Integrated Food Safety System Online Collaboration Development, 30470-30471 [2015-12853]
Download as PDF
30470
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 102 / Thursday, May 28, 2015 / Notices
93.103
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA–2010–N–0480]
Integrated Food Safety System Online
Collaboration Development
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION:
Notice.
The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) is announcing the
availability of grant funds for the
support of the National Center for Food
Protection and Defense (NCFPD). The
goal of the NCFPD is to provide wellestablished and high-level access to
Food/Agriculture Sector Organizations
and coordination of electronic
collaborative tools; collaborative
support from the Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS), the
Department of Homeland Security
(DHS), and the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA). NCFPD also has
past experience directly supporting the
President’s Food Safety Working Group
Objectives to integrate the food safety
system at all levels.
DATES: Important dates are as follows:
1. The application due date is July 15,
2015.
2. The anticipated start date is
September 2015.
3. The opening date is May 15, 2015.
4. The expiration date is July 16,
2015.
SUMMARY:
Submit electronic
applications to: https://www.grants.gov.
For more information, see section III of
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section
of this notice.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Nicola Areshenko, Food and Drug
Administration, Office of Regulatory
Affairs, 253–987–7921, email:
Nicola.areshenko@fda.hhs.gov; or Dan
Lukash, Grants Management Specialist,
Food and Drug Administration, Office of
Acquisitions & Grant Services, 240–
402–7596, daniel.lukash@fda.hhs.gov.
For more information on this funding
opportunity announcement (FOA) and
to obtain detailed requirements, please
refer to the full FOA located at https://
grants.nih.gov/grants/guide (select the
‘‘Request for Applications’’ link), https://
www.grants.gov (see ‘‘For Applicants’’
section), and https://www.grants.gov/
web/grants/searchgrants.html?keywords=rfa-fd-15-024.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
ADDRESSES:
I. Funding Opportunity Description
RFA–FD–15–021
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:18 May 27, 2015
Jkt 235001
A. Background
Food can become contaminated at
many different points—on the farm, in
processing or distribution facilities,
during transit, at retail and food service
establishments, and in the home. In
recent years, FDA, in cooperation with
other food regulatory and public health
agencies, has done a great deal to
prevent both intentional and
unintentional contamination of food at
each of these points. FDA has worked
with other Federal, State, local, tribal,
territorial, and foreign counterpart food
safety regulatory and public health
agencies, as well as with law
enforcement and intelligence-gathering
agencies, and with industry, consumer
groups, and academia, to strengthen the
nation’s food safety and food defense
system across the entire distribution
chain.
This cooperation has resulted in
greater awareness of potential
vulnerabilities, the creation of more
effective prevention programs, new
surveillance systems, and the ability to
respond more quickly to outbreaks of
foodborne illness. However, changes in
consumer dietary patterns, changes in
industry practices, changes in the U.S.
population, an increasingly globalized
food supply chain, and new pathogens
and other contaminants pose challenges
that are requiring us to adapt our
current food protection strategies.
At the Federal level, a number of
agencies are working together to
coordinate their efforts and develop
short- and long-term agendas to make
food safer. As the Federal regulatory
Agency responsible for most of the
nation’s food supply,1 FDA is
committed to ensuring that the food 2
supply is among the safest in the world.
This requires a systematic, integrated
approach to effective risk control and
enforcement strategies. Together with
our Federal, State, local, tribal, and
territorial public health partners, FDA is
working to plan and implement an
inspection and enforcement program to
ensure high rates of compliance with
the Agency’s food safety standards. FDA
intends to establish a fully integrated
national food safety system built on
collaboration among all of these
partners. This system will encompass
1 FDA is the Federal Agency that is responsible
for regulating most of the country’s food supply,
with the exception of most meat, poultry, and
processed egg products, which are overseen by the
USDA.
2 For purposes of this document, the term ‘‘food’’
includes human food, animal feed, components (i.e.
ingredients) of both food and feed, and dietary
supplements for humans, except as otherwise
noted.
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
inspections, laboratory testing, and
outbreak response and will place
priority on preventing foodborne illness,
in both food for humans and animals.
This collaboration will result in: (1)
Better ability to assess potential risk at
domestic food facilities and greater and
more consistent inspectional coverage of
these facilities across the entire food
supply chain, (2) greater food
surveillance through integration of food
facility inspection and testing
information, and (3) improved rapid
response capacity and efficiency.
Current leveraging efforts have not
been sufficient to ensure adequate
oversight of the entire food supply
chain. Food facilities are not uniformly
inspected, data are not uniformly
captured on a national basis, and the
data that are collected are not
systematically mined for intelligence.
Neither FDA nor our regulatory or
public health partners alone collect and
analyze a sufficient number of
surveillance samples per year to have
confidence in to the ability to effectively
identify potential areas of concern;
combining the data from all public
health partners would greatly enhance
FDA’s ability to detect potential
problems. In addition, national response
efforts are uneven. Throughout the
years, numerous reports have concluded
that FDA does not take full advantage of
the inspectional and surveillance
capabilities of our state, territorial, tribal
and local regulatory and public health
partners. This is due in large part to the
varied standards and laws in each state
as compared with the Federal system, as
well as to the lack of interoperable data
systems and legal impediments to
sharing data among partners.
These combined factors present a
challenge in managing and responding
to signals of public health concern in
the food supply. The currently
decentralized U.S. public health and
agriculture system results in a situation
in which responsibility for surveillance,
detection, investigation, response, and
recovery to foodborne disease outbreaks
is shared across Federal, State,
territorial, tribal, and local government
agencies.
Various levels of government are
working to improve the nation’s food
safety and defense system. At all levels,
there is a call for greater integration and
coordination between the Federal
agencies and the regulatory and public
health partners involved in food safety.
An integrated food safety system will
allow FDA to meet the President’s Food
Safety Working Group recommendation
that the Federal government ‘‘. . .
prioritize crucial inspection and
enforcement activity across the world,
E:\FR\FM\28MYN1.SGM
28MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 102 / Thursday, May 28, 2015 / Notices
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
support safety efforts by States,
localities, and businesses at home; and
utilize data to guide these efforts and
evaluate their outcomes.’’ 3
To be fully successful, the national
food safety system must be built with
continuous input from FDA’s regulatory
and public health partners. Efforts shall
facilitate information sharing and
communication among all partners, and
include infrastructure for a national
electronic information-sharing
mechanism. These actions will result in
a national food safety system that
identifies sources of risk throughout the
system and reduces time to detect and
respond to foodborne outbreaks. A
public health-driven, collaborative, and
leveraged approach to food safety
activities and responsibilities will be
reflected in improved public sector
resource utilization at a national level,
which provides additional capacity for
ensuring a safe and secure food supply.
B. Research Objectives
The Office of Regulatory Affairs, in
coordination with FDA’s Office of
Foods, Center for Food Safety and
Applied Nutrition, and Center for
Veterinary Medicine, is soliciting a
cooperative grant proposal to expedite
program development to support critical
federal-state collaboration necessary to
plan and implement an integrated food
safety system. The intent is to fund
proposals for the continued
development and operations of
collaborative online tools involving a
range of stakeholders for the purposes
of: (1) Information sharing in the
development of an integrated food
safety system and (2) developing and
implementing a sustainable model for
continued collaborative communication
and information sharing. This grant
opportunity is limited to organizations
receiving funding under the current
Integrated Food Safety System Online
Collaboration Development cooperative
agreement. The NCFPD, a DHS Center of
Excellence, has unique expertise and
capacity found nowhere else. It is the
host/creator of FoodSHIELD, an intergovernmental collaborative project
supporting information sharing at the
Federal, State, and local levels. NCFPD
is uniquely qualified to provide: Wellestablished and high-level access to
Food/Agriculture Sector Organizations
and coordination of electronic
collaborative tools; collaborative
support from HHS, DHS, and the USDA.
NCFPD also has past experience directly
supporting the President’s Food Safety
3 President’s Food Safety Working Group Key
Findings Report submitted to President Obama on
July 7, 2009.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:18 May 27, 2015
Jkt 235001
Working Group Objectives to integrate
the food safety system at all levels.
C. Eligibility Information
The following organizations/
institutions are eligible to apply:
This cooperative agreement is only
available to organizations receiving
funding under the current Integrated
Food Safety System Online
Collaboration Development cooperative
agreement. Competition is limited to
NCFPD because it is uniquely qualified
and has expertise and capacity found
nowhere else. It is the host/creator of
FoodSHIELD, an intergovernmental
collaborative project supporting
information sharing at the federal, state
and local levels. NCFPD is uniquely
qualified to provide: Well-established
and high-level access to Food/
Agriculture Sector Organizations and
coordination of electronic collaborative
tools; collaborative support from HHS,
DHS, and the USDA. NCFPD also has
past experience directly supporting the
President’s Food Safety Working Group
Objectives to integrate the food safety
system at all levels.
II. Award Information/Funds Available
A. Award Amount
One award up to $680,000 for fiscal
year 2015 with up to an additional 4
years funding up to $680,000 per year.
B. Length of Support
Up to 5 years.
III. Electronic Application,
Registration, and Submission
Only electronic applications will be
accepted. To submit an electronic
application in response to this FOA,
applicants should first review the full
announcement located at https://
grants.nih.gov/grants/guide. (FDA has
verified the Web site addresses
throughout this document but FDA is
not responsible for any subsequent
changes to the Web sites after this
document publishes in the Federal
Register.) For all electronically
submitted applications, the following
steps are required.
• Step 1: Obtain a Dun and Bradstreet
(DUNS) Number
• Step 2: Register With System for
Award Management (SAM)
• Step 3: Obtain Username &
Password
• Step 4: Authorized Organization
Representative (AOR) Authorization
• Step 5: Track AOR Status
• Step 6: Register With Electronic
Research Administration (eRA)
Commons
Steps 1 through 5, in detail, can be
found at https://www07.grants.gov/
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 9990
30471
applicants/organization_
registration.jsp. Step 6, in detail, can be
found at https://commons.era.nih.gov/
commons/registration/
registrationInstructions.jsp. After you
have followed these steps, submit
electronic applications to: https://
www.grants.gov.
Dated: May 21, 2015.
Leslie Kux,
Associate Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2015–12853 Filed 5–27–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4164–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
National Institute on Aging; Notice of
Closed Meeting
Pursuant to section 10(d) of the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, as
amended (5 U.S.C. App.), notice is
hereby given of the following meeting.
The meeting will be closed to the
public in accordance with the
provisions set forth in sections
552b(c)(4) and 552b(c)(6), Title 5 U.S.C.,
as amended. The grant applications and
the discussions could disclose
confidential trade secrets or commercial
property such as patentable material,
and personal information concerning
individuals associated with the grant
applications, the disclosure of which
would constitute a clearly unwarranted
invasion of personal privacy.
Name of Committee: National Institute on
Aging Special Emphasis Panel; Financial and
Health Models.
Date: June 22, 2015.
Time: 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
Agenda: To review and evaluate grant
applications.
Place: National Institute on Aging,
Gateway Building, Suite 2C212, 7201
Wisconsin Avenue, Bethesda, MD 20892,
(Telephone Conference Call).
Contact Person: Kimberly Firth, Ph.D.,
National Institutes of Health, National
Institute on Aging, Gateway Building, 7201
Wisconsin Avenue, Suite 2C212, Bethesda,
MD 20892, 301–402–7702, firthkm@
mail.nih.gov.
(Catalogue of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program Nos. 93.866, Aging Research,
National Institutes of Health, HHS)
Dated: May 21, 2015.
Melanie J. Gray,
Program Analyst, Office of Federal Advisory
Committee Policy.
[FR Doc. 2015–12797 Filed 5–27–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140–01–P
E:\FR\FM\28MYN1.SGM
28MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 102 (Thursday, May 28, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 30470-30471]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-12853]
[[Page 30470]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA-2010-N-0480]
Integrated Food Safety System Online Collaboration Development
AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is announcing the
availability of grant funds for the support of the National Center for
Food Protection and Defense (NCFPD). The goal of the NCFPD is to
provide well-established and high-level access to Food/Agriculture
Sector Organizations and coordination of electronic collaborative
tools; collaborative support from the Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS), the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), and the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA). NCFPD also has past experience
directly supporting the President's Food Safety Working Group
Objectives to integrate the food safety system at all levels.
DATES: Important dates are as follows:
1. The application due date is July 15, 2015.
2. The anticipated start date is September 2015.
3. The opening date is May 15, 2015.
4. The expiration date is July 16, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Submit electronic applications to: https://www.grants.gov.
For more information, see section III of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section of this notice.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Nicola Areshenko, Food and Drug
Administration, Office of Regulatory Affairs, 253-987-7921, email:
Nicola.areshenko@fda.hhs.gov; or Dan Lukash, Grants Management
Specialist, Food and Drug Administration, Office of Acquisitions &
Grant Services, 240-402-7596, daniel.lukash@fda.hhs.gov.
For more information on this funding opportunity announcement (FOA)
and to obtain detailed requirements, please refer to the full FOA
located at https://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide (select the ``Request for
Applications'' link), https://www.grants.gov (see ``For Applicants''
section), and https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/search-grants.html?keywords=rfa-fd-15-024.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Funding Opportunity Description
RFA-FD-15-021
93.103
A. Background
Food can become contaminated at many different points--on the farm,
in processing or distribution facilities, during transit, at retail and
food service establishments, and in the home. In recent years, FDA, in
cooperation with other food regulatory and public health agencies, has
done a great deal to prevent both intentional and unintentional
contamination of food at each of these points. FDA has worked with
other Federal, State, local, tribal, territorial, and foreign
counterpart food safety regulatory and public health agencies, as well
as with law enforcement and intelligence-gathering agencies, and with
industry, consumer groups, and academia, to strengthen the nation's
food safety and food defense system across the entire distribution
chain.
This cooperation has resulted in greater awareness of potential
vulnerabilities, the creation of more effective prevention programs,
new surveillance systems, and the ability to respond more quickly to
outbreaks of foodborne illness. However, changes in consumer dietary
patterns, changes in industry practices, changes in the U.S.
population, an increasingly globalized food supply chain, and new
pathogens and other contaminants pose challenges that are requiring us
to adapt our current food protection strategies.
At the Federal level, a number of agencies are working together to
coordinate their efforts and develop short- and long-term agendas to
make food safer. As the Federal regulatory Agency responsible for most
of the nation's food supply,\1\ FDA is committed to ensuring that the
food \2\ supply is among the safest in the world. This requires a
systematic, integrated approach to effective risk control and
enforcement strategies. Together with our Federal, State, local,
tribal, and territorial public health partners, FDA is working to plan
and implement an inspection and enforcement program to ensure high
rates of compliance with the Agency's food safety standards. FDA
intends to establish a fully integrated national food safety system
built on collaboration among all of these partners. This system will
encompass inspections, laboratory testing, and outbreak response and
will place priority on preventing foodborne illness, in both food for
humans and animals. This collaboration will result in: (1) Better
ability to assess potential risk at domestic food facilities and
greater and more consistent inspectional coverage of these facilities
across the entire food supply chain, (2) greater food surveillance
through integration of food facility inspection and testing
information, and (3) improved rapid response capacity and efficiency.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ FDA is the Federal Agency that is responsible for regulating
most of the country's food supply, with the exception of most meat,
poultry, and processed egg products, which are overseen by the USDA.
\2\ For purposes of this document, the term ``food'' includes
human food, animal feed, components (i.e. ingredients) of both food
and feed, and dietary supplements for humans, except as otherwise
noted.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current leveraging efforts have not been sufficient to ensure
adequate oversight of the entire food supply chain. Food facilities are
not uniformly inspected, data are not uniformly captured on a national
basis, and the data that are collected are not systematically mined for
intelligence. Neither FDA nor our regulatory or public health partners
alone collect and analyze a sufficient number of surveillance samples
per year to have confidence in to the ability to effectively identify
potential areas of concern; combining the data from all public health
partners would greatly enhance FDA's ability to detect potential
problems. In addition, national response efforts are uneven. Throughout
the years, numerous reports have concluded that FDA does not take full
advantage of the inspectional and surveillance capabilities of our
state, territorial, tribal and local regulatory and public health
partners. This is due in large part to the varied standards and laws in
each state as compared with the Federal system, as well as to the lack
of interoperable data systems and legal impediments to sharing data
among partners.
These combined factors present a challenge in managing and
responding to signals of public health concern in the food supply. The
currently decentralized U.S. public health and agriculture system
results in a situation in which responsibility for surveillance,
detection, investigation, response, and recovery to foodborne disease
outbreaks is shared across Federal, State, territorial, tribal, and
local government agencies.
Various levels of government are working to improve the nation's
food safety and defense system. At all levels, there is a call for
greater integration and coordination between the Federal agencies and
the regulatory and public health partners involved in food safety. An
integrated food safety system will allow FDA to meet the President's
Food Safety Working Group recommendation that the Federal government
``. . . prioritize crucial inspection and enforcement activity across
the world,
[[Page 30471]]
support safety efforts by States, localities, and businesses at home;
and utilize data to guide these efforts and evaluate their outcomes.''
\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ President's Food Safety Working Group Key Findings Report
submitted to President Obama on July 7, 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To be fully successful, the national food safety system must be
built with continuous input from FDA's regulatory and public health
partners. Efforts shall facilitate information sharing and
communication among all partners, and include infrastructure for a
national electronic information-sharing mechanism. These actions will
result in a national food safety system that identifies sources of risk
throughout the system and reduces time to detect and respond to
foodborne outbreaks. A public health-driven, collaborative, and
leveraged approach to food safety activities and responsibilities will
be reflected in improved public sector resource utilization at a
national level, which provides additional capacity for ensuring a safe
and secure food supply.
B. Research Objectives
The Office of Regulatory Affairs, in coordination with FDA's Office
of Foods, Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, and Center for
Veterinary Medicine, is soliciting a cooperative grant proposal to
expedite program development to support critical federal-state
collaboration necessary to plan and implement an integrated food safety
system. The intent is to fund proposals for the continued development
and operations of collaborative online tools involving a range of
stakeholders for the purposes of: (1) Information sharing in the
development of an integrated food safety system and (2) developing and
implementing a sustainable model for continued collaborative
communication and information sharing. This grant opportunity is
limited to organizations receiving funding under the current Integrated
Food Safety System Online Collaboration Development cooperative
agreement. The NCFPD, a DHS Center of Excellence, has unique expertise
and capacity found nowhere else. It is the host/creator of FoodSHIELD,
an inter-governmental collaborative project supporting information
sharing at the Federal, State, and local levels. NCFPD is uniquely
qualified to provide: Well-established and high-level access to Food/
Agriculture Sector Organizations and coordination of electronic
collaborative tools; collaborative support from HHS, DHS, and the USDA.
NCFPD also has past experience directly supporting the President's Food
Safety Working Group Objectives to integrate the food safety system at
all levels.
C. Eligibility Information
The following organizations/institutions are eligible to apply:
This cooperative agreement is only available to organizations
receiving funding under the current Integrated Food Safety System
Online Collaboration Development cooperative agreement. Competition is
limited to NCFPD because it is uniquely qualified and has expertise and
capacity found nowhere else. It is the host/creator of FoodSHIELD, an
intergovernmental collaborative project supporting information sharing
at the federal, state and local levels. NCFPD is uniquely qualified to
provide: Well-established and high-level access to Food/Agriculture
Sector Organizations and coordination of electronic collaborative
tools; collaborative support from HHS, DHS, and the USDA. NCFPD also
has past experience directly supporting the President's Food Safety
Working Group Objectives to integrate the food safety system at all
levels.
II. Award Information/Funds Available
A. Award Amount
One award up to $680,000 for fiscal year 2015 with up to an
additional 4 years funding up to $680,000 per year.
B. Length of Support
Up to 5 years.
III. Electronic Application, Registration, and Submission
Only electronic applications will be accepted. To submit an
electronic application in response to this FOA, applicants should first
review the full announcement located at https://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide. (FDA has verified the Web site addresses throughout this
document but FDA is not responsible for any subsequent changes to the
Web sites after this document publishes in the Federal Register.) For
all electronically submitted applications, the following steps are
required.
Step 1: Obtain a Dun and Bradstreet (DUNS) Number
Step 2: Register With System for Award Management (SAM)
Step 3: Obtain Username & Password
Step 4: Authorized Organization Representative (AOR)
Authorization
Step 5: Track AOR Status
Step 6: Register With Electronic Research Administration
(eRA) Commons
Steps 1 through 5, in detail, can be found at https://www07.grants.gov/applicants/organization_registration.jsp. Step 6, in
detail, can be found at https://commons.era.nih.gov/commons/registration/registrationInstructions.jsp. After you have followed
these steps, submit electronic applications to: https://www.grants.gov.
Dated: May 21, 2015.
Leslie Kux,
Associate Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2015-12853 Filed 5-27-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4164-01-P