The Sanitary Cold Chain
U. S. Carrier Food Safety Management
TransCert 
FDA FSMA Rules on the Sanitary Transportation of Human and Animal Foods

Help to Clear Up Your Confusion
Start by following these basic steps:

1.  The company needs to develop a food safety plan that focuses on the transportation of food.  Most companies already have a food safety plan, so the transportation part needs to be added to the original company plan.

2.  The company management needs to approve the plan and monitor plan implementation.

3.  Procedures for temperature monitoring and the sanitation of trailers must be written, people trained, and implementation monitored.  How this is done depends on what foods are transported and your customer needs.

4.  There needs to be a written agreement between the company and its customers regarding who is responsible for what (sanitation and temp monitoring) 

5.  All transportation operations personnel (loaders, un-loaders, drivers, supervisors, etc.) must go through mandatory training (3 courses are specified by the FDA).  Training certificates should be kept on file. See our training link on the home page.

6.  The company needs to look at two primary planning and implementation issues:

     a.  In-transit issues:  Acceptance at load and unload according to written procedures and hazard control specifications, data related to sanitation and temp monitoring during transit, trailer precool, security, reefer breakdowns, prior loads driver acceptance and many others (see the CID user manual appendix, our cell phone app allows the driver to record all events and the date/time/location that they occur).

     b.  What we call "ground operations" that include the sanitation and temp control of the load and unload environments (tools, conveyors, floor jacks, mops, brooms, etc) - See the attached Grower Shipper Documentation manual.

Assessment is the first step in our ATAC program


Assessment is designed to help you determine how well your current loading, unloading and in-transit procedures are aligned with basic customer and TransCert standards and federal laws.  Take a minute to download our free checklist and call us for help with a GAP analysis.  We have auditors in your region that can help determine what training is appropriate will prepare your company for the road ahead.  Go to our "Contact" page to request the free "checklist" download.

1.  Self Assessment:  Ask for our free "Container Checklist" to provide a basic review of your current procedures
2.  Auditor assisted GAP Analysis:  We will send an auditor to perform a review against your customer and TransCert standards
3.  Certification Audit: When you have completed training, ask us to schedule a certification audit.

Take a proactive approach
Do a self assessment today.  Click this link to request our free container Inspection Checklist

If these scenes are familiar to you, your company should consider beginning with an Assessment
Birds and rats nesting in harvest bins means that food is contaminated with feces and urine.  No known wash system can remove such contaminants from harvested food under such conditions. 

The contaminants are eventually transferred to consumer kitchens.
Clean packaged broccoli and spinach sitting in the 90F sun on the HOT pavement (2 hours).
The company that harvested, cooled, washed, chopped, bagged and shipped by air would certainly be disappointed by this freight forwarder.  Shelf life is significantly shortened and bacteria is now growing rapidly due to increased temperatures.