FDA has issued Draft Guidance on Model Accreditation Standards for Third-Party Auditor/Certification Body Accreditation for Food Safety Audits with recommendations on the qualifications that third-party auditors/certification bodies, and their auditing agents, should have in such areas as education and experience. After considering several voluntary consensus standards and identifying those most commonly used, FDA based much of its draft guidance on the International Organization for Standardization ISO/IEC 17021:2011. Thus, throughout the guidance, FDA provides references to ISO/IEC 17021:2011 clauses relevant to specific sections, noting some instances where the guidance differs from the ISO standard, and that, where the draft guidance differ, the recommendations of the guidance apply.
This is an interesting rule, and some have asked “Does this mean all auditors have to be FDA certified?” The answer is no. This program is just for auditors who wish to audit for purposes of issuing certificates for the Voluntary Qualified Importer Program, or issuing required certificates for imported high-risk foods. So far FDA has not identified any high-risk foods that will require certification, but I will bet a paycheck that they will as soon as they can get the system up and running.
Latest from Quality Assurance & Food Safety
- FDA Releases Produce Regulatory Program Standards
- Invest in People or Risk the System: Darin Detwiler and Catalyst Food Leaders on Building Real Food Safety Culture
- USDA Proposes Increasing Poultry, Pork Line Speeds
- FDA Releases New Traceability Rule Guidance
- TraceGains and iFoodDS Extend Strategic Alliance
- bioMérieux Launches New Platform for Spoiler Risk Management
- SafetyChain Receives SOC 2 Type 2 Certification
- Puratos Acquires Pennsylvania-Based Vör Foods