred by chain grocery
stores related to posting consumer
notifications, as required by section
417(h) of the FD&C Act. Because grocery
stores likely have experience with
providing notices to consumers, these
stores likely have data and information
that could assist the Agency in
estimating associated costs and burdens
related to compliance. Such information
could also assist the Agency in
establishing requirements to efficiently
enforce the FSMA amendments to
section 417 of the FD&C Act.
FDA anticipates that information from
stakeholders and the public regarding
these issues, along with the other issues
described in the paragraphs that follow,
will significantly assist the Agency in
developing requirements to implement
section 417 of FD&C Act and efficiently
enforce such requirements. For these
reasons, FDA is issuing this ANPRM to
solicit additional comments, data, and
other information related to the FSMA
amendments to section 417 of the FD&C
Act.
Issue 1: Consumer-Oriented Information
Submissions and Consumer
Notifications
Question 1a: What information should
FDA require be included in consumeroriented information submissions and
consumer notifications for a reportable
food to enable a consumer to accurately
identify whether he or she is in
possession of the reportable food?
Section 417(f) of the FD&C Act
provides that the consumer-oriented
information submitted to FDA by a
responsible party must include: (1) A
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description of the article of food; (2)
affected product identification codes,
such as UPC, SKU, or lot or batch
numbers sufficient for the consumer to
identify the article of food; (3) contact
information for the responsible party;
and (4) ‘‘any other information the
Secretary determines is necessary to
enable a consumer to accurately identify
whether such consumer is in possession
of the reportable food.’’ Section
417(g)(1) requires that FDA prepare the
consumer-oriented information as a
standardized one-page summary and
publish such one-page summary on
FDA’s Web site in a format that can be
easily printed by grocery stores for the
purposes of consumer notification. In
response to a similar question presented
in the FSMA public meeting notice, two
commenters asserted that the consumeroriented information should include the
reason for the recall of the reportable
food, if applicable. Another commenter
recommended that the consumeroriented information include a picture
of the product and product label, state
when the product was sold, and state
what consumers should do with the
product.
FDA is interested in additional data
and information regarding what
information should be required in
consumer-oriented information
submissions and consumer notifications
for reportable foods to enable a
consumer to accurately identify whether
such consumer is in possession of the
reportable food. FDA is also interested
in data and information regarding
whether the one-page summary of
consumer-oriented information posted
at FDA’s Web site should contain other
information, such as advice to
consumers on disposing of a reportable
food product.
Question 1b: Should FDA require
responsible parties to submit consumeroriented information to FDA, as
described in section 417(f) of the FD&C
Act, for reportable foods that are not
available, or will not be available, for
sale to consumers in chain grocery
stores or otherwise available for sale to
consumers at the retail food market?
As noted previously, a ‘‘responsible
party’’ generally is required to submit a
report to FDA through the Safety
Reporting Portal, as soon as practicable,
but in no case later than 24 hours after
determining that an article of food is a
reportable food (see section 417(d) of
the FD&C Act). In addition, section
417(f) of the FD&C Act provides that
FDA may require a responsible party to
submit to FDA consumer-oriented
information regarding a reportable food
(except for fruits and vegetables that are
raw agricultural commodities). It is
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possible that there may be a reportable
food, for which a responsible party is
required to submit a report to FDA
through the Safety Reporting Portal
under section 417(d), that has not or
will not reach the retail food market,
including chain grocery stores. For
example, many reportable food reports
concern food ingredients and bulk
commercial products that are not sold at
the retail level. One of the purposes of
the RFR is to identify makers of foods
sold at retail who have received an
ingredient that is the subject of a
reportable food report to stop shipment
of possibly contaminated foods before
they are sold at retail. Under section
417(f) of the FD&C Act, a responsible
party may also be required to submit to
FDA consumer-oriented information for
such a reportable food. Section 417(h)(1)
makes clear that unless a chain grocery
store sold a food that is the subject of
a one-page summary published by FDA,
the grocery store is not required to post
a consumer notification described in
section 417(g) about such food. FDA is
interested in comments or other
information regarding whether FDA
should require responsible parties to
submit the consumer-oriented
information described in section 417(f)
for all reportable foods, including those
that have not been available, or will not
be available, for sale to consumers in
chain grocery stores or otherwise
available for sale to consumers at the
retail food market.
Question 1c: FDA is interested in
additional data and information from
industry and consumer groups regarding
consumer preferences for receiving
information. For the one-page
summaries of consumer-oriented
information prepared by FDA and
published on FDA’s Web site, what
structure and format would be the most
useful to grocery stores and consumers?
To what extent, if any, should the
consumer-oriented information be
provided in languages other than
English?
Question 1d: Should FDA revise and
republish a one-page summary of
consumer-oriented information on
FDA’s Web site if the published
information no longer provides the
information necessary to enable a
consumer to accurately identify whether
such consumer is in possession of the
reportable food? For example, a recall
expanding to include additional lots,
and corrections in amended industry
reports could create this scenario. If a
one-page summary is revised and
republished on FDA’s Web site, should
this trigger additional posting
obligations for chain grocery stores?
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Question 1e: What mechanisms can
be employed so that chain grocery stores
are aware that a one-page summary of
consumer-oriented information for a
reportable food has been published on
the Agency’s Web site, or that a
previously published one-page
summary has been revised?
Issue 2: Grocery Stores
Question 2a: What types of retail
establishments should FDA consider to
be ‘‘grocery stores’’ within the meaning
of section 417(h) of the FD&C Act?
Section 417(h)(1) provides in relevant
part that if a chain grocery store sold a
reportable food that is the subject of a
one-page consumer-oriented
information summary published on
FDA’s Web site, the chain grocery store
must prominently display the one-page
summary or information from the onepage summary within 24 hours after the
one-page summary is published on
FDA’s Web site and maintain such
display for 14 days. The FD&C Act does
not define the term ‘‘grocery store.’’
FDA requests comment on what types of
retail establishments should be subject
to the consumer notification
requirements of section 417(h). Please
provide an explanation for your
response and any supporting data.
Comments that FDA received in
response to the FSMA public meeting
notice supported a broad definition of
the term ‘‘grocery store’’ to encompass
all retail establishments in which the
sale of groceries is a primary business
activity, including supermarkets,
warehouse stores, wholesale club stores,
convenience stores, and other stores that
are part of a chain. One commenter
noted that consumers may buy groceries
online from both grocery store chains
and other online retailers, and stated
that these retailers should also be
required to provide the consumer
notifications described in section 417(h)
of the FD&C Act. Two commenters
recommended that, in developing a
definition of the term ‘‘grocery store’’ for
purposes of implementing section
417(h), FDA consider the definition of
‘‘retail food establishment,’’ which
includes grocery stores, in FDA’s
regulations for registration of food
facilities at 21 CFR 1.227(b)(11).
Issue 3: Posting Consumer Notifications
Question 3a: How can a chain grocery
store prominently display or provide a
consumer notification via a conspicuous
location or manner as described in
section 417(h)(2) of the FD&C Act?
Section 417(h)(1) of the FD&C Act
provides in relevant part that if a chain
grocery store sold a reportable food that
is the subject of a one-page consumer-
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oriented information summary
published on FDA’s Web site, the chain
grocery store must ‘‘prominently display
such summary or the information from
such summary via at least one of the
methods identified in [section
417(h)(2)].’’ Section 417(h)(2) provides
in relevant part that FDA shall develop
and publish ‘‘a list of acceptable
conspicuous locations and manners,
from which grocery stores shall select at
least one, for providing [consumer
notifications].’’ Further, section
417(h)(2) provides that such list must
include: (1) Posting the notification at or
near the register; (2) providing the
location of the reportable food; (3)
providing targeted recall information
given to customers upon purchase of a
food; and (4) other such prominent and
conspicuous locations and manners
utilized by grocery stores as of the date
of enactment of FSMA (i.e., January 4,
2011) to provide notice of such recalls
to consumers as considered appropriate
by FDA.
Question 3b: How can a chain grocery
store prominently display or provide a
consumer notification ‘‘at or near the
register’’ as described in section
417(h)(2)(A) of the FD&C Act?
Question 3c: How can a chain grocery
store prominently display or provide a
consumer notification in a way that
provides ‘‘the location of the reportable
food,’’ as described in section
417(h)(2)(B) of the FD&C Act?
Question 3d: How can a chain grocery
store prominently display or provide a
consumer notification in a way that
provides ‘‘targeted recall information
given to customers upon purchase of a
food,’’ as described in section
417(h)(2)(C) of the FD&C Act?
Question 3e: Section 417(h)(2) of the
FD&C Act requires FDA to develop and
publish a ‘‘list of acceptable
conspicuous locations and manners’’ for
chain grocery stores to post the
consumer notifications described in
section 417(g), and describes certain
locations and manners. Section
417(h)(2)(D) provides in relevant part
that such a list must include ‘‘other
such prominent and conspicuous
locations and manners utilized by
grocery stores as of the date of
enactment of [FSMA] to provide notice
of . . . recalls to consumers as
considered appropriate by [FDA]’’. What
methods, manners, and/or locations, if
any, have grocery stores or other retail
food establishments used to effectively
notify consumers about food recalls?
One comment that FDA received in
response to the FSMA public meeting
notice stated that FDA regulations
implementing the consumer notification
requirements of section 417 of the FD&C
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Act or related guidance should provide
retailers with the flexibility to choose
among different approaches to notifying
consumers about food recall
information. The commenter stated that
the regulations should ‘‘afford the
opportunity for new ideas and modes of
notification and not be so prescriptive
as to limit innovation.’’ Section
417(h)(2)(D) of the FD&C Act specifies
that the other manners and locations
that must be included on the list
developed and published by FDA (as
considered appropriate by FDA) are
those used by grocery stores as of the
date of enactment of FSMA to provide
notice of food recalls that are
‘‘conspicuous’’ and ‘‘prominent.’’ In
light of this requirement, FDA is
particularly interested in data and
information on the most innovative and
effective approaches used by grocery
stores or other retail food establishments
to notify consumers about food recalls
in manners and locations that are
conspicuous and prominent.
One commenter recommended that,
where purchases of food have occurred
over the Internet, electronically
contacting consumers is effective
because the retailer knows exactly what
the consumer purchased and has
reliable contact information for the
consumer. The commenters noted that
these consumers may never see a
posting in a physical store. Two
commenters recommended the use of
loyalty cards as a tool to notify
customers. One of these commenters
cited a report by a retailer that noted
that the retailer was able to
electronically notify 90 percent of
purchasers (17 of 19) of a recalled food
item.
One commenter stated that retailers
currently notify consumers of food
recalls by: (1) Posting information at or
near the register; (2) posting information
at the area where the food is displayed;
(3) loyalty card or membership
notifications by email, phone, or mail;
(4) providing printout information to
consumers at checkout; (5) Web site
posting; (6) posting information at
kiosks in the store; and (7) posting
information on a bulletin board or
similar information area. The comment
suggested that FDA allow retailers to
choose one or more manners of
notification, or use different manners for
different recalls. The commenter
identified factors that may be relevant to
the manner used, including the size of
recall; whether the product was
distributed nationally or more narrowly;
the type of product; the target
customers; the shelf life of the product,
and the product’s use as an ingredient
in other foods.
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Question 3f: What factors could
influence a chain grocery store’s
decision about whether to display a onepage summary of consumer-oriented
information regarding a reportable food
as published on FDA’s Web site, or
instead to display the information from
the FDA summary?
Section 417(h)(1) of the FD&C Act
requires in relevant part that chain
grocery stores prominently display, in
the prescribed timeframe, either the
consumer-oriented information onepage summary published on FDA’s Web
site ‘‘or the information from such
summary.’’
Question 3g: Could compliance with
the consumer notification requirements
of section 417(h) of the FD&C Act by
chain grocery stores affect the voluntary
or mandatory display of other
information regarding a food recall by
retail establishments?
One commenter stated that food
retailers receive product recall
notifications primarily from their
suppliers or manufacturers, usually
before the information is provided by
FDA or through the RFR. The
commenter stated that in addition to
removing the product from sale, food
retailers take action to notify consumers.
The commenter argued that if FDA links
notifying consumers about recalls to the
RFR one-page summaries prepared by
FDA and published on FDA’s Web site,
it could result in a delay compared to
current practices for notifying
consumers about recalls, or could result
in duplicative notices. The commenter
recommended that food retailers who
notify consumers about food recalls
before FDA information is available not
be required to provide any subsequent
notifications, unless information about
the recall has changed.
FDA is interested in receiving further
comment on the issues raised in these
comments. We note that nothing in the
new requirements in section 417 of the
FD&C Act precludes a chain grocery
store from posting its own notice
regarding a food recall before FDA
publishes on its Web site a one-page
summary of consumer-oriented
information regarding a reportable food.
However, regardless of the actions a
responsible party or grocery store may
take prior to FDA’s publication of a onepage summary, the consumer
notification requirements of section
417(h) would still apply. Accordingly, if
a chain grocery store sold a reportable
food that is the subject of a one-page
summary, the grocery store would still
be required to prominently display the
one-page summary or the information
from the summary within 24 hours after
the summary is published on FDA’s
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Sfmt 4702
16703
Web site and must maintain the display
for 14 days.
Question 3h: What, if any, impact will
the consumer notification requirements
in section 417(h) have on grocery store
operations? For example, how might the
requirements affect resources if
resources are spent monitoring FDA’s
Web site for new consumer notifications
to be posted, or resources are spent
posting such notifications or the
information from such notifications?
Question 3i: What are the estimated
costs to chain grocery stores, per store
and per reportable food, associated with
displaying consumer notifications as
required by section 417(h)?
Question 3j: How much time (hours
per reportable food) is currently used by
grocery store and other retail food
establishment employees (including
managers) to notify consumers about
reportable foods? What is the estimated
change, if any, in the time spent on
notifying consumers about reportable
foods as a result of the consumer
notification requirements in section
417(h) of the FD&C Act?
Question 3k: Should chain grocery
stores be permitted to use multiple
manners and locations, as identified by
FDA, to post consumer notifications
consecutively for a total of 14 days?
Section 417(h)(1) of the FD&C Act
provides in relevant part that a chain
grocery store that sold a reportable food
that is the subject of a one-page
summary published on FDA’s Web site
must prominently display such
summary or the information from such
summary, and maintain such display for
14 days. One commenter suggested that
the 14-day time period should begin
when the retailer first notifies
consumers about a recall. Further, the
commenter stated that for other methods
of informing consumers about food
recalls a 14-day duration might not be
practicable (e.g., repeated phone calls to
the same consumer for 14 days). The
commenter also stated that the 14-day
time period should include all
notification manners used by the
grocery store. The commenter noted, as
an example, that a grocery could post a
sign for 2 days notifying consumers
about a recall for a food product whose
shelf life is long past, and then the
grocery store could post the information
for the next 12 days on the retailer’s
Web site. Because of the statutory terms
in section 417(h) of the FD&C Act
regarding a chain grocery store
‘‘prominently display[ing]’’ an FDA onepage summary or information from such
summary and ‘‘maintain[ing] the
display for 14 days,’’ it seems unlikely
that the telephone calls described in the
comment would satisfy section 417(h).
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FDA is interested in further comment
and information regarding manners and
locations for posting consumer
notifications for the 14-day time period
specified in section 417(h).
Issue 4: Other Issues
Question 4a: As noted previously, the
term ‘‘reportable food’’ does not include
dietary supplements or infant formula
(see sections 201(ff) and 417(a)(2) of the
FD&C Act). Further, as discussed
previously, section 417(f) of the FD&C
Act, as amended by FSMA, provides
that FDA may require a responsible
party to submit to FDA ‘‘consumeroriented information’’ regarding a
reportable food with the exception of
fruits and vegetables that are raw
agricultural commodities. Based on
these exceptions and exclusions,
responsible parties may not submit to
FDA consumer-oriented information,
under section 417(f) of the FD&C Act,
for dietary supplements, infant formula,
and fruits and vegetables that are raw
agricultural commodities. There may be
potential public health impacts if
consumer notifications for reportable
foods do not include information on
dietary supplements, infant formula,
and fruits and vegetables that are raw
agricultural commodities, particularly if
the public believes that such consumer
notifications are meant to encompass all
food products regulated by FDA. FDA
seeks comments or other information on
whether consumer notifications posted
by chain grocery stores, as specified by
section 417(h) of the FD&C Act, should
include information advising consumers
that such notifications do not cover
certain foods, such as a statement
asserting that the consumer notifications
do not include reportable food or recall
information for dietary supplements,
infant formula, and fruits and vegetables
that are raw agricultural commodities,
and consumers should consult FDA’s
Web site for any relevant information
for these products.
Question 4b: There may be a situation
where FDA is aware of a class 1 recall
for a reportable food for which a
responsible party would be required to
submit to FDA consumer-oriented
information for such reportable food
under section 417(f) of the FD&C Act,
but the responsible party failed to
submit such information to FDA. In
such situations, should FDA prepare
and publish a one-page summary of
consumer-oriented information, if
known, for such reportable food, and
require chain grocery stores that sold
the reportable food to post such
summary or the information from such
summary, as specified in section 417(h)
of the FD&C Act?
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IV. Comments
Interested persons may submit either
electronic comments regarding this
document to https://www.regulations.gov
or written comments to the Division of
Dockets Management (see ADDRESSES). It
is only necessary to send one set of
comments. Identify comments with the
docket number found in brackets in the
heading of this document. Received
comments may be seen in the Division
of Dockets Management between 9 a.m.
and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday, and
will be posted to the docket at https://
www.regulations.gov.
Please note that this is not related to
the request in the Federal Register of
May 25, 2010 (75 FR 29350) (Docket No.
FDA–2009–D–0260), for comments
regarding the finalization of the current
RFR, 2d Edition, draft guidance.
Dated: March 20, 2014.
Leslie Kux,
Assistant Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2014–06614 Filed 3–25–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 100
[Docket Number USCG–2014–0097]
RIN 1625–AA08
Special Local Regulations; Dragging
on the Waccamaw, Atlantic
Intracoastal Waterway; Bucksport, SC
Coast Guard, DHS.
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Coast Guard proposes to
establish special local regulations on the
Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway in
Bucksport, South Carolina during the
Outboard Drag Boat Association (ODBA)
dragging on the Waccamaw, a series of
high-speed boat races. The event is
scheduled to take place from 10:30 a.m.
on June 21, 2014, through 8:30 p.m. on
June 22, 2014. Approximately 50 highspeed race boats are anticipated to
participate in the races. These special
local regulations are necessary to
provide for the safety of life and
property on navigable waters of the
United States during the event. These
special local regulations would
temporarily restrict vessel traffic in a
portion of the Atlantic Intracoastal
Waterway. Persons and vessels that are
not participating in the races would be
prohibited from entering, transiting
through, anchoring in, or remaining
SUMMARY:
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within the restricted area unless
authorized by the Captain of the Port
Charleston or a designated
representative.
Comments and related material
must be received by the Coast Guard on
or before April 25, 2014. Requests for
public meetings must be received by the
Coast Guard on or before April 15, 2014.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
identified by docket number using any
one of the following methods:
(1) Federal eRulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulations.gov.
(2) Fax: 202–493–2251.
(3) Mail or Delivery: Docket
Management Facility (M–30), U.S.
Department of Transportation, West
Building Ground Floor, Room W12–140,
1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC 20590–0001. Deliveries
accepted between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except federal
holidays. The telephone number is 202–
366–9329.
See the ‘‘Public Participation and
Request for Comments’’ portion of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section
below for further instructions on
submitting comments. To avoid
duplication, please use only one of
these three methods.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If
you have questions on this rule, call or
email Chief Warrant Officer Christopher
Ruleman, Sector Charleston Office of
Waterways Management, Coast Guard;
telephone (843)–740–3184, email
Christopher.L.Ruleman@uscg.mil. If you
have questions on viewing or submitting
material to the docket, call Cheryl
Collins, Program Manager, Docket
Operations, telephone (202) 366–9826.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DATES:
Table of Acronyms
DHS—Department of Homeland Security
FR—Federal Register
NPRM—Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
A. Public Participation and Request for
Comments
We encourage you to participate in
this rulemaking by submitting
comments and related materials. All
comments received will be posted
without change to https://
www.regulations.gov and will include
any personal information you have
provided.
1. Submitting Comments
If you submit a comment, please
include the docket number for this
rulemaking, indicate the specific section
of this document to which each
comment applies, and provide a reason
for each suggestion or recommendation.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 58 (Wednesday, March 26, 2014)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 16698-16704]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-06614]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
21 CFR Chapter I
[Docket No. FDA-2013-N-0590]
RIN 0910-AG97
Implementation of the Food and Drug Administration Food Safety
Modernization Act Amendments to the Reportable Food Registry Provisions
of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
ACTION: Advance notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is issuing this advance
notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPRM) to solicit comments, data, and
information to assist the Agency in implementing the FDA Food Safety
Modernization Act (FSMA), which added new provisions to the Reportable
Food Registry (RFR) requirements of the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act (the FD&C Act). Under the new provisions, FDA may require
a responsible party to also submit to FDA ``consumer-oriented''
information regarding certain reportable foods, including information
necessary to enable a consumer to accurately identify whether the
consumer is in possession of a reportable food. FDA must prepare and
publish on FDA's Internet Web site a one-page summary of the consumer-
oriented information that can be easily printed by a grocery store for
the purposes of consumer notification. A grocery store that sold a
reportable food that is the subject of an FDA one-page summary, and
that is part of a chain of establishments with 15 or more physical
locations, is required to prominently display the FDA one-page summary,
or the information from the summary, within 24 hours after the one-page
summary is published on FDA's Web site, through a method identified by
FDA. FDA is seeking input on topics including consumer-oriented
information submissions, consumer notifications, posting consumer
notifications in grocery stores, and grocery stores subject to the new
requirements.
DATES: Submit either electronic or written comments by June 9, 2014.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by Docket No. FDA-2013-
N-0590 or Regulatory Information Number (RIN) number 0910-AG97, by any
of the following methods:
Electronic Submissions
Submit electronic comments in the following way:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Written Submissions
Submit written submissions in the following ways:
Mail/Hand delivery/Courier (for paper submissions):
Division of Dockets Management (HFA-305), Food and Drug Administration,
5630 Fishers Lane, Rm. 1061, Rockville, MD 20852.
Instructions: All submissions received must include the Agency name
and Docket No. FDA-2013-N-0590 and RIN 0910-AG97 for this advance
notice of proposed rulemaking. All comments received may be posted
without change to https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal
information provided. For additional information on submitting
comments, see the ``Comments'' heading of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section of this document.
Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or
comments received, go to https://www.regulations.gov and insert the
docket number(s), found in brackets in the heading of this document,
into the ``Search'' box and follow the prompts and/or go to the
Division of Dockets
[[Page 16699]]
Management, 5630 Fishers Lane, Rm. 1061, Rockville, MD 20852.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ted Elkin, Center for Food Safety and
Applied Nutrition (HFS-008), Food and Drug Administration, 5100 Paint
Branch Pkwy., College Park, MD 20740, 240-402-2428; or April Hodges,
Center for Veterinary Medicine (HFV-230), Food and Drug Administration,
7519 Standish Pl., Rockville, MD 20855, 240-276-9237.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
A. The Reportable Food Registry
Section 1005 of the Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act of
2007 (FDAAA) (Pub. L. 110-085) amended the FD&C Act by creating section
417 entitled ``Reportable Food Registry'' (21 U.S.C. 350(f)). Under
section 1005 of FDAAA, FDA established the RFR, an electronic portal
that is used to submit mandatory and voluntary reports to FDA regarding
``reportable foods.'' A ``reportable food'' is an article of food
(other than dietary supplements or infant formula) for which there is a
reasonable probability that the use of, or exposure to, such article of
food will cause serious adverse health consequences or death to humans
or animals (see section 201(ff) of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 321(ff)) and
section 417(a)(2) of the FD&C Act). Subject to certain exceptions, a
``responsible party'' is required to submit a report to FDA through the
RFR, as soon as practicable, but in no case later than 24 hours after
determining that an article of food is a reportable food (see section
417(d) of the FD&C Act). Under section 417(a)(1) of the FD&C Act, a
``responsible party'' with respect to an article of food is defined as
``a person that submits the registration under section 415(a) [of the
FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 350d)] for a food facility that is required to
register under section 415(a), at which such article of food is
manufactured, processed, packed, or held.'' The FD&C Act specifies that
the term ``person'' includes individuals, partnerships, corporations,
and associations (section 201(e) of the FD&C Act). A Federal, State, or
local public health official may submit a report about a reportable
food to FDA through the RFR (section 417(d)(3) of the FD&C Act).
Several terms are used to describe the RFR system as a whole, as
well as its components. Reportable food reports are submitted through
the Department of Health and Human Services Safety Reporting Portal at
https://www.safetyreporting.hhs.gov/, which we refer to in this document
as ``the Safety Reporting Portal'' or ``SRP.'' The term ``Registry''
refers to the database maintained by FDA to catalogue reports that have
been submitted through the Safety Reporting Portal, and that Agency
review has determined to be reports for foods that meet the standard
for ``reportable foods.'' The terms ``Reportable Food Registry'' and
``RFR'' refer to the system as a whole. This terminology is consistent
with terms FDA uses in its annual reports on the RFR. (See ``The
Reportable Food Registry: A New Approach to Targeting Inspection
Resources and Identifying Patterns of Adulteration: First Annual
Report: September 8, 2009-September 7, 2010'' (January 2011); ``The
Reportable Food Registry: Targeting Inspection Resources and
Identifying Patterns of Adulteration: Second Annual Report: September
8, 2010-September 7, 2011'' (April 2012); and ``The Reportable Food
Registry: Targeting Inspection Resources and Identifying Patterns of
Adulteration: Third Annual Report: September 8, 2011-September 7,
2012'' (April 2013), available at https://www.fda.gov/ReportableFoodRegistry).
The RFR reporting requirements cover reportable foods that are not
under the exclusive jurisdiction of the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
which include human food (except infant formula and dietary
supplements) and animal food/feed (including pet food) regulated by
FDA. (Other mandatory reporting systems exist for infant formula and
dietary supplements.\1\) Submissions through the Safety Reporting
Portal provide early warning to FDA about potential serious public
health risks related to reportable foods and increase the speed with
which the Agency and its partners at the State and local levels can
investigate and take appropriate action, including ensuring that
reportable foods are removed from commerce when necessary.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ A manufacturer, packer, or distributor of a dietary
supplement whose name appears on the label of a dietary supplement
marketed in the United States must submit to FDA any report received
of a serious adverse event associated with such dietary supplement
when used in the United States, accompanied by a copy of the dietary
supplement's label, under section 761 of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C.
379aa-1). Infant formula manufacturers must comply with notification
requirements for violative infant formula in 21 CFR 107.240.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FDA's RFR does not receive reportable food reports from consumers
through the Safety Reporting Portal. Instead, FDA has established other
reporting forms for receiving and responding to consumer emergencies,
complaints, questions, and concerns about FDA-regulated foods. (See,
e.g., ``Your Guide to Reporting Problems to FDA'' at https://www.fda.gov/ForConsumers/ConsumerUpdates/ucm095859.htm).
Reportable food reports submitted by responsible parties or public
health officials, such as Federal, State, or local public health
officials, are categorized and tracked by FDA. The initial report
concerning a reportable food that FDA generally receives from either a
responsible party or a public health official is designated as the
primary report for that reportable food. All other reports subsequently
received from a responsible party (i.e., either by an immediate
previous source (upstream) or an immediate subsequent recipient
(downstream)) of a reportable food for which a primary report has been
submitted are designated as subsequent reports. After consultation with
the responsible party that submitted an initial report, FDA may require
such responsible party to amend the initial report to include contact
information for certain parties directly linked in the supply chain
(section 417(d)(6)(A) of the FD&C Act). This type of report, which
corrects or adds to an initial report, is an amended report. The
responsible party may also provide corrections or add new information
to a report at any time voluntarily. FDA may also require a responsible
party that has submitted an initial report to notify the immediate
previous source (upstream) or the immediate subsequent recipient
(downstream) of the food for which the responsible party has submitted
an initial report, if FDA deems necessary (see section 417(d)(6)(B) of
the FD&C Act). If another responsible party, such as the immediate
previous source or immediate subsequent recipient of the food, receives
a notification regarding a food for which an initial report has been
submitted, FDA may require such responsible party to submit a report to
FDA regarding that reportable food (see section 417(d)(7) of the FD&C
Act). This type of report, as indicated previously, is a subsequent
report as it contains additional information regarding the reportable
food from a responsible party other than the responsible party that
submitted the initial report. If a responsible party receives a
notification with respect to a food and the responsible party has
already submitted an initial report or subsequent report to FDA with
respect to such food, the responsible party is required to amend such
report to include contact information for certain parties directly
linked in the supply chain and provide the unique report number(s)
issued through the Safety Reporting Portal for
[[Page 16700]]
report(s) (by which FDA is able to link reports about the reportable
food and identify the supply chain) for such reportable food (see
section 417(d)(8) of the FD&C Act).
After reports are submitted to FDA through the Safety Reporting
Portal, FDA reviews and assesses the information for purposes of
identifying reportable foods, entering information into the Registry,
issuing an alert as FDA deems necessary, and exercising other existing
food safety authorities to protect the public health (see sections
417(b)(2) and (c) of the FD&C Act).
Due to the potential for confusion, it is important to explain that
there are key differences between FDA's RFR and food recall programs.
Generally, FDA's food recall program has been the primary channel of
food product safety communication between FDA, consumers, and others in
the supply chain. The RFR is a separate program, and its general
purpose has been to provide a ``reliable mechanism to track patterns of
adulteration in food . . . [to] support efforts by the [FDA] to target
limited inspection resources to protect the public health'' (Pub. L.
110-085, section 1005(a)(4)). Where the food recall program would, in
part, gather and communicate information helpful to consumers who may
encounter a recalled food, such as safe product disposal instructions,
the RFR gathers information to identify and track a reportable food in
the supply chain. The FSMA amendments to section 417 of the FD&C Act
will give the RFR a greater role in informing the public in the event
of a potential public health emergency.
B. FSMA Amendments to the Reportable Food Registry
On January 4, 2011, FSMA (Pub. L. 111-353) was signed into law.
FSMA generally amended the FD&C Act to provide for a modernized,
prevention-based food safety system. FSMA amended section 417 of the
FD&C Act, which governs the RFR, in relevant part by adding paragraphs
(f), (g), and (h) (Pub. L. 111-353, 124 Stat. 3885, 3951-3953). Section
417(f), as amended by FSMA, provides that, within 18 months after the
date of enactment of FSMA, the Secretary of Health and Human Services
(the Secretary) (and by delegation, FDA) may require a responsible
party to submit to FDA ``consumer-oriented information'' regarding a
reportable food with the exception of fruits and vegetables that are
raw agricultural commodities. The consumer-oriented information must
include the following: (1) A description of the article of food; (2)
affected product identification codes, such as the Universal Product
Code (UPC), stock keeping unit (SKU), or lot or batch numbers
sufficient for the consumer to identify the article of food; (3)
contact information for the responsible party; and (4) any other
information FDA determines is necessary to enable a consumer to
accurately identify whether such consumer is in possession of the
reportable food (section 417(f)(4) of the FD&C Act). Section 417(g)(1)
of the FD&C Act, as amended by FSMA, requires FDA to prepare the
consumer-oriented information described in section 417(f) as a
standardized one-page summary, and publish the one-page summary on
FDA's Web site in a format that can be easily printed by a grocery
store for purposes of consumer notification.
A grocery store that is part of a chain of establishments with 15
or more physical locations (``chain grocery store'') that sold a
reportable food that is the subject of a one-page summary published on
FDA's Web site must notify consumers by: (1) Prominently displaying the
one-page summary or information from such summary, through a method
described in section 417(h)(2) of the FD&C Act, no later than 24 hours
after the one-page summary is published on FDA's Web site, and (2)
maintain the display for 14 days (section 417(h)(1) of the FD&C Act).
The chain grocery store must also include in the consumer notification
the date and time that the one-page summary was posted on the FDA's Web
site (section 417(g)(2) of the FD&C Act).
Section 417(h)(2) of the FD&C Act, as amended by FSMA, requires
that, within 1 year after the date of enactment of FSMA, FDA develop
and publish ``a list of acceptable conspicuous locations and manners''
from which a chain grocery store must select at least one method for
displaying a consumer notification about the reportable food. Section
417(h)(2) provides that the list of acceptable conspicuous locations
and manners must include the following:
``Posting the notification at or near the register;''
``Providing the location of the reportable food;''
``Providing targeted recall information given to customers
upon purchase of food;'' and
``Other such prominent and conspicuous locations and
manners utilized by grocery stores as of the date of the enactment of
[FSMA (i.e., as of January 4, 2011)] to provide notice of such recalls
to consumers as considered appropriate by the Secretary.''
While sections 417(f) and 417(h)(2) of the FD&C Act include
statutory deadlines within 18 and 12 months of the enactment of FSMA,
respectively, FDA is issuing this ANPRM, rather than a notice of
proposed rulemaking, to solicit further input from the public regarding
issues related to the FSMA amendments to section 417 of the FD&C Act.
As discussed in the paragraphs that follow, FDA believes that the
information it obtains through this ANPRM will assist the Agency in
implementing and efficiently enforcing the FSMA amendments to section
417 of the FD&C Act.
II. June 6, 2011, Public Meeting and Request for Comments
On May 26, 2011, FDA issued a Federal Register notice announcing a
public meeting scheduled for June 6, 2011, entitled ``FDA Food Safety
Modernization Act: Focus on Inspections and Compliance'' (FSMA public
meeting notice) and requesting comments (76 FR 30727). The purpose of
the public meeting was to provide interested persons an opportunity to
discuss implementation of inspections and compliance under FSMA, and to
give the public an opportunity to provide information and share views
to inform FDA's FSMA implementation strategies related to, among other
things, implementation of the new provisions in section 417 of the FD&C
Act. The FSMA public meeting notice presented the following questions
related to the FSMA amendments to section 417 of the FD&C Act:
What information is necessary to enable a consumer to
accurately identify whether the consumer is in possession of a
reportable food?
What methods could best be used by grocery stores to
inform consumers of information to enable them to identify whether they
possess a reportable food?
Are there other approaches to getting key information in
the hands of consumers in real time that FDA should also consider
pursuing?
Who should FDA consider to be a grocery store subject to
the consumer notification requirement in section 417(h) of the FD&C
Act?
What methods are grocery stores currently using to provide
notice of food recalls to consumers?
At the public meeting, FDA provided opportunities for individuals
to make presentations during an open public and Webcast comment
session. A transcript of FDA's remarks at the opening session, the open
public and Webcast comment session, and the listening session is
available on FDA's Web site at (https://www.fda.gov/Food/GuidanceRegulation/FSMA/ucm255954.htm). No public comments regarding
the FSMA amendments to
[[Page 16701]]
section 417 of the FD&C Act were received during the public meeting
sessions. Stakeholders were given other opportunities to express their
views during breakout sessions focused on specific topics, including a
session on section 417 of the FD&C Act. These sessions were not
recorded.
In the FSMA public meeting notice, FDA also requested comments, and
noted that electronic or written comments could be submitted to the
Division of Dockets Management regardless of whether commenters
attended the public meeting. FDA opened Docket No. FDA-2011-N-0366 for
public comments. In response to this request, FDA received three
comments. The comments were from trade associations and a consumer
group. These comments are discussed in section III.
III. Issues and Requests for Data and Information
As noted previously, FDA only received three comments regarding the
FSMA amendments to section 417 of the FD&C Act. While these comments
provided useful input, additional input from the public would assist
the Agency in implementing and efficiently enforcing the FSMA
amendments to section 417 of the FD&C Act. In addition to the issues
described in the FSMA public meeting notice, there are several other
issues related to the new requirements in section 417 for which FDA
believes further comment, data, and information would be helpful to the
Agency in implementing and enforcing the new requirements. As discussed
in the paragraphs that follow, FDA is soliciting input regarding what
information responsible parties should be required to provide to the
Agency in consumer-oriented information submissions for reportable
foods to enable consumers to accurately identify whether they possess
such foods, as specified in section 417(f)(4) of the FD&C Act (FDA
``may require a responsible party to submit to [FDA] consumer-oriented
information regarding a reportable food, which shall include . . . any
other information [FDA] determines is necessary to enable a consumer to
accurately identify whether such consumer is in possession of the
reportable food.''). FDA anticipates that additional input from the
public, including consumers and stakeholders, regarding what
information would allow consumers to determine whether they possess
reportable foods will be critical in FDA's implementation of section
417(f) of the FD&C Act.
FDA is also soliciting input regarding manners and locations used
by grocery stores to provide food recall information to consumers, as
specified in section 417(h)(2) of the FD&C Act (FDA ``shall develop and
publish a list of acceptable conspicuous locations and manners, from
which grocery stores shall select at least one, for providing the
notification required in [section 417(h)(1) of the FD&C Act] . . .
[which] shall include . . . other such prominent and conspicuous
locations and manners utilized by grocery stores as of the date of the
enactment of [FSMA] to provide notice of such recalls to consumers . .
.''). There may be several manners and locations in which grocery
stores provide or have provided food recall information to consumers.
Further, grocery stores and consumers can provide more information to
FDA regarding these manners and locations, including the advantages and
disadvantages of particular approaches.
In addition, FDA is soliciting information regarding potential
impacts to and costs incurred by chain grocery stores related to
posting consumer notifications, as required by section 417(h) of the
FD&C Act. Because grocery stores likely have experience with providing
notices to consumers, these stores likely have data and information
that could assist the Agency in estimating associated costs and burdens
related to compliance. Such information could also assist the Agency in
establishing requirements to efficiently enforce the FSMA amendments to
section 417 of the FD&C Act.
FDA anticipates that information from stakeholders and the public
regarding these issues, along with the other issues described in the
paragraphs that follow, will significantly assist the Agency in
developing requirements to implement section 417 of FD&C Act and
efficiently enforce such requirements. For these reasons, FDA is
issuing this ANPRM to solicit additional comments, data, and other
information related to the FSMA amendments to section 417 of the FD&C
Act.
Issue 1: Consumer-Oriented Information Submissions and Consumer
Notifications
Question 1a: What information should FDA require be included in
consumer-oriented information submissions and consumer notifications
for a reportable food to enable a consumer to accurately identify
whether he or she is in possession of the reportable food?
Section 417(f) of the FD&C Act provides that the consumer-oriented
information submitted to FDA by a responsible party must include: (1) A
description of the article of food; (2) affected product identification
codes, such as UPC, SKU, or lot or batch numbers sufficient for the
consumer to identify the article of food; (3) contact information for
the responsible party; and (4) ``any other information the Secretary
determines is necessary to enable a consumer to accurately identify
whether such consumer is in possession of the reportable food.''
Section 417(g)(1) requires that FDA prepare the consumer-oriented
information as a standardized one-page summary and publish such one-
page summary on FDA's Web site in a format that can be easily printed
by grocery stores for the purposes of consumer notification. In
response to a similar question presented in the FSMA public meeting
notice, two commenters asserted that the consumer-oriented information
should include the reason for the recall of the reportable food, if
applicable. Another commenter recommended that the consumer-oriented
information include a picture of the product and product label, state
when the product was sold, and state what consumers should do with the
product.
FDA is interested in additional data and information regarding what
information should be required in consumer-oriented information
submissions and consumer notifications for reportable foods to enable a
consumer to accurately identify whether such consumer is in possession
of the reportable food. FDA is also interested in data and information
regarding whether the one-page summary of consumer-oriented information
posted at FDA's Web site should contain other information, such as
advice to consumers on disposing of a reportable food product.
Question 1b: Should FDA require responsible parties to submit
consumer-oriented information to FDA, as described in section 417(f) of
the FD&C Act, for reportable foods that are not available, or will not
be available, for sale to consumers in chain grocery stores or
otherwise available for sale to consumers at the retail food market?
As noted previously, a ``responsible party'' generally is required
to submit a report to FDA through the Safety Reporting Portal, as soon
as practicable, but in no case later than 24 hours after determining
that an article of food is a reportable food (see section 417(d) of the
FD&C Act). In addition, section 417(f) of the FD&C Act provides that
FDA may require a responsible party to submit to FDA consumer-oriented
information regarding a reportable food (except for fruits and
vegetables that are raw agricultural commodities). It is
[[Page 16702]]
possible that there may be a reportable food, for which a responsible
party is required to submit a report to FDA through the Safety
Reporting Portal under section 417(d), that has not or will not reach
the retail food market, including chain grocery stores. For example,
many reportable food reports concern food ingredients and bulk
commercial products that are not sold at the retail level. One of the
purposes of the RFR is to identify makers of foods sold at retail who
have received an ingredient that is the subject of a reportable food
report to stop shipment of possibly contaminated foods before they are
sold at retail. Under section 417(f) of the FD&C Act, a responsible
party may also be required to submit to FDA consumer-oriented
information for such a reportable food. Section 417(h)(1) makes clear
that unless a chain grocery store sold a food that is the subject of a
one-page summary published by FDA, the grocery store is not required to
post a consumer notification described in section 417(g) about such
food. FDA is interested in comments or other information regarding
whether FDA should require responsible parties to submit the consumer-
oriented information described in section 417(f) for all reportable
foods, including those that have not been available, or will not be
available, for sale to consumers in chain grocery stores or otherwise
available for sale to consumers at the retail food market.
Question 1c: FDA is interested in additional data and information
from industry and consumer groups regarding consumer preferences for
receiving information. For the one-page summaries of consumer-oriented
information prepared by FDA and published on FDA's Web site, what
structure and format would be the most useful to grocery stores and
consumers? To what extent, if any, should the consumer-oriented
information be provided in languages other than English?
Question 1d: Should FDA revise and republish a one-page summary of
consumer-oriented information on FDA's Web site if the published
information no longer provides the information necessary to enable a
consumer to accurately identify whether such consumer is in possession
of the reportable food? For example, a recall expanding to include
additional lots, and corrections in amended industry reports could
create this scenario. If a one-page summary is revised and republished
on FDA's Web site, should this trigger additional posting obligations
for chain grocery stores?
Question 1e: What mechanisms can be employed so that chain grocery
stores are aware that a one-page summary of consumer-oriented
information for a reportable food has been published on the Agency's
Web site, or that a previously published one-page summary has been
revised?
Issue 2: Grocery Stores
Question 2a: What types of retail establishments should FDA
consider to be ``grocery stores'' within the meaning of section 417(h)
of the FD&C Act? Section 417(h)(1) provides in relevant part that if a
chain grocery store sold a reportable food that is the subject of a
one-page consumer-oriented information summary published on FDA's Web
site, the chain grocery store must prominently display the one-page
summary or information from the one-page summary within 24 hours after
the one-page summary is published on FDA's Web site and maintain such
display for 14 days. The FD&C Act does not define the term ``grocery
store.'' FDA requests comment on what types of retail establishments
should be subject to the consumer notification requirements of section
417(h). Please provide an explanation for your response and any
supporting data.
Comments that FDA received in response to the FSMA public meeting
notice supported a broad definition of the term ``grocery store'' to
encompass all retail establishments in which the sale of groceries is a
primary business activity, including supermarkets, warehouse stores,
wholesale club stores, convenience stores, and other stores that are
part of a chain. One commenter noted that consumers may buy groceries
online from both grocery store chains and other online retailers, and
stated that these retailers should also be required to provide the
consumer notifications described in section 417(h) of the FD&C Act. Two
commenters recommended that, in developing a definition of the term
``grocery store'' for purposes of implementing section 417(h), FDA
consider the definition of ``retail food establishment,'' which
includes grocery stores, in FDA's regulations for registration of food
facilities at 21 CFR 1.227(b)(11).
Issue 3: Posting Consumer Notifications
Question 3a: How can a chain grocery store prominently display or
provide a consumer notification via a conspicuous location or manner as
described in section 417(h)(2) of the FD&C Act? Section 417(h)(1) of
the FD&C Act provides in relevant part that if a chain grocery store
sold a reportable food that is the subject of a one-page consumer-
oriented information summary published on FDA's Web site, the chain
grocery store must ``prominently display such summary or the
information from such summary via at least one of the methods
identified in [section 417(h)(2)].'' Section 417(h)(2) provides in
relevant part that FDA shall develop and publish ``a list of acceptable
conspicuous locations and manners, from which grocery stores shall
select at least one, for providing [consumer notifications].'' Further,
section 417(h)(2) provides that such list must include: (1) Posting the
notification at or near the register; (2) providing the location of the
reportable food; (3) providing targeted recall information given to
customers upon purchase of a food; and (4) other such prominent and
conspicuous locations and manners utilized by grocery stores as of the
date of enactment of FSMA (i.e., January 4, 2011) to provide notice of
such recalls to consumers as considered appropriate by FDA.
Question 3b: How can a chain grocery store prominently display or
provide a consumer notification ``at or near the register'' as
described in section 417(h)(2)(A) of the FD&C Act?
Question 3c: How can a chain grocery store prominently display or
provide a consumer notification in a way that provides ``the location
of the reportable food,'' as described in section 417(h)(2)(B) of the
FD&C Act?
Question 3d: How can a chain grocery store prominently display or
provide a consumer notification in a way that provides ``targeted
recall information given to customers upon purchase of a food,'' as
described in section 417(h)(2)(C) of the FD&C Act?
Question 3e: Section 417(h)(2) of the FD&C Act requires FDA to
develop and publish a ``list of acceptable conspicuous locations and
manners'' for chain grocery stores to post the consumer notifications
described in section 417(g), and describes certain locations and
manners. Section 417(h)(2)(D) provides in relevant part that such a
list must include ``other such prominent and conspicuous locations and
manners utilized by grocery stores as of the date of enactment of
[FSMA] to provide notice of . . . recalls to consumers as considered
appropriate by [FDA]''. What methods, manners, and/or locations, if
any, have grocery stores or other retail food establishments used to
effectively notify consumers about food recalls?
One comment that FDA received in response to the FSMA public
meeting notice stated that FDA regulations implementing the consumer
notification requirements of section 417 of the FD&C
[[Page 16703]]
Act or related guidance should provide retailers with the flexibility
to choose among different approaches to notifying consumers about food
recall information. The commenter stated that the regulations should
``afford the opportunity for new ideas and modes of notification and
not be so prescriptive as to limit innovation.'' Section 417(h)(2)(D)
of the FD&C Act specifies that the other manners and locations that
must be included on the list developed and published by FDA (as
considered appropriate by FDA) are those used by grocery stores as of
the date of enactment of FSMA to provide notice of food recalls that
are ``conspicuous'' and ``prominent.'' In light of this requirement,
FDA is particularly interested in data and information on the most
innovative and effective approaches used by grocery stores or other
retail food establishments to notify consumers about food recalls in
manners and locations that are conspicuous and prominent.
One commenter recommended that, where purchases of food have
occurred over the Internet, electronically contacting consumers is
effective because the retailer knows exactly what the consumer
purchased and has reliable contact information for the consumer. The
commenters noted that these consumers may never see a posting in a
physical store. Two commenters recommended the use of loyalty cards as
a tool to notify customers. One of these commenters cited a report by a
retailer that noted that the retailer was able to electronically notify
90 percent of purchasers (17 of 19) of a recalled food item.
One commenter stated that retailers currently notify consumers of
food recalls by: (1) Posting information at or near the register; (2)
posting information at the area where the food is displayed; (3)
loyalty card or membership notifications by email, phone, or mail; (4)
providing printout information to consumers at checkout; (5) Web site
posting; (6) posting information at kiosks in the store; and (7)
posting information on a bulletin board or similar information area.
The comment suggested that FDA allow retailers to choose one or more
manners of notification, or use different manners for different
recalls. The commenter identified factors that may be relevant to the
manner used, including the size of recall; whether the product was
distributed nationally or more narrowly; the type of product; the
target customers; the shelf life of the product, and the product's use
as an ingredient in other foods.
Question 3f: What factors could influence a chain grocery store's
decision about whether to display a one-page summary of consumer-
oriented information regarding a reportable food as published on FDA's
Web site, or instead to display the information from the FDA summary?
Section 417(h)(1) of the FD&C Act requires in relevant part that
chain grocery stores prominently display, in the prescribed timeframe,
either the consumer-oriented information one-page summary published on
FDA's Web site ``or the information from such summary.''
Question 3g: Could compliance with the consumer notification
requirements of section 417(h) of the FD&C Act by chain grocery stores
affect the voluntary or mandatory display of other information
regarding a food recall by retail establishments?
One commenter stated that food retailers receive product recall
notifications primarily from their suppliers or manufacturers, usually
before the information is provided by FDA or through the RFR. The
commenter stated that in addition to removing the product from sale,
food retailers take action to notify consumers. The commenter argued
that if FDA links notifying consumers about recalls to the RFR one-page
summaries prepared by FDA and published on FDA's Web site, it could
result in a delay compared to current practices for notifying consumers
about recalls, or could result in duplicative notices. The commenter
recommended that food retailers who notify consumers about food recalls
before FDA information is available not be required to provide any
subsequent notifications, unless information about the recall has
changed.
FDA is interested in receiving further comment on the issues raised
in these comments. We note that nothing in the new requirements in
section 417 of the FD&C Act precludes a chain grocery store from
posting its own notice regarding a food recall before FDA publishes on
its Web site a one-page summary of consumer-oriented information
regarding a reportable food. However, regardless of the actions a
responsible party or grocery store may take prior to FDA's publication
of a one-page summary, the consumer notification requirements of
section 417(h) would still apply. Accordingly, if a chain grocery store
sold a reportable food that is the subject of a one-page summary, the
grocery store would still be required to prominently display the one-
page summary or the information from the summary within 24 hours after
the summary is published on FDA's Web site and must maintain the
display for 14 days.
Question 3h: What, if any, impact will the consumer notification
requirements in section 417(h) have on grocery store operations? For
example, how might the requirements affect resources if resources are
spent monitoring FDA's Web site for new consumer notifications to be
posted, or resources are spent posting such notifications or the
information from such notifications?
Question 3i: What are the estimated costs to chain grocery stores,
per store and per reportable food, associated with displaying consumer
notifications as required by section 417(h)?
Question 3j: How much time (hours per reportable food) is currently
used by grocery store and other retail food establishment employees
(including managers) to notify consumers about reportable foods? What
is the estimated change, if any, in the time spent on notifying
consumers about reportable foods as a result of the consumer
notification requirements in section 417(h) of the FD&C Act?
Question 3k: Should chain grocery stores be permitted to use
multiple manners and locations, as identified by FDA, to post consumer
notifications consecutively for a total of 14 days?
Section 417(h)(1) of the FD&C Act provides in relevant part that a
chain grocery store that sold a reportable food that is the subject of
a one-page summary published on FDA's Web site must prominently display
such summary or the information from such summary, and maintain such
display for 14 days. One commenter suggested that the 14-day time
period should begin when the retailer first notifies consumers about a
recall. Further, the commenter stated that for other methods of
informing consumers about food recalls a 14-day duration might not be
practicable (e.g., repeated phone calls to the same consumer for 14
days). The commenter also stated that the 14-day time period should
include all notification manners used by the grocery store. The
commenter noted, as an example, that a grocery could post a sign for 2
days notifying consumers about a recall for a food product whose shelf
life is long past, and then the grocery store could post the
information for the next 12 days on the retailer's Web site. Because of
the statutory terms in section 417(h) of the FD&C Act regarding a chain
grocery store ``prominently display[ing]'' an FDA one-page summary or
information from such summary and ``maintain[ing] the display for 14
days,'' it seems unlikely that the telephone calls described in the
comment would satisfy section 417(h).
[[Page 16704]]
FDA is interested in further comment and information regarding manners
and locations for posting consumer notifications for the 14-day time
period specified in section 417(h).
Issue 4: Other Issues
Question 4a: As noted previously, the term ``reportable food'' does
not include dietary supplements or infant formula (see sections 201(ff)
and 417(a)(2) of the FD&C Act). Further, as discussed previously,
section 417(f) of the FD&C Act, as amended by FSMA, provides that FDA
may require a responsible party to submit to FDA ``consumer-oriented
information'' regarding a reportable food with the exception of fruits
and vegetables that are raw agricultural commodities. Based on these
exceptions and exclusions, responsible parties may not submit to FDA
consumer-oriented information, under section 417(f) of the FD&C Act,
for dietary supplements, infant formula, and fruits and vegetables that
are raw agricultural commodities. There may be potential public health
impacts if consumer notifications for reportable foods do not include
information on dietary supplements, infant formula, and fruits and
vegetables that are raw agricultural commodities, particularly if the
public believes that such consumer notifications are meant to encompass
all food products regulated by FDA. FDA seeks comments or other
information on whether consumer notifications posted by chain grocery
stores, as specified by section 417(h) of the FD&C Act, should include
information advising consumers that such notifications do not cover
certain foods, such as a statement asserting that the consumer
notifications do not include reportable food or recall information for
dietary supplements, infant formula, and fruits and vegetables that are
raw agricultural commodities, and consumers should consult FDA's Web
site for any relevant information for these products.
Question 4b: There may be a situation where FDA is aware of a class
1 recall for a reportable food for which a responsible party would be
required to submit to FDA consumer-oriented information for such
reportable food under section 417(f) of the FD&C Act, but the
responsible party failed to submit such information to FDA. In such
situations, should FDA prepare and publish a one-page summary of
consumer-oriented information, if known, for such reportable food, and
require chain grocery stores that sold the reportable food to post such
summary or the information from such summary, as specified in section
417(h) of the FD&C Act?
IV. Comments
Interested persons may submit either electronic comments regarding
this document to https://www.regulations.gov or written comments to the
Division of Dockets Management (see ADDRESSES). It is only necessary to
send one set of comments. Identify comments with the docket number
found in brackets in the heading of this document. Received comments
may be seen in the Division of Dockets Management between 9 a.m. and 4
p.m., Monday through Friday, and will be posted to the docket at https://www.regulations.gov.
Please note that this is not related to the request in the Federal
Register of May 25, 2010 (75 FR 29350) (Docket No. FDA-2009-D-0260),
for comments regarding the finalization of the current RFR, 2d Edition,
draft guidance.
Dated: March 20, 2014.
Leslie Kux,
Assistant Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2014-06614 Filed 3-25-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160-01-P