Ethanol plants are taking training courses to comply with federal food safety rules

Ethanol plants around the country are taking steps to stay compliant with federal food safety rules, especially when it comes to what is being fed to livestock.

Under the Food Safety Modernization Act, or FSMA, ethanol facilities that produce distiller’s grains must follow strict preventative controls. The Renewable Fuels Association says these co-products feed livestock worldwide, so it is crucial to document the chain of custody from the corn entering the plant to the feed that goes out the door.

“Most important aspect of this is that the FDA has implemented the Food Safety Modernization Act, and as part of that program, you know your distiller grains, your co-products, anything that you’re using that’s going out the door there, there’s kind of the chain of chain of custody, right? So if you’re producing, you know, a distiller grain that gets fed to a cow and then that cow gets fed to humans, you know, you want to be able to document kind of the whole chain from the part, which we take the corn into the facility, the part where we produce the grain and then and where it gets fed,” said Justin Schultz, RFA’s Director of Environment, Health & Safety.

Schultz will lead a two-and-a-half-day training course next month in South Dakota. He describes the hazard analysis, preventative controls and verification requirements are tailored to the ethanol industry.

“There are 20 hours of standard training. This training is developed by the Food Safety Preventive Controls Alliance, so that the FSPCA, curriculum, is recognized by the FDA, and it meets all those requirements for the preventive controls qualified individual.”

The course is open to both members and nonmembers of the Renewable Fuels Association. With demand for training growing and regulations evolving, Schultz says now is the time for producers to get ahead and stay compliant.

Related Stories
Theresa Long and Theresa Pittman joined us on behalf of the AgriSafe Network to discuss the health and social issues impacting families in agriculture.
Herd rebuilding looks slow, keeping cattle prices supported; beef-on-dairy crosses help fill feedlots, while imports temper—but don’t erase—tightness.
“We believe that it is just a matter of days or weeks... before we see New World screwworm in Texas.”
The three-point plan was announced during remarks at the annual meeting of the National Association of State Departments of Agriculture.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Todd Miller, CEO of Head Honchos, shares about his business offering to ease agricultural labor shortages.
The National FFA Organization hosts the Washington Leadership Conference, where thousands of FFA members gather to learn how to be change makers in their communities.
Having a good read on fuel prices is a must during harvest, but one analyst says grain farmers should also be watching the crude oil markets.
National Farmers Union (NFU) President Rob Larew discusses the urgent need for aid as farm families face mounting input costs and long-term market uncertainty.
Bradley Roy was the youngest angler to compete in a Bassmaster Elite Series event. Now, he’s prepping to hit the water with MLF Hall of Famer Greg “The Rooster” Vinson in the Team Series Patriot Cup.
Stories like this remind us what FFA is all about — leadership, service, and growth.