Photo: (Left to right) Award presenter Shelly Feist, Partnership for Food Safety, John Butts, Ph.D., Judy A. Harrison, Ph.D., Gary Acuff, accepting the award for Purnendu C. Vasavada, Ph.D. and award presenter Lori Stephens, NSF International.
NSF International, a global public health and safety organization that provides food safety and quality assurance services across all food supply chain sectors, announced the winners of the 2016 NSF Food Safety Leadership Awards during the 2016 Food Safety Summit in Rosemont, Ill.
The NSF International Food Safety Leadership Awards recognize individuals and organizations for real and lasting improvements in food safety. Now in its thirteenth year, the awards program encourages innovation in educational programs, processes and technologies to advance food safety. Each year, an independent panel of food safety experts from academia, industry and the regulatory community reviews nominations from around the world to select the recipients. Nominations are evaluated on the basis of innovation, design and contribution to the advancement of food safety.
The 2016 NSF Food Safety Leadership Award winners are:
- Lifetime Achievement Award: John N. Butts, Ph.D., Vice President, Research, Land O’ Frost and President, Food Safety by Design LLC. Butts is a food safety advocate and food processing scientist with more than 40 years of experience creating food protection solutions such as improved sanitation and sanitary design of facilities and equipment, pathogen intervention, process control and risk assessment. He has helped food companies integrate scientific principles and food technology in real-world manufacturing settings to help enhance food safety, assure product quality and deliver efficient solutions. In particular, he developed investigative tools that help identify and control pathogen growth in cooked, processed meats and he implemented technologies to minimize pathogen transfer within high-risk areas.
In the 1980s, Butts led the team that developed Land O’Frost’s “seek & destroy” process to identify and control Listeria monocytogenes growth niches, which has since been adopted across the meat industry and by other food sectors. He also introduced a pasteurization step and one-way product process that separated the raw and ready-to-eat (RTE) areas of plants. Butts is one of the founding members of an education program with the North American Meat Institute to teach environmental pathogen control. The program of strategies and practices to control Listeria in RTE meat and poultry products has been widely accepted across the U.S. and globally, and forms the core of an education course conducted and emulated nationwide, reaching well over 1,000 meat industry employees. For many years, Butts also served as a program instructor.
- Lifetime Achievement Award: Purnendu C. Vasavada, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus, University of Wisconsin-River Falls (Retired). Vasavada has made lasting contributions to advancing food safety through teaching, applied research and training programs on novel food processing, emerging pathogens, microbial food safety and rapid methods for detecting microorganisms in food and dairy products. For 30 years, he organized the Food Microbiology Symposium and Rapid Methods Workshop, which attracted scientists worldwide, provided a forum for expanding food safety knowledge, and helped companies understand emerging pathogens and developments in cultural, immunological and molecular methods to implement effective strategies for food safety and quality assurance. As an FDA-Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education Fellow, Vasavada was instrumental in forming the Food Safety Preventive Controls Alliance (FSPCA). In 2013, he helped initiate FSPCA working groups to develop training materials for the FSMA Preventive Controls for Human Foods regulation. The Food Safety Preventive Controls for Human Food course is now being offered to train FDA investigators, state food processing inspectors and the food processing industry.
Over his 35-year career, Vasavada initiated and managed collaborations with academia, industry and governmental agencies in the U.S. and abroad. Through the USDA Cochrane Fellowship program and the United States Agency for International Development, he developed training programs for visiting scientists and industry professionals from Asia and Eastern Europe. He has taught over 2,500 students and food science professionals, presented over 150 papers and authored over 100 publications, including co-editing the book Beverage Quality and Safety. He has also consulted with industry and regulators about policy and practices that affect food safety.
- Training and Education Award: Judy A. Harrison, Ph.D., Professor and Extension Food Safety Specialist, University of Georgia Dept. of Foods and Nutrition. Harrison designs and implements targeted food safety education programs for children, consumers, farmers and farmers’ market managers to reduce the risk of foodborne illness and improve behaviors. She has collaborated with partners such as the Georgia Dept. of Agriculture, the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, the USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service and the Partnership for Food Safety Education (PFSE) to create and implement programs to help keep food safe nationwide. Harrison has developed curricula, educational videos and print materials for extension agents, trained extension agents and disseminated food safety knowledge in consumer publications and the media. She uses focus groups and applied research to target the programs and then measures their effectiveness in improving food safety knowledge and behavior.
Working with the PFSE and USDA, Harrison led the development of the series Smart Kids Fight BAC! (an animated video, activity books and teaching guides) and the book He’s BAC! to teach kids to keep food safe. The curriculum significantly increased food safety knowledge of thousands of children and was requested in 27 states. Another of Harrison’s programs, Wash Your Paws, Georgia!, has taught over 10,000 children proper handwashing to prevent illness. Her curriculum, Enhancing the Safety of Locally Grown Produce, has trained approximately 650 farmers and 150 market managers in five states. The program enhances consumer protection by increasing knowledge and safety practices such as self-inspections, improved cleaning and sanitizing, and better recordkeeping.
The NSF Food Safety Leadership Award nominations are judged by an independent panel of jurors. The 2016 jurors included:
- Mary Adolf, M.S., R.D., Executive Director, International Pizza Hut Franchise Holders Association
- Shelley Feist, Executive Director, Partnership for Food Safety Education (PFSE)
- Donna Garren, Ph.D., Vice President, Regulatory and Technical Affairs, American Frozen Food Institute
- Linda Harris, Ph.D., President-Elect, IAFP, and Specialist in Cooperative Extension Food Science and Technology, University of California-Davis
- Ernest Julian, Ph.D., Chief of the Office of Food Protection, Rhode Island Department of Health
- Ronald Klein, Program Director, Association of Food and Drug Officials
- Jim Mann, Founder and Executive Director, Handwashing for Life Institute
- Ewen Todd, Ph.D., President, Ewen Todd Consulting and Former Director, Food Safety Policy Center, Michigan State University
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