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Greenbelt Farmers’ Market Network Market Manager’s Day Wolf Saxler Food Safety Manager

Greenbelt Farmers’ Market Network Market Manager’s Day Wolf Saxler Food Safety Manager April 20, 2016. Public Health Inspectors & Farmers’ Markets. What I will be covering What is the background of a Public Health Inspector (PHI) Legislation ASPHIO Guidance Document

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Greenbelt Farmers’ Market Network Market Manager’s Day Wolf Saxler Food Safety Manager

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  1. Greenbelt Farmers’ Market Network Market Manager’s Day Wolf Saxler Food Safety Manager April 20, 2016

  2. Public Health Inspectors & Farmers’ Markets • What I will be covering • What is the background of a Public Health Inspector (PHI) • Legislation • ASPHIO Guidance Document • What we look for at a farmers’ market (FM) • Operational issues/concerns

  3. Public Health Inspectors & Farmers’ Markets • PHI Background • Currently a BA or BSc • There are 5 universities across Canada teaching the courses. • Each PHI must do a minimum of 12 weeks of field training • Each PHI must pass a Board of Certification test • There are requirements to take professional development credits each year • Certified Public Health Inspector (Canada), CPHI(C)

  4. Public Health Inspectors & Farmers’ Markets • Legal Requirements Health Protection & Promotion Act • Duty to inspect • Definition of a health hazard • Section for an Order • Appeals • Provision to charge for obstruction or hindrance • Provision for the taking of samples, evidence and the destruction of food

  5. Public Health Inspectors & Farmers’ Markets • Ontario Food Premises Regulation • Sets standards for all food operations • Requirements for safe food handling, hot and cold temperatures of food, storage, cleanliness, hand washing, utensil cleaning, cooking temperature, etc. • Also has exemptions for FM’s • Fixed vs temporary FM’s

  6. Public Health Inspectors & Farmers’ Markets • ASPHIO Guidance Document Also known as Common Approaches for Farmers’ Markets & Exempted Special Events, A Guide for Public Health Units • Provides the direction for the process • Sets standard for exempt and not exempt markets • Sets process, i.e. friendly visit

  7. Public Health Inspectors & Farmers’ Markets • What 3 things won’t we accept • Raw milk • Ungraded eggs • Uninspected meats

  8. Public Health Inspectors & Farmers’ Markets • Types of FM’s Fixed Markets • Generally open year round • Have food operations indoor • The food operations meet the requirements of the Ontario Food Premises Regulation • Would have access to power and water

  9. Public Health Inspectors & Farmers’ Markets • Types of FM’s Seasonal Markets • Generally open a day per week for a limited time • Have food operations mainly outdoors • The vendors set up and tear down each day • May or may not have access to power and water

  10. Public Health Inspectors & Farmers’ Markets • What do we look for at a FM? • Types of food available • Cleanliness of the units • Food protection • Food temperature • Food supplier • Water supply • Hand washing facilities • Food handler training/knowledge

  11. Public Health Inspectors & Farmers’ Markets • What makes us nervous? • Hazardous foods • Hazardous foods not being kept at the right temperature • Foods made at home • Animals • Lack of hand washing facilities • Lack of food handler training/knowledge

  12. Public Health Inspectors & Farmers’ Markets • How do you make us less nervous? • Have a list of vendors ready • Mark off the farm vendors • Be supportive • Ask us for a summary at the end of our visit

  13. Public Health Inspectors & Farmers’ Markets • What to do when we come. • Ask for identification if you don’t know us • City/Regional photo ID • Badge • Business cards • Provide us with a list of vendors • Have the farm vendors marked

  14. Public Health Inspectors & Farmers’ Markets • Our role during the visit • We are there to make sure that people don’t get sick from the food • We can provide some education on the spot • We may have to condemn food • If the situation warrants it, we would close a vendor • We will provide you with reasons and justification for our decisions • We may just tell you that everything is fine

  15. Public Health Inspectors & Farmers’ Markets • Why we visit • To assess the market • To determine if a health hazard exists • Both the public and Ministry of Health expect us to • We may be there because someone complained

  16. Public Health Inspectors & Farmers’ Markets • Other agencies that may come • Canadian Food Inspection Agency • Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs • Transportation • Municipal Licensing • Parks and Recreation Departments • Waste & Pollution Control

  17. Public Health Inspectors & Farmers’ Markets • If you are in disagreement • Speak with the PHI to ask about their reasoning • You can always call and speak to their manager • Most municipalities also have a complaint process

  18. Public Health Inspectors & Farmers’ Markets • Questions?

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