Current through Register Vol. 41, No. 3, September 23, 2024
A. Each person who determines the quantity of
milk in any lot of milk being picked up on any dairy farm in Virginia shall
comply with one of the following:
1. If the
milk is being picked up from a farm bulk cooling or holding tank, the person
shall use only a measuring rod, gauge, or gauge tube accurately calibrated to
the individual farm bulk cooling or holding tank and the accompanying
calibration chart with a serial number that matches the serial number for the
specific farm bulk cooling or holding tank for which it was prepared;
2. If the milk being picked up is
not stored in a farm bulk cooling or holding tank, the person shall determine
the quantity of milk at the point of delivery to the milk plant processing the
milk by commingling all of the milk in a vessel equipped with a gauge rod,
surface gauge, gauge, or gauge tube and a volume chart that has been prepared
in compliance with §
3.2-5620
of the Code of Virginia;
3. If the
milk being picked up is not stored in a farm bulk cooling or holding tank and
the basis for payment for the milk will be based solely on the volume of milk
in gallons, the person shall determine the quantity of milk by adding the
volume in gallons of each separate full container and the volume in gallons of
any milk in containers that are not full; or
4. If the milk being picked up is not stored
in a farm bulk cooling or holding tank and the basis for payment for the milk
will be based solely on the pounds of milk delivered, the person shall
determine the quantity of milk in pounds by weighing each of the containers of
milk on a commercial scale before and after they have been emptied and
subtracting the weight of the empty containers from the total weight of the
containers and the milk, the difference being the weight in pounds of milk.
B. Each person who
desires to convert a volumetric measurement of milk to weight in pounds of milk
shall multiply the volume of milk in gallons by 8.60.
C. Each person that operates a dairy farm and
transports any milk in cans or other containers from the dairy farm to a milk
plant and intends to determine the basis for payment of the milk based solely
on its volume in gallons or solely on its weight in pounds, shall ensure the
cans or other containers comply with the following:
1. Each container shall be provided with a
visual means to measure the volume of milk in the container in divisions of one
or more whole gallons up to the total capacity of the container;
2. Each container shall be equipped with a
tightly fitting lid that prevents any milk from leaking out around the closure;
3. Each container shall be
manufactured from stainless steel, food grade plastic, or tinned metal;
4. No container shall be
manufactured from glass or other easily breakable material;
5. Each container shall be smooth and easily
cleanable; and
6. Each container
shall be equipped with an opening large enough to allow the container to be
washed by hand if it is intended to be washed by hand or washed by mechanical
means if it is intended to be washed by mechanical means.
D. Each person that operates a pay purpose
laboratory shall:
1. Provide a separate room
of sufficient size in which pay purpose testing shall be conducted;
2. Provide lighting of at least 20
foot-candles when measured at work bench levels and at all other work areas
used to conduct testing;
3.
Provide adequate ventilation sufficient to prevent condensation from forming
and to prevent noxious or hazardous chemical fumes from collecting in the
laboratory;
4. Provide heating and
cooling equipment sufficient to maintain a constant room temperature of
70°F plus or minus 2.0°F in his laboratory at all times;
5. Provide a separate permanently installed
hand-washing facility with hot and cold running water under pressure supplied
through a mix valve, soap, and single service paper towels;
6. Provide only potable water under pressure
in the laboratory;
7. Provide
walls that are constructed of impervious material with a light-colored material
and that are easily cleanable;
8.
Provide floors made of concrete or other equally impervious material that are
easily cleanable;
9. Provide
toilet facilities for employees;
10. Use only methods and equipment approved
by the state regulatory authority agency to test milk for protein, solids,
solids not fat, and fat;
11.
Construct the facility to ensure that the laboratory environment has a stable
electrical supply, stable water supply, stable heating and cooling, and stable
ventilation to allow a constantly controllable environment for pay purpose
testing procedures and pay purpose equipment; and
12. Dispose of all liquid, solid, and gaseous
wastes in a manner that complies with state and federal requirements for waste
disposal.
E. Each bulk
milk hauler shall:
1. Collect at least two
representative samples from each bulk milk cooling or holding tank each time
that milk is picked up from the dairy farm for use as official milk samples;
2. Collect a minimum of four
ounces of milk for each official milk sample collected;
3. Maintain custody of all official milk
samples collected or transfer custody of all official milk samples collected to
another permitted bulk milk hauler, bulk milk sampler, or at the discretion of
the state regulatory agency, lock all official milk samples in a suitable
container in which they may be transported or stored;
4. Pick up all of the milk in each farm bulk
cooling or holding tank each time that milk is picked up from the farm bulk
cooling or holding tank; and
5.
Pick up only milk that is 45°F or cooler, but not frozen.
F. Each person who desires to
determine the butterfat content of milk as a basis for payment shall either
select from each dairy farm supplying them with milk a minimum of four milk
samples taken at irregular intervals each month and utilize only laboratory
butterfat test results from milk samples that have been tested within 48 hours
of collection for pay purposes or:
1. Collect
a representative sample from each shipment of each producer supplying them with
milk for a maximum of 16 days, if composite milk samples are used to determine
butterfat content;
2. Store
composite milk samples only in an approved milk laboratory that will perform
the butterfat test;
3. Preserve
all composite milk samples with an appropriate preservative designed to prevent
the spoilage of milk and that will not affect the butterfat test; and
4. Test each composite milk sample
within three days following the end of the number of days used to create the
composite milk sample.
Statutory Authority: §§
3.2-5206,
3.2-5223,
and
3.2-5224
of the Code of Virginia.