Code of Federal Regulations (Last Updated: October 10, 2024) |
Title 21 - Food and Drugs |
Chapter I - Food and Drug Administration, Department of Health and Human Services |
SubChapter B - Food for Human Consumption |
Part 112 - Standards for the Growing, Harvesting, Packing, and Holding of Produce for Human Consumption |
Subpart L - Equipment, Tools, Buildings, and Sanitation |
§ 112.123 - What general requirements apply regarding equipment and tools subject to this subpart?
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§ 112.123 What general requirements apply regarding equipment and tools subject to this subpart?
All of the following requirements apply regarding equipment and tools subject to this subpart:
(a) You must use equipment and tools that are of adequate design, construction, and workmanship to enable them to be adequately cleaned and properly maintained; and
(b) Equipment and tools must be:
(1) Installed and maintained as to facilitate cleaning of the equipment and of all adjacent spaces; and
(2) Stored and maintained to protect covered produce from being contaminated with known or reasonably foreseeable hazards and to prevent the equipment and tools from attracting and harboring pests.
(c) Seams on food contact surfaces of equipment and tools that you use must be either smoothly bonded, or maintained to minimize accumulation of dirt, filth, food particles, and organic material and thus minimize the opportunity for harborage or growth of microorganisms.
(d)
(1) You must inspect, maintain, and clean and, when necessary and appropriate, sanitize all food contact surfaces of equipment and tools used in covered activities as frequently as reasonably necessary to protect against contamination of covered produce.
(2) You must maintain and clean all non-food-contact surfaces of equipment and tools subject to this subpart used during harvesting, packing, and holding as frequently as reasonably necessary to protect against contamination of covered produce.
(e) If you use equipment such as pallets, forklifts, tractors, and vehicles such that they are intended to, or likely to, contact covered produce, you must do so in a manner that minimizes the potential for contamination of covered produce or food contact surfaces with known or reasonably foreseeable hazards.