Jul 31, 2012

Many hotels yet to apply for licence

Punitive action has been postponed by six months
Even as the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India has postponed by six months punitive action against shops that have not renewed their licence under the Food Safety Act, 2006, only a section of hotels in the district have applied for the licence.
A July 25 order by the Enforcement Director of the authority extended the August 4 deadline beyond which action should have been taken.
District Food Safety Officer A. Mohammed Rafi told The Hindu here on Monday that 4,318 hotels in the district had applied for the licence as on Monday. The local bodies had been the licensing authorities before the Act came into effect.
With various pieces of legislation, such as the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954, and the Food Products Order, 1955, annulled, the entire responsibility of licensing has been assigned to the Commissioner for Food Safety. “The licensing work started in March. The number of hotels in the district is yet to be ascertained as the local bodies have not handed over the details related to the previous licensing regimes,” Mr. Rafi said.
Hotels with a turnover of over Rs. 12 lakh should apply for a licence and those with less than that needed registration. “Almost a month ago, I submitted an application for licence to the hotel owners’ association, who will apply on our behalf. But I am yet to hear from them,” Gireeshan A., a hotel owner at West Hill, said. The delinking of local bodies from activities related to food safety had reduced the number of personnel involved and added to the workload of the Food Safety Commissionerate, which is said to be understaffed. “There are only seven staff members to handle all the work related to food safety in Kozhikode district,” Mr. Rafi said.

Leading paan masalas have nicotine?


PATNA: If you thought leading brands of paan masala like Rajnigandha and Manikchand don't contain nicotine, as they claim, give a second thought to it. The state food safety commissioner cum health secretary, Sanjay Kumar, has issued an order to test them for nicotine content after Union health ministry submitted a Central Tobacco Research Institute report recently in the Supreme Court confirming presence of nicotine in them.
Kumar said on Monday he has asked all designated officers and food safety officers to collect samples of all leading paan brands. He said, "Ten samples of leading brands of paan masala would be retested for nicotine. If they are found to contain nicotine, they, too, would be prohibited to effectively impose the ban on tobacco products in the state."
As per the report of Andhra Pradesh-based research institute submitted to the apex court, gutka (Goa 1000), gutka RMD (Manikchand), paan masala (Rajnigandha) and khaini (Chaini Khaini) and khaini (Raja) contain 2.04%, 1.88%, 2.26%, 0.58% and 1.02% nicotine respectively.
The state government banned the sale, distribution and production of nicotine containing products from May this year, based on the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India regulation no 2.3.4 notified in August 2011.
Deepak Mishra, executive director of an NGO, SEEDS, said if these products are found containing nicotine, they must be banned with immediate effect. He added, "After the ban on gutka products, the sale of leading paan masala brands, which people think don't contain nicotine, has increased alarmingly."
Tobacco consumption is the causative factor in 40% cancer cases, the maximum by any factor. According to a survey, 53.5% people in Bihar use tobacco, highest in the country. According to experts, nicotine affects all organs of body from head to toe.
Noted surgeon Dr A A Hai on Monday said, "The most common cancers caused by tobacco are the ones of oral cavity and upper aerodigestive tract. Bronchitis is another common disease caused which causes problems in breathing. Apart from that, eyes, lungs, abdomen, blood, heart vessels and urinary tract are also affected." He added what added to the misery of the suffering families was the high cost of treatment. Pregnant women should avoid tobacco products, especially because that can affect foetus. The consumption of tobacco can also affect reproductive health of both males and females, he said.

How does the wood in your bread, biscuit taste today?

plate of biscuits 
A lot of the high-fibre fast-food packages sold by major food brands most likely contains “wood cellulose” that’s even used by the plastics industry. And the food safety authority is aware about it

Let's start with some first-hand experience, which is very often how curiosity is sparked and questions arise.  


A few months ago, I was wading through an assignment at a factory in an industrial suburb outside Delhi, where a large number of unskilled and semi-skilled workers were employed. Minimum wages in this segment are not very high, and for this category of people, every paisa saved counts. That's what they've left the tough conditions in their rural homes for.


Most of us have absolutely no idea of how this segment lives and survives. Even though they come under the category of organised labour in many cases, protected by law with benefits like ESIC, EPFO and pension plans, what matters is what they get in hand every month and how much of it they are able to save to send home, or to try and buy that elusive plot of land to enable them to build a roof over their heads.


Everything else is nothing but promises, which they have learned not to trust, as it does not get them dinner in the here and now.


Expenses are, therefore, sought to be reduced to the bare minimum. Free meals of the sort provided on certain days at certain places are balanced against the cost of time and travel to get there. Cheap lodging in the vicinity of the factory is balanced against the option of a place to sleep in the factory environs free of cost, perhaps in exchange for some night duty responsibilities.

Education for family members is an aim for which no effort is spared. Likewise, some amount of effort and sacrifice is made towards further self-education, by sacrificing other expenses, and night schools—where they exist—are indeed popular. Free uniforms from the factory are a boon; the older ones are used to sleep in, reducing the necessity of buying clothes.


But what's really interesting is the way they spend on food. As some of them explained, at one time it was cheaper to bring grain, cereals, lentils and even some amount of ghee from the village, and use it during their stay in the city. Now, when they return from their villages, whatever they bring along gets a good price if they sell it, and then they survive on what they can find in the city, in and around the workplace.

The first thing that takes a toss in such conditions is the group-cooked hot meal in the morning. It just doesn't exist, and in lieu it is often a packet of cheap biscuits dipped in the first mug of free tea at work, eaten on the move. Lunch is often a perquisite of the job, huge helpings of roti-daal-subzi-pickle. Dinner is scrounged around. Most of these workers also double up for late evening work where a meal can be sourced.

So, to keep things going when hunger pangs overtake planning, there are the cheap-packed foods of the biscuit sort and the cheap fried foods of the samosa sort, dipped in a cup of 'tea' which is more often than not brewed with urea as a whitener instead of milk at the roadside stall.


The biscuits attracted my attention. Popular big brands selling handy small packs at a "price point" of two to five rupees for 6-12 biscuits, seldom found at the better stores you and I shop at. Taking a bite, dipped in tea, I found that they did not dissolve and break like biscuits used to in the past, and they filled me up admirably, giving me a feeling of fullness in very quick time. At first, I thought it could be excess corn glue binders or baking soda, till I researched the price of corn glue binders and baking soda and wrote that off. So, full of pride that I had discovered a cheaper alternative, I bought a few packets and brought them home, basic "glucose", "chocolate" and "cream". All major brands. So cheap?


Obviously, I was treated to a lecture, that these were simply not healthy. At this point, I thought it was snobbishness talking, but fact remains the biscuits remained untouched for a few days. Everybody prefers "local" bakery biscuits at our home, procured from a charity organisation at the nearby Lajpat Bhavan, or expensive imported ones presented now and then. So after a few days, I thought to myself, maybe the birds and the stray dogs will appreciate them more?


Next morning, along with the bird seed that we have sprinkled on a wall, I laid out some of the biscuits, neatly crumbled, but while the bird seed was gobbled up as usual by about 9am, the biscuits were untouched-even the squirrels who eat everything, left them alone. Same with the stray dogs, a sniff at the "orange cream" biscuit, a bit of a whine, and then left alone. In due course, the ants and the termites presumably finished off the biscuits, because the birds and dogs didn't touch them.


The maid, watching bemused, said that the animals don't eat it because the biscuits have "plastic" in them. Plastic? Where had she heard that from? Turns out that everybody in her village near Ranchi knew about this, because some people from there who worked in a processed factory had told them that the seths were now using an ingredient for bread and biscuits called "cellulose", in quantities from 15% to 25%. How did they know? Because similar packets from the same supplier were being used for the plastic to be used for the wrapping and packaging, as well as to line the insides of the biscuit packaging to prevent the biscuit from going soggy. To prove her point, she crumbled up the biscuits and stirred them into a mug of warm water. After a few minutes, much of what used to be the biscuit was still floating on top. After a few hours it was exactly the same.

Please try this yourself. It is like the "patty" inside the famous McDonalds burger, which does not deteriorate or go bad for days on end.


Around the same time, I had been filing RTI applications on the subject of artificial sweeteners used by the processed food industry, specifically called "aspartame". (Read,
Did you check the neurotoxin in your 'soft' drink today?)      In the course of the responses, which contained the usual evasive answers from the ministries, as well as the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI), I also managed to develop some sources within. People like you and me, but unwilling or unable to come on record, but right-thinking all the same.

I decided to approach a few of them to try and find out what was going on, and meanwhile, tried to place a total ban on packaged bread and biscuits at home, rewarding the maid with basic bakery lessons and going in for "
chakki atta" ground at a store. (By the way, the one shop in our area which provides fresh ground atta of various sorts has so much business now that the owner is opening a second shop and provides an increasingly growing range of choices, with exotic grains of all sorts.)

This was when I received my next surprise. Yes, the FSSAI, at an informal level, were aware that there was something being added to processed foods, especially biscuits and bread, for the last few years, and that this new miracle ingredient going under the technological name of 'cellulose' was actually the same 'wood cellulose' used by, among others, the plastics industry, and by an amazing coincidence of nomenclature, was categorised as 'fibre' for all practical purposes, including the list of ingredients. As a matter of fact, within the industry there was growing awareness on the cost-saving benefits of adding more and more wood cellulose to everything, not just bread and biscuits, but also ice cream, cheese, meat . . . and upstream into desserts, pizzas and most other forms of 'fast food'.


So just how did 'wood cellulose' get into the lexicon of the Ministry of Food Processing (MoFP) and the FSSAI as 'fibre'? Well, in one way, it is the truth. Wood cellulose is fibre. The only thing is that unless you share your enzymes with termites, you and I can't digest it. Even woodpeckers can't digest wood cellulose or wood, and they are pecking away at it all the time. Nor could hundreds of thousands of people starving to death in famines from the Siege of Leningrad ,to closer in history in Darfur.

Within the food industry in the US, the FDA apparently permits limited use of wood cellulose under very specific conditions, and up to a maximum of between 1% and 3.5%. And there's no way the manufacturers there can get away by calling it 'fibre'.

Within the food industry in India, welcome to the reality, and check out how many new products on your shop or supermarket shelves carry the added nomenclature 'fibre'. And as per my source/sources in the FSSAI, this is growing at a very rapid pace. The cost of wood cellulose in India, meanwhile, is dropping, because the new miracle raw material for wood cellulose in India is, hold your breath, not just the tree or plant, but sawdust. Processed sawdust = fibre in your bread and biscuit?


At such a rapid pace and with such huge profits on the back of this new trend to put wood cellulose into everything, the processed food industry—riding on the back of these lower prices and huge profits—is making a strong bid once again to enter the mid-day meal space. With an attempt to replace the hot cooked meal with a "high fibre" pre-packaged meal. And as an added incentive, they plan to use the term "fortified and enhanced" with a variety of other ingredients like, for example, iron. This, incidentally, is co-terminus with a strong movement in the developed countries to move away from such processed foods and fast foods.


India, therefore, is the obvious next target. Just like it was with opium for China a few hundred years ago and tobacco in the recent past, it is now going to be wood cellulose masquerading as fibre in our packaged foods.

I wonder, will they use iron sweepings or filings, and will we be able to transport these modern high-fibre fortified with iron biscuits using magnets, soon?

Quality of food: HC seeks report

The Kerala High Court on Monday directed the state to file a detailed report on a petition seeking a directive to the Food Safety Commissioner to ensure that quality food is supplied by hotels and restaurants across the state. The state submitted before the court that 1,400 hotels were raided and action was taken against the offenders in the wake of the death of Sachin Roy Mathew, allegedly after consuming Shawarma.
A Division Bench comprising Acting Chief Justice Manjula Chellur and Justice A M Shaffique issued the directive on a petition filed by Baisil Attipetty of Ernakulam.
The petitioner sought a directive to state to issue an order to Kerala Hotel and Restaurants’ Association and its members to sell food in accordance with the provisions of the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006.
The petitioner stated that every citizen has a right to have hygienic and safe food from hotels.
The petitioner also sought a directive to the association to issue a detailed bill for each item they supply to consumers and to display the price list of all the food items sold.

Many waiters carry GERMS ON HANDS

Study Finds Food Handlers Carry E. Coli, Various Dangerous Bugs

    The meal that the waiter has served you appears to be perfect. It looks good, smells great and has just the right quantities of protein, carbohydrates and vitamins. But zoom in at a microscopic level and you’d probably see that also contains the most vile-looking and dangerous germs and bacteria like Escherichia coli (E. coli) and amoebic cysts.
    Not having hair or grime on your plate does not mean that the food served at a restaurant or roadside eatery is safe. A study shows that the hands of many chefs and waiters in the city are infested with deadly micro-organisms.
    The results of the study by Indian Public Health Association have come as a shocker to people who eat out as well as doctors and health department officials. Researchers found E. coli on the hands of nearly 11.2% of the people who handle food in five star hotels. In smaller restaurants, 47% of chefs and waiters had the bacterium, which can cause serious food poisoning, on their hands. The figure rises to 84.7% in roadside eateries.
    Researchers found amoebic cysts on the hands of 11.2% of waiters in roadside eateries. These cysts can cause forms of amoebiasis, from dysentery to amoebic liver abscess, the third most common cause of death (after schistosomiasis and malaria) from parasitic infections.
    What makes eating at roadside kiosks more dangerous is that these units do not follow hygienic practices and have unclean cooking practices. Eateries are often located near open drains or garbage bins. People in the city are also extremely vulnerable to food poisoning.
    It is an extremely scary situation, said IPHA state president Dr S Elango, who led the study. “We did not know these dangers existed before the study,” he said. “Food inspectors often test food quality but rarely check health and hygiene of people who handle food.” The situation could be even worse, he said. “We don’t know if there are other, more serious health risks because our study covered a
limited number of disease causing microorganisms,” he said.
    Dr Elango’s team surveyed 250 restaurants and eateries over six months and checked the hands of 1,000 people who handled food. The subjects’ hands were dipped in distilled water that was then tested in labs. The tests showed that the water contained E. coli and several other dangerous micro-organisms.
    Scientists in the UK and France are now finding that lack of food safety measures could lead to the growth of superbugs that are resistant to antibiotics. Across the globe, experts have called on health officials to step up monitoring and stop superbugs like salmonella and typhimurium from spreading globally.
    City health officer B Kuganatham estimates that at least 65 lakh people in Chennai eat or drink in hotels or eateries at least once every day. The trade licences for hotels and eateries are issued by the
State Food and Drug Safety Authority as per the provisions of the Food Safety Act.
    The law mandates hygienic practices for food handlers — including regular washing of hands with soap, use of disposable gloves, hair covers and clean clothes. A senior member of city’s hotel owner’s association said many restaurants do not follow the prescribed norms.
    “I work in a five star restaurant and we have very stringent rules,” a chef said. “But workers in our kitchens rarely wear gloves or follow other protocol.” Health officials said they often come across breaches of hygiene rules.
    Senior surgical gastroenterologist Dr S M Chandramohan said more than twothirds of his patients with food poisoning or stomach infections had been regularly eating out. Symptoms of stomach infections show up within minutes in some cases and sometimes take days.
    pushpa.narayan@timesgroup.com 

FSSA ineffective in curbing food adulteration cases

The newly notified Food Safety & Standards Act, 2006, does not seem to be effective in curbing adulteration of food articles as is the case with previous Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954.

This has become evident from statistics which show that the Government of Kerala has failed to take stringent action against the issue during the period 2004-2012. An RTI application filed by the Human Rights Defence Forum (HRDF), Kerala, has revealed the details.

D B Binu, general secretary, HRDF, Kerala, said, “Surprisingly, out of the 95,261 samples tested between 2004 and 2012, 2,190 food samples were found to be adulterated and authorities initiated action in only 1,912 cases.”

Binu explained that the information was revealed to the organisation based on the RTI filed by it and further probe in the case evolved based on the number of food adulteration cases being reported in Kerala by the media.

Binu added that it was a sad state of affairs that the court convicted only 660 persons responsible for adulteration, which included reputed hotels, in the state. Also those who were convicted were punished with only Rs 2,000 as fine.

While the remaining 757 persons were acquitted, it was revealed that the maximum number of food adulteration was being reported and detected in the Ernakulam district of Kerala followed by Thiruvananthapuram and Kozhikode.

Binu stressed that the new law, the FSSA enforced on August 5, 2011, had created a lot of confusion in terms of registration and licensing and also in the implementation of the Act across the nation.

He pointed out that since the new Act failed, several important tasks such as registration and licensing of food labs and prosecution in cases of food adulteration were left incomplete. Hence, he wanted the new law to be implemented properly at the earliest.

The new lords of misrule


Sunita NarainSunita NarainLast fortnight, we began discussing ‘authorities’, and asked: Is this variant of governance reform working? This time, let’s consider the Food Safety and Standards Authority (FSSA). It was created because of a recommendation of the Joint Parliamentary Committee which investigated our report on pesticide content in soft drinks and the lack of standards to regulate contamination in food.

 The concern was the existing structure, based on a committee within the Union ministry of health and family welfare, was inadequate to the challenge of the modern food industry, which is taking over our kitchens. We needed a regulator that erred on the side of public health, to ensure the food on our table met strict standards for toxins, additives and chemicals and enable nutrition, not commerce, to drive the food industry.

Food science has changed, so has the business. In this scenario, regulation had to move away from adulteration-checking inspectors to knowledge-based decisions on the best standards for food. But sadly, the FSSA is increasingly compromised. From the few steps it has taken—its track-record is abysmal—it seems to be not a consumer-friendly but an industryfriendly food regulator.

 A proof is the March 2009 draft regulation on food recall procedure, necessary for incidents like melamine in milk (China) or dioxin in beverages (Europe) or worms in chocolate (India). The draft regulation says it could maintain “confidentiality of commercially sensitive information and could delay public notification of food recall if it will cause panic among consumers”. This is for corporates, not public health. It was no surprise, then, to learn—as we did through media reports—the committees of the FSSA which take ‘scientific’ decisions are stacked high with food industry representatives, officials from beverage and fast-food giants like Pepsico, Coca Cola and Nestle. It is evident corporate regulatory capture is possible, indeed easy, in this form of institutional management. The reason’s not hard to find.

First, FSSA, and other authorities, are created to be independent. But little is done to make them accountable to this objective. The ‘authority’, in nine cases out of ten, is headed by retired, out-of-commission bureaucrats, for these individuals have regulatory experience. But in the new role they are not bound by the government’s established administrative, reporting and personnel systems. Instead, by law, they report to a faceless Parliament. No specific parliamentary sub-committee exists to manage and oversee the work of a newly created authority.

Regulatory capture becomes effortless for powerful interests in the petroleum, food or any sector. What happens, then, is decisions get murkier, undermining all credibility, making the ‘authority’ even less functional or effective. The experience of the Petroleum and Natural Gas Regulatory Board should teach us a lesson or two. Second, an ‘authority’ is created without fixing the underlying problems of sectoral expertise and the need for integration with existing institutional capacity. In other words, no attention is paid to the serious details of institutional reform.

In FSSA’s case, the expertise of standardsetting lies with the Bureau of Indian Standards, but that’s under a different ministry—Consumer Affairs. No real effort’s been made to re-engineer institutional capacity. No clear roles defined. Instead, one more agency’s joined the rigmarole of governance. The situation is the same with environmental impact assessment (EIA) authorities, created in each state to scrutinize and sanction industrial projects.

Till a few years ago, all projects came to the Centre for clearance, leading to delays and seemingly poor decision-making. It was believed decisions devolve to the state level, where environmental impacts are more evident. Assessment would be easier. But all this was done without thinking through the institutional design, and all it has ended up doing is to decentralize the ‘transaction cost’. EIA decisions are not being taken for the environment. Indeed, regulatory capacity is seriously missing in the area of environment. My colleagues recently evaluated the working of state pollution control boards and found, to their horror, nobody’s made the institutions functional. They lack funds, personnel and capacity to ensure enforcement and compliance. In most cases, they are toothless bodies, made dysfunctional via neglect. The challenge should be to build internal capacity. But internal reform is difficult. So the government’s taken the easy way: bypass, and just create new institutions.

For instance, the state EIA authorities have been set up as committees, headed by former bureaucrats or similarly experienced individuals, but without internal capacity to evaluate projects and no clarity on the interface with existing pollution regulators. These bodies meet, clear projects and go away. Somebody is ‘responsible’ for assessment and somebody else is ‘responsible’ for monitoring future impacts. So how can we have effective decision-making? The current institutional ‘design’ is not for public purpose. It needs review, fast. Could we have institutions that can tackle future challenges? ■

Registration under the Food Safety Act - Deadline for food joints extended by six months

Amritsar, July 30
The deadline for restaurants, eating outlets and grocery stores keeping food products to get registered under the Food Safety Act has been extended by another six months. Earlier deadline was August 4.
Amrit Lal Jain, vice-president, Bharatiya Udhyog Beopar Mandal, an all-India body of traders, said he has received a copy of the decision from the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.
He said a delegation of the BUBM had met Union Health Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad in this regard in June.
Jain said the FSA was copied from the developed countries and implemented without keeping in view the domestic conditions. He said the country does not have adequate number of laboratories to test the quality of food. Claiming that the number of these labs was less than 100, Jain demanded that each district of the country must have at least one such lab.
Meanwhile, the Punjab Pradesh Beopar Mandal, the state unit under the BUBM, will hold agitation against the FSA on August 9 in the state, including Amritsar.

Will seize gutkha, won’t destroy yet, govt tells HC

The state government on Monday informed the Bombay High Court that while it would continue to confiscate gutkha being sold or transported in violation of a ban order issued on July 19, it would not destroy the seized products.
Manufacturers pleaded the ban had brought their businesses to a halt, and urged the court to restrain the government from preventing the transport of gutkha to other states that allow its sale.
Dhariwal Industries Private Limited, Ghodavat Paan Masala Products, Rajnandini Foods Private Limited, SDD Agencies Private Limited and Hira Enterprises had petitioned the court urging it to set aside the ban, which invoked the Food Safety and Standards Act (FSSA), 2006.
Arguing for the manufacturers, senior counsel Milind Sathe said that the government notification had, apart from prohibiting the sale and distribution of gutkha and paan masala, also put curbs on storing and transporting gutkha. “We want to transport our product to states that have no ban. They (state government) should not take any action against us,” Sathe said. Senior counsel Janak Dwarkadas added that the product has a short shelf life.
Sathe said the government had instructed its officers to destroy seized gutkha. He urged the bench to direct the government not to do so until a final decision. Chief Justice Mohit Shah said, “But somebody might continue to manufacture.”
Government pleader D A Nalavade told the court that gutkha had a shelf life of six months. He said that while the government would not permit the transport of gutkha to other states and confiscate consigments, it would not begin to destroy the seized material until the court heard the case further.
Adjourning the case, Chief Justice Shah and Justice N M Jamdar asked the state government to file its reply by August 7.
Arguing for the petitioners, senior counsel Navroz Seervai told the court that the ban is nothing but an “attempt to overrule by legislation a judgment of the Supreme Court”.
“Entire industries cannot be closed down because of somebody’s whims,” Seervai said.
The state had earlier attempted to ban gutkha in 2002 and in 2008, but had encountered several legal hurdles. Seervai said that the sale of gutkha, that contains tobacco, can be governed only by the Tobacco Act, 2003, and not by the FSSA.
The manufacturers have contended that gutkha, which contains 6-8 per cent tobacco, has no nutritional value and hence cannot be brought under the purview of the FSSA that deals with “food”. Mere oral consumption would not bring gutkha under the FSSA as it is not consumed for taste or nutrition but for pleasure, the petitioners have said.
Government counsel Nalavade also informed the court that another petition filed by an association of dealers seeking unrestricted transportation of gutkha before another bench of the court, had been withdrawn.

Deadline for registration, licence renewal extended

Food business operators have got a breather as the deadline for licence registration as per the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006 has been extended by six months. The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India has also directed that nutraceuticals, proprietary foods, organic foods and genetically modified foods have to get their products approved failing which licences will be cancelled.
FSSA came into effect on August 5 last year and is expected to regulate manufacturing, storage, distribution, sale and import of food items.
The law enables consumers to register complaints against defaulters. FDA Commissioner Mahesh Zagade told Newsline that Maharashtra was way ahead of other states in registering and renewing licences of food business operators. As many as 1.29 lakh registrations and 61,789 licences have been issued since August last year.
Shashikant Kekare, Joint Commissioner, Food, Pune division said that the deadline to renew and issue licences to food business operators was August 4 this year. However, it has now been extended for another six months. In Pune division, FDA officials have renewed as many as 25,185 licences as per the FSSA and as many as 13,045 licences that were to expire in 2012 or 2014.
Pune division has earned a revenue of Rs 12 crore as part of the drive to issue and renew licences. Maharashtra as a whole earned a revenue of Rs 43 crore.
At a meeting in New Delhi, S N Mohanty, CEO, FSSAI, had said there were certain grey areas since the Act was operationalised as some states were giving licences under the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act instead of the FSSA.
Maharashtra FDA officials said that the Act was new and hence there was still a lack of understanding. Zagade said that a monitoring system had been developed for implementing FSSA.
Paan masala worth Rs 4.56 lakh seized
PUNE: A total of 706 rounds of inspection have been conducted by FDA officials in Pune division (that includes Pune, Solapur, Satara,
Sangli and Kolhapur) since July 20. Gutkha and paan masala worth Rs 11.3 lakh have been seized. As many as 25 food safety officers are involved in conducting the raids and the maximum amount of gutkha and paan masala worth Rs 4.56 lakh has been seized from the city.

A total of 4,188 packets and 39 kg of gutkha was seized, FDA officials said.

Jul 30, 2012

Food Safety and Standards Act: Hoteliers object to five conditions

Hoteliers in the state have taken a strong exception to the five conditions of the Food Safety and Standards Act, including the restriction on the chefs from wearing ornaments, as they are “not practical and feasible to the functioning of low and medium level hotels”.
The State Food Safety Commissioner had issued a circular the other day with 30 guidelines in the Act after the tragic incident of a youth’s death on  July 10 after having ‘shawarma’ from Salwa Cafe in Thiruvananthapuram.
“It’s improper to ask the women not to wear ornaments including their wedding chain. These kind of restrictions are applicable only in case of big food industries,” said Jose Mohan, president of the Kerala Hotels and Restaurants Association(KHRA).
The association is also against the two guidelines on the use of water.
“We are using drinking water provided either by the Corporation or  the Water Authority and it’s the duty of the government to ensure the quality of water.
“We are using bore-well water for washing as the availability and cost of drinking water is so dear. Hence, it is not practical to use drinking water for this purpose,” he said.
The guidelines make it mandatory to keep the details of the medical examination that all persons in the hotel who deal with food are free from any contagious diseases and need certificates from a government doctor not less than a medical surgeon to all the employees by October 31. However, the hoteliers argue that  it would not be practical to get the certificate from government surgeons and instead suggest the certificate from any qualified doctor.
The KHRA president pointed out that there is no clarity about the distance between the kitchen and the toilets though they are not against keeping it clean and tidy by sanitising it four times a day.
“We  would be raising our objections to the commissioner after a discussion. We would also be meeting the Chief Minister and Health Minister next week,” said Jose.

Do cooks wash hands? Hotel owners unaware

A room packed with local restaurateurs listened with rapt attention as lessons were given on how to keep their kitchens clean and hygienic at DNA’s Hygiene For Kitchens workshop.
The New Food Safety and Standards Act (FSSA), 2006, which came into effect in 2011, requires every food business operator to stick to food safety norms.
The workshop, which was organised in association with the Indian Hotel and Restaurant Association and Equinox Labs on July 26, focused on helping restaurateurs follow the norms prescribed by the state Food and Drug Administration under the FSSA.
More than 150 restaurateurs were unaware whether their cooks or waiters washed hands after visiting theloo. “Washing hands is one of the basic requirements to ensure food safety. Many a times, adequate soap is not available for the food handlers,” said Ashwin Bhadri, head, business relations at Equinox Labs.
He also stressed on the need for regular medical check-up for the staff. “It is mandatory for a hotel owner employer to verify with the doctor that his employees do not suffer from any infectious skin disease or contagious ailment, but is rarely done. At times the doctor doesn’t even examine the employee and issues a medical certificate. This, under the new Act, will work against a restaurant owner, if a customer falls ill due to unhygienic standards in the kitchen.”
According to the rulebook, penalties ranging from Rs1 lakh up to Rs10 lakh with a maximum of six years’ jail could be imposed on the restaurateur if proven guilty for maintaining unsanitary conditions leading to illness or death of a person after consuming the unhygienic food.
The workshop also focused on the need for restaurateurs to document the steps taken to maintain hygiene under the 14-point agenda of food safety management system. “Every owner should jot down the description of the surroundings around the eatery. Also, he should ensure the water is clean, utensils and containers washed properly and the place is well ventilated. Self-inspection and audits will led to better standards of hygiene,” said Bala Shetty, who owns a restaurant in Wadala.

File Reply on Pleas Challenging Gutka Sale: Bombay HC

The Bombay High Court today asked Maharashtra government to file reply by August 7 on a clutch of petitions challenging the recent ban imposed on sale of gutka and paan masala in the state.

Government pleader Dhariyasheel Nalawade asked for time to file reply saying they had not received the petitions.

A division bench headed by Chief Justice Mohit Shah then allowed the state time to file reply within a week.

On behalf of the state government, Nalawade assured the court that the state would not destroy the gutka pouches.

The petitioners sought 'ad interim relief' urging stay on the notification banning sale of gutka. However, the court said it would first hear the state.

Gutka and paan masala manufacturers have urged the court to set aside the state government's July 19 notification and two regulations of the Food Safety and Standards Act (FSSA), 2006, under which the ban was brought into effect.

The petitions have been filed by Dhariwal Industries Pvt Ltd, Ghodavat Paan Masala Products, Rajnandini Foods Pvt Ltd, SDD Agencies Pvt Ltd and Hira Enterprises.

The petitioners contended that gutka, which consists six per cent tobacco, has no nutritional value and hence the product cannot be brought under the purview of the FSSA that deals with "food".

Terming the ban as "discriminatory", the petitioners submitted that their business had come to a standstill owing to the state government's decision to prohibit sale of gutka.

The monthly sale of gutka in Maharashtra is estimated to the tune of Rs 300 crore and the state earns Rs 100 crore as taxes on the product.

The petitioners argued that the ban on sale of gutka was contrary to a Supreme Court ruling of 2004.

The state Cabinet had decided on July 12 to invoke the ban on the sale of gutka across the state. The state had earlier attempted to ban gutka in 2002 and then in 2008, but had faced legal hurdles. The new FSSA has enabled the ban again this time.

The gutka manufacturers have challenged the ban saying that gutka contains tobacco and its sale would be governed by Tobacco Act, 2003, a Central Government legislation. Mere oral consumption would not bring gutka under FSSA as it is not consumed for taste or nutrition but for pleasure, they argued.

The petitioners have also questioned the state's decision to spare the makers of raw tobacco from the ban.

The petitioners said the government's decision was discriminatory as magnesium carbonate, an ingredient in gutka, is permitted in various foods.

It was argued that the Food Safety and Standards (Food Products Standards and Food Additives) Regulations, 2011, do not permit the use of carbonates of calcium and magnesium in foods except in those specifically allowed like table salt, onion powder, garlic powder, fruit powder, soup powder and chewing gum, but not exceeding two per cent.

High Court to hear petitions challenging gutkha ban today

The Bombay High Court is on Monday likely to hear five petitions challenging the state government’s ban on the sale of gutkha.
Gutkha and paan masala manufacturers have urged the court to set aside the government’s July 19 notification and two regulations under the Food Safety and Standards Act (FSSA), 2006, under which the ban was brought into effect.
Dhariwal Industries Private Limited, Ghodavat Paan Masala Products, Rajnandini Foods Private Limited, SDD Agencies Private Limited and Hira Enterprises have petitioned the court. They have contended that gutkha, which consists six per cent tobacco, has no nutritional value and hence cannot be brought under the purview of the FSSA that deals with “food”. The petitioners have stated that their business has come to a standstill owing to the “discriminatory” ban that is contrary to a Supreme Court ruling of 2004.
The state Cabinet had, on July 12, taken a decision to invoke the ban on the sale of gutkha across the state. The state had earlier attempted to ban gutkha in 2002 and then in 2008, but had encountered several legal hurdles. The new FSSA has enabled the ban this time.
The manufacturers, however, contested the ban stating that gutkha contains tobacco and its sale would be governed by the Tobacco Act, 2003, a Central government legislation. Mere oral consumption would not bring gutkha under the FSSA as it is not consumed for taste or nutrition but for pleasure, the petitioners stated.
Also alleging discrimination, the manufacturers said magnesium carbonate, an ingredient in gutkha, is permitted in various foods. Also, the makers of raw tobacco have been spared the ban, they alleged.
The Food Safety and Standards (Food Products Standards and Food Additives) Regulations, 2011, do not permit the use of carbonates of calcium and magnesium in foods except in those specifically allowed like table salt, onion powder, garlic powder, fruit powder, soup powder and chewing gum, but not exceeding two per cent.
The monthly sale of gutkha in Maharashtra is estimated to be around Rs 300 crore and the government annually earns more than Rs 100 crore in taxes on it.
A Division Bench of Chief Justice Mohit Shah and Justice N M Jamdar will hear the group of petitions on Monday.

Extension to licensing deadline: Equinox’ Bhadri for stricter adherence

Among the various reactions that have been pouring in with regard to the six-month extension given to compliance with certain provisions of the Food Safety and Standards (Licensing and Registration) Regulations, 2011, by food business operators, the one offered by Ashwin Bhadri, head, business relations, Equinox Labs, an NABL-accredited food testing facility in Mumbai, is interesting. For Bhadri has offered a different kind of perspective touching two aspects.

“Firstly, the advantage of the extension is that it will give FBOs and the industry some time to get themselves registered or licensed. The issues faced by the industry were that they did not have access to quality resources to upgrade themselves. For instance, many FBOs did not know how to make a Food Safety Management Systems (FSMS) Plan. In the beginning there was very little clarity in the mind of the FBOs on the requirements of the law and how to comply with them. Over the last one year, a lot of work has been done to ensure that all these doubts are cleared,” he said.

“Secondly, FBOs were already given a year's notice to comply with the same, but majority have not yet complied with them. The extension should be adhered to strictly, or else it will be pointless, and nobody in the country will take the law seriously,” said Bhadri.

About the testing capability available in the country, Bhadri said, “There are plenty of private labs that have NABL accreditation. They ensure that the total testing load can be handled. It will take the government a long time to be able to cater to the growing requirement for testing throughout the country.”

New Food Safety and Standards Act to favour FDI: Vidarbha Taxpayers' Association

NAGPUR: Even though the central government has extended the deadline of implementing the Food Bill Act by six months, the Vidarbha Taxpayers' Association said that they would continue their fight against the Food Safety and Standards (Licensing and Registration of Food Businesses) Regulations, 2011.

In a memorandum to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, agriculture and food processing industries minister Sharad Pawar, health minister Ghulam Nabi Azad and chairman of Food Safety and Standards Authority of India K Chandramouli and Commissioner ( Food and Drug Administration) Mahesh Zagade for extension of the one-year deadline expiring on August 4 as stipulated under Regulation 2.1.2 of Food Safety and Standards (Licensing and Registration of Food Businesses) Regulations, 2011.

"This is just a temporary relief and the horror of unpractical & harsh provisions shall be back to haunt everyone from February 5, 2013," pointed out the VTA's memorandum.

The VTA had highlighted that the provisions in the FSS Act & Regulations are literally meant to shut down small & medium Food Business Operators (FBOs) in the country and it only supports Foreign Direct Investments and Multi National Companies.

VTA also alleged that Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) has squarely failed in making a balance between existing procedure followed and preparing unkind provisions from farm to fork, which means a petty dhaba and Seven Star Hotel should be following the same norms as no parameters or gradation is described the new Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006 (FSSA).

The memorandum also highlighted that although FSSAI was incorporated to lay down science based standards for articles of food and to regulate their manufacture, storage, distribution, sale and import to ensure availability of safe and wholesome food for human consumption, the Act has been enforced without studying the Indian market, agriculture procedure and other parameters.

"Fight for appropriate amendment in Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006 would continue; else small and medium Food Business Operators will have to down their shutters permanently after 6 months. They can only survive by compelling themselves with the help of corruption," stated the memorandum.

Food safety regulations to be enforced in city

After a year delay, the Delhi Government has decided to implement the Food Safety and Standards (Licensing and Registration of Food Businesses) Regulations 2011 from the first week of August. This means food safety licence would be mandatory for tea stalls, dhabas, fruit and vegetable sellers, grocery shops, milk vendors, canteens, caterers, restaurants, hotels, food processors in the national Capital. Even trucks and other vehicles engaged in transporting food will have to obtain licences to this effect.
On the delay in the implementation of the Regulation, Health Minister Ashok Kumar Walia told The Pioneer that the implementation had been extended six month by the Central Government. “As far as Delhi is concerned, a Hyderabad-based company will open six counters in the Capital so that hawkers and vendors could be registered,” Walia said, adding the Food Safety and Standards Act would ensure improved quality of food for the consumers and censure misleading claims and advertisement by those in food business.
The implementation of Food Safety and Standards Act will ensure improved quality of food for the consumers and censure misleading claims and advertisement by those in food business.
The new Act will have more stringent provisions, including penalty clauses like life imprisonment and a fine of up to Rs 10 lakh. Though the Act was passed by Parliament in 2006, the Centre notified the rules for enforcement of the legislation only a few months back. The Delhi Government is preparing to issue a notification to enforce the law. According to the Act, for getting these licences, the stall owner needs to apply to the registration authority that will carry out an inspection and then issue a licence that needs to be renewed every year. Identity cards will be issued with the new licences.
According to Government officials entrusted with the task to enforce of the new Act, food adulteration will become almost impossible as it will attract heavy fine and punishment. Under the new Act, all food business operators with a turnover specified under the Act will have to acquire a licence and get themselves registered. Small-time shopkeepers will have to apply for registration while big business establishments will have to acquire licences.
In case of substandard, misbranded food or misleading advertisements about food products that are not injurious to health will invite a fine of up to Rs 10 lakh. In case of injurious food, the punishment will be imprisonment up to seven years, with a fine of up to Rs 10 lakh. In case of death caused due to adulterated food items, the punishment will range from seven years’ imprisonment to life, besides a fine of up to Rs 10 lakh.
The officials of health department of Delhi Government say the new regulations will benefit small businesses for they can attract more customers by displaying identity cards. “The customers would be assured of hygienic products, even if the stall is small,” the officials added.

Compulsory registration rule for all street vendors

Thousands of traders selling food items across the city will now have to register their businesses.

Delhi health minister Ashok Kumar Walia said the government would start registering vendors and issue food licenses very soon. He said the government had roped in a Government of
India's undertaking organisation to carry out the exercise. "We have decided to outsource the job of registering of the vendors to the National Institute of Smart Governance. The institute will start with six centres in the Capital and each centre will have 10 counters where vendors can register. Later, more centres will be opened," Walia said.
He said the government's website would also have a link where vendors will be able to upload their documents for registration.
Under the Food Safety and Standards Act 2006, which was implemented across the country in 2011, any person engaged in food business will have to register and obtain a licence to run his business. The vendors will have to fulfil safety and hygiene conditions to obtain a licence.
Under this, all sorts of food businesses, including fruits and vegetables sellers, roadside tea stalls, grocery and milk shops, restaurants, hotels, canteens and caterers will have to obtain a licence. The food licence will be in addition to other licences that the business establishments take from the local civic agencies, excise, tax and police.
Though the government had earlier fixed August 4, 2012, as the deadline for all states to complete the process, Delhi government officials said the deadline had been extended by six months.
Officials said the vendor would be liable for sale of any sub-standard food material and liable for action. Failure to get themselves registered will also attract heavy penalty.

Food safety regulations to be enforced in city

After a year delay, the Delhi Government has decided to implement the Food Safety and Standards (Licensing and Registration of Food Businesses) Regulations 2011 from the first week of August. This means food safety licence would be mandatory for tea stalls, dhabas, fruit and vegetable sellers, grocery shops, milk vendors, canteens, caterers, restaurants, hotels, food processors in the national Capital. Even trucks and other vehicles engaged in transporting food will have to obtain licences to this effect.
On the delay in the implementation of the Regulation, Health Minister Ashok Kumar Walia told The Pioneer that the implementation had been extended six month by the Central Government. “As far as Delhi is concerned, a Hyderabad-based company will open six counters in the Capital so that hawkers and vendors could be registered,” Walia said, adding the Food Safety and Standards Act would ensure improved quality of food for the consumers and censure misleading claims and advertisement by those in food business.
The implementation of Food Safety and Standards Act will ensure improved quality of food for the consumers and censure misleading claims and advertisement by those in food business.
The new Act will have more stringent provisions, including penalty clauses like life imprisonment and a fine of up to Rs 10 lakh. Though the Act was passed by Parliament in 2006, the Centre notified the rules for enforcement of the legislation only a few months back. The Delhi Government is preparing to issue a notification to enforce the law. According to the Act, for getting these licences, the stall owner needs to apply to the registration authority that will carry out an inspection and then issue a licence that needs to be renewed every year. Identity cards will be issued with the new licences.
According to Government officials entrusted with the task to enforce of the new Act, food adulteration will become almost impossible as it will attract heavy fine and punishment. Under the new Act, all food business operators with a turnover specified under the Act will have to acquire a licence and get themselves registered. Small-time shopkeepers will have to apply for registration while big business establishments will have to acquire licences.
In case of substandard, misbranded food or misleading advertisements about food products that are not injurious to health will invite a fine of up to Rs 10 lakh. In case of injurious food, the punishment will be imprisonment up to seven years, with a fine of up to Rs 10 lakh. In case of death caused due to adulterated food items, the punishment will range from seven years’ imprisonment to life, besides a fine of up to Rs 10 lakh.
The officials of health department of Delhi Government say the new regulations will benefit small businesses for they can attract more customers by displaying identity cards. “The customers would be assured of hygienic products, even if the stall is small,” the officials added.

Registration of food industries extended by six months

NAGPUR: The food security and standards department (FSSD) has extended the deadline for food industries and establishments for registered by another six months. As per the earlier order these industries and establishments had to get registered by August 4.

The national small shopkeepers' federation (NSSF) had appealed to central government to give an extension. This demand was supported by several other organizations.

Last year the central government had amended the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006 and made the standards more stringent. It had become mandatory for the food sector to comply with the new standards. The industries and establishments had to complete the required formalities and then seek a fresh registration. A years' time had been given for this.

NSSF pointed out that it had faced a lot of difficulties in complying with the new standards. In the initial stages there was complete confusion among the members.

NSSF had claimed that there were several grey areas in the Act and some of the standards were difficult to comply with. The federation has demanded that until the act was changed government should not compel its members to get registered.

The federation had pointed out the food testing laboratories did not have proper equipments for testing. Hence, they should be upgraded first. It also claimed that FSSD had not create awareness among the businessmen and industries regarding the new standards.

Jul 29, 2012

Kill the bad bug not the hawker

Street vendor cartoon


The New Food Safety and Standards Act will kill the hawker, but not the bug

There are two kinds of Indians-those who eat and drink everything on offer, and those who don't. I'm not talking about religious taboos here but street food. I belong to the latter category. I was brought up to be cautious about what I ate off the street and continue to be so. And for good reason. I don't want to be knocked down by jaundice, typhoid, colitis or a new strain of stomach bug.
The brave ones who eat everything look down on us lily-livered types. They hold us in the highest contempt. What's the point of living in India if you don't sample the delights of street food? Why behave like a faux firang, constantly rubbing your hands with hand sanitiser? Eat. Live!
Well, I'm alive, even though I might have 'lived' a tad less than most. I've never had chuski-that crushed ice concoction dunked in fluorescent liquid. I've admired the pushcarts neatly lined with colourful bottles of syrup - red, yellow and green, but from a safe distance. I've never stood over a garbage bin and shoved paani-puri into my mouth. I've never had an orange bar from a dodgy ice-cream cart. I've never had a glass of the tenpaisa 'machine-ka-thanda paani'. I've never had freshly squeezed sugarcane juice from a thela. I've stayed away from buying 'open cut fruit' off the pavement. I don't eat street pork because I'm terrified of tapeworm. Remember the one who snaked its way all the way to Leander Paes' brain?
Legislation
There are those among us who bravely try everything but inevitably land up at the doctor's. There are those who eat indiscriminately and survive. In 1995, a friend of mine and I were headed back from Trivandrum to Delhi on the Kerala Express. It was a hot afternoon. The train made an unscheduled stop at a dusty nondescript station in Madhya Pradesh. A woman in rags with stringy brown hair appeared on the platform, carrying a pail of water and a mug. I watched on in horror and disbelief as my friend drank five glasses, at two rupees a pop. He lived to tell the tale. A few years later, I wasn't so lucky. On a trip back home from Oxford, I ate kebabs from the old part of town. Everyone else who ate it was fine. I had to be hospitalised.
Nowadays, though, I take my chances. Impending middle age has made me reckless. Just the other day, I was at my favourite nihari and brain curry place in Nizamuddin. I took a friend along for the experience. It's a working class joint, packed with Muslim men in skullcaps. It's the kind of place that always smells like a wet unwashed rag. Everything was going well until a train of cockroaches decided to walk across the Formica top. It looked like a family - big fat Father Cockroach leading the way, with missus and the little ones scurrying along behind. My friend stopped eating and went for a walk. I ordered another nihari. I was okay the next day. Just about.
We should be able to eat what we want without the fear of falling sick. That we live in Norflox Nation is hardly a matter of pride. This is an incontrovertible point. When guests come visiting from abroad, we shouldn't have to send them out with lists of culinary do's and don'ts. Our working class too, which practically lives off cheap dhaba food, deserves better.
The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India has come up with a new legislation that aims to fix just this - the levels of hygiene in eateries. The tough Food Safety and Standards Act (which applies to five stars and roadside stalls alike, and even includes temples serving 'prashad') will invite penalty and prosecution if, say, rats are found at restaurants, or if impure water is served. The deadline for compliance, which was August 4 earlier, has been extended by six months. A food safety licence is now a must for those dealing in any form of food business. This licence is in addition to existing licensing requirements from various government agencies.
On paper, tighter food safety regulations don't seem like a bad idea. For the moment, let's keep aside five star restaurants and fancy establishments. Let's presume that they are self-regulating and maintain high hygiene levels of their own accord. The scope of the bill is huge and encompasses much of the food chain. Let's keep that aside too. Let us concentrate only on how it affects the roadside vendor. In states like Kerala and Maharashtra, where local governments have already begun enforcing the law, it's the street vendor who has been affected the most. Hundreds of small restaurants have been ordered shut.
Reality
How fair and feasible is it to expect the street vendor to match the levels of hygiene achieved by bigger establishments? For one, there is the problem of location. Hawkers can control the quality of their food, but only to the extent their environment allows them. And who is responsible for the filthy environment they operate in? The MCD and other state actors. How fair is it then for these same MCD officials to come around and prosecute the hapless hawker?
The average Indian street is dirty. It has cows, bulls, buffaloes, dogs, pigs and horses. There are mounds of dung everywhere, and piles of unswept, stinking garbage. Even one shower leads to water logging; there are stagnant pools of water. If you've ever been to the old ISBT, you'd have noticed the sheets of flies billowing in and out of the bus shelters and waiting rooms. This is the environment in which the hawker peddles his wares. How hygienic can he be?
And how evenhanded is it to expect the hawker to serve clean water when often the drinking water supplied by the municipality has traces of sewage in it, especially during the monsoon?
The hawker has to be close to the people he serves. You'd be destroying his livelihood if you move him out of the street into a sanitised 'designated zone'. He needs to be in a street where it's convenient for his customers.
Enforcement
Then there's the issue of harassment by the authorities. Every new law gives them a stick to beat the poor with. Some years ago, I was in a Bombay Irani restaurant owned by a wellknown film critic. Two dour-looking men arrived and the owner went into a huddle with them at the back of the café. They left soon after. When I asked the owner what'd happened, he said that they were food inspectors come for their monthly bribe. The new law will encourage more of it.
In his piece 'On Washing Hands', the New Yorker writer Atul Gawande writes that most illnesses can be prevented by the simple act of washing one's hands. Bacterial counts on the hands range from 5,000 to 5 million colony-forming units per square centimetre. Deep skin crevices trap 10 to 20 per cent of the flora, making removal difficult, even with scrubbing. How will the enforcers of this law ensure that the hawker washes his hand regularly? Will they carry gadgets capable of measuring the bacterial count on a palm in an instant?
We'd all like to eat out without worrying about the state of our stomachs the next day. I doubt though that the answer to this lies in overregulation, and expanding the existing legal and bureaucratic framework. This will kill the hawker, but not the bug.

Street food set to choke on new licence raj


Come August 4, and street food may get a little hard to find in the capital. That’s when the Food Safety and Standards (Licensing and Registration of Food Businesses) Regulations 2011 come into effect after a year’s delay. All tea stalls, dhabas, fruit and vegetable sellers, grocery shops, milk vendors, canteens, caterers, restaurants, hotels, food processors will have to obtain a new food safety licence by August 4. Even trucks and other vehicles engaged in transporting food will have to obtain licences. Unlicensed food businesses will become “illegal” after August 4, according to the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI).
“The regulation is in place to ensure that the food being served meets the minimum standards of hygiene and safety. The regulations were formulated by the FSSAI under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. Every outlet needs to obtain a licence and maintain a certain level of hygiene,” said a senior FSSAI official.
He added: “There are many parameters in starting a food business, and people have to be made aware of these and clarifications with respect to the online and manual licensing and registration system. Getting their businesses registered is the need of the hour as quality and standard of food being served can be monitored, even for a ‘chaiwala’.”
After August 4, raids will be conducted and outlets found not having the licence or not registered will be shut down till they apply and ensure proper hygiene. Fines could be imposed too. For getting these licences, the stall owner needs to apply to the registration authority that will carry out an inspection and then issue a licence that needs to be renewed every year. Identity cards will be issued with the new licences.
FSSAI officials the new regulations will benefit small businesses for they can attract more customers by displaying identity cards. “The customers would be assured of hygienic products, even if the stall is small,” the official added.
Several eating joints in the city remain unaware of impending doom. Others say they don’t know the procedure of getting their stalls registered. “It is a very bad idea. By putting these stalls we are able to earn our living. Now getting them registered will cost us some thousands. Where will be get this money from?” says Amrit Singh, who runs a chola-kulcha stall near Maharani Bagh.

Limited food testing facilities a bane

Drive against stale food is full of legal loopholes
The drive against contaminated food under the new food safety regime is riddled with legal loopholes and handicapped by the lack of full-fledged, government-run, accredited laboratory to test the samples.
Results of tests done in laboratories not accredited by the National Accreditation Board for Testing and Calibration Laboratories (NABL) would not stand scrutiny in a court of law, said N. Anandavalli, member, Technical Committee, National Food Safety and Standards Authority of India.
Private labs
She told The Hindu on Thursday that though there were a few accredited private sector laboratories in the State, there was a limit to the government using their services for works in the key area of food safety. However, work is on to get the government analytical laboratories in Kozhikode, Kochi, and Thiruvananthapuram accredited. But she said it was a difficult work, given the condition of the labs in Kochi and Kozhikode.
Dr. Anandavalli, a consultant to the State government and member of the accreditation committee of NABL, said it would take at least a year, if the government started in right earnest now, to get the labs working properly.
Director of the Council for Food Research and Development, Konni, M.K. Mukundan pointed to the inadequacy of state-of-the-art laboratory facilities in the State.
The CFRD could test food samples across the State if the government supported it financially. Carrying out tests, even the simple ones, was costly. The basic micro-biological analysis and analysis for chemical parameters would cost up to Rs.1,000 a sample.
Basic need
Dr. Mukundan pointed out the need to test samples at least from 10 per cent of the hotels and restaurants in the State to get a clear picture of the state of food safety.
Food samples collected from different parts were periodically tested at the Konni laboratory.
However, these were random efforts and more concerted efforts were needed to ensure that the food served in our restaurants was safe.
He said that the CFRD laboratory had recently added a chemical analysis section to its laboratory, which has accreditation from NABL for micro-biological analyses.
The accredited, government-owned labs in the State are the one in Vellayani, near Thiruvananthapuram, under the Kerala Agricultural University, which tests samples for pesticide residues.
Another is under the Central Institute of Fisheries Technology, a referral lab in the country and one of the best in South India.
Cashew Export Promotion Council’s laboratory in Kollam is one of the best and oldest in the State. Though the State government has enlisted the services of these laboratories, institutions under which they operate face a shortage of manpower.

Efforts on to get accreditation for 3 public labs
CFRD ready to test samples across Kerala

DINAMALAR NEWS





FSSA move welcomed

The Tamil Nadu Chamber of Commerce and Industry has welcomed the move by Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSA) to extend the date for registration and licensing.
In a statement, chamber president S. Rethinavelu said that the FSSA has extended by six months the last date for registering and obtaining licence by food business operators. As a result, businesses have time till February 4, 2013 instead of the earlier deadline of August 5 this year. Obtaining licences and registration had been made mandatory for all those engaged in food-related industry under the Food Safety and Standards Act, which replaced the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act.

Gutka-makers move high court, challenge ban

MUMBAI: Gutka manufacturers have moved Bombay high court to challenge the state government's ban on gutka and paan masala. Around half a dozen petitions will come up before the HC on Monday , questioning the constitutional validity of the barely 10-day old notification issued by the government.

The petitions insist gutka cannot be treated and regulated as "food" as it has "no nutritional value" and highlight the "discriminatory nature" of the ban that has brought their business to a "complete halt".

Dhariwal Industries and Ghodawat Pan Masala Products , two flavoured-tobacco majors in the state , are among the petitioners. They want the July 19 notification and the two regulations under the Food Safety and Standards Act of 2006 , based on which the state issued the ban , set aside as unconstitutional and contrary to a 2004 Supreme Court judgment which ruled against a similar ban. The manufacturers also want the court to order the state to stop raiding their vendors as an interim measure. "Areca nut growersdepend on the gutka and paan masala industry and the ban will cause severe harm to farmers," they argued.

Maharashtra issued the ban under the Food Safety and Standards Act on the grounds that presence of magnesium carbonate in paan masala containing tobacco is injurious to health. The manufacturers' main argument appears to be that the "state exercising delegated powersunder theFSS Act 2006, which is a general Act, can't prohibit the mixture of tobacco with paan masala when there exists a special central law, the Tobacco Act of 2003, to deal with tobacco products." Gutka should be treated as a tobacco product and not food merely because it is consumed orally, they say, but add it has only 6% tobacco. "Food connotes to all that is eaten for taste and nourishment but not for intoxication or pleasure ... gutka is consumed for pleasure," says a petition.

They say the ban is discriminatory as "magnesium carbonate has been permitted in table salt, onion powder, garlic powder, fruit powder, soup powder, bubblegum, chewing gum, instant mixes, etc." The manufacturers also complained that the "pure or raw tobacco industry has been exempted".

Profit vs public health?

The manufacturers' arguments

All items consumed orally are not "food", for instance medicine and narcotics, the petition says, pointing out special laws that regulate these drugs

Gutka is a tobacco product and must be governed only by the Tobacco Act, not the Food Safety and Standards Act

Past attempts to ban gutka

The state issued bans in 2002 and then in 2008, but encountered legal roadblocks

In 2010 the state government banned sale of gutka within 100 meters of educational institutions

The present ban is under the Food Safety and Standards Act brought into effect last year

Ban in other states

Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Goa and Bihar have already banned the sale of gutka

Rule relied on by the govt to notify the ban

Regulation 2.3.4 of the Food Safety Standards Prohibition and Restrictions on Sales) Regulations, 2011 prohibits sale of products that contain any substance injurious to health and prohibits tobacco and nicotine as ingredients in any food products Regulation 3.1.7 of the Food Safety and Standards (Food Products Standards and Food Additives) Regulations, 2011, restricts use of anticaking agents like carbonates of calcium and magnesium in foods except where specifically allowed like in table salt, onion powder, fruit powder and soup powder, but not more than 2%.

Steps to check transportation of adulterated milk

Housing Minister and Leader of the Legislative Council V. Somanna on Friday told the House that a meeting of officials from the Karnataka Milk Federation, Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike, Police and Food Departments would be convened soon to decide the ways and means of checking the transportation of adulterated milk from other States, especially Erode in Tamil Nadu, to Bangalore.
Responding to the concern expressed by members that highly adulterated milk, which was akin to poison, was being transported from Erode to Bangalore every day, Mr. Somanna said a decision on effectively tackling this menace would be taken in a week.
Earlier, Health Minister Arvind Limbavali told the House that 7.35 lakh litres of milk was being transported from other States to Bangalore everyday. This included 6.50 lakh litres of packaged milk being sold by private companies.

Probe sought

The Opposition members in the Legislative Council on Friday demanded that the government order an inquiry into the alleged irregularities in the affairs of the Sports Authority of Karnataka in the last three years.
Tabling a call-attention notice in this regard, Congress member K. Govindaraju alleged that the interests of athletes and sports personalities had been completely ignored by the authority.
He alleged that there were instances where bills had been claimed for a 50-feet swimming pool though only 23-feet-long pool had been built. Similarly, bribes equivalent of 50 per cent of the prize money were being collected for giving sports awards including the prestigious Ekalavya award, Mr. Govindaraju alleged.
Responding to this, newly appointed Sports Minister Appachu Ranjan said he was ready to order a comprehensive inquiry if specific instances of irregularities were brought to his notice in writing.

Deadline extended

Health Minister Arvind Limbavali on Friday announced in the Legislative Council that the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India had extended the deadline for the traders of food items to register themselves and get license for their business by six months. Earlier, this deadline was supposed to end on August 5, 2012.
He said the deadline had been extended as huge number of applications seeking registration and license were pending with the authority.

FDA seizes gutkha, pan masala worth Rs 5 lakh

A joint team comprising sleuths of the district Food and Administration (FDA) and Crime Branch today raided a godown here and seized gutkha and pan masala worth Rs 5 lakh.
Eight gunny bags containing the banned products (gutkha and pan masala) were seized from the godown of Arco Roadlines Transport, located near Belora airport, police sub-inspector Yerme told reporters.
"We are trying to identify persons from whom the consignment was meant to," he said, adding the haul was delivered on July 5 and July 17 from a Mumbai-based trader and one Ali Javed from Nagpur.
 Maharashtra government has imposed a ban on sale, manufacture, storage and distribution of gutkha and pan masala in the state which came into effect from July 20.
On a tip-off, police swung into action late last night and reached the godown, but could not gain access inside as it was locked, Yerme said, adding the police could enter inside it at around 10 AM when the staffers there rolled up the shutters.
While 'Pan Parag' was found stashed in five gunny bags, three bags were found stuffed with 'Dhamal' gutkha.
FDA official Wani, who also participated in the raid, said altogether 32 cartoons were recovered from the godown.
The cost of the seizure is pegged at Rs 5 lakh, he said.
An offence has been registered under section 30/2 of Food and Drugs Act 2006.

Jul 28, 2012

HC stays certain sections of FSS Rules

Madras High Court today stayed certain provisions of the Food Safety and Standards Rule 2011 on a petition which contended that it offered a 'red carpet welcome' to multinational companies and endangered the existence of local merchants.
Granting the stay, Justice K.Venkataraman also recorded the submission made by central government counsel D.Nallathambi that he was taking notice on behalf of the Union Health and Family Welfare Secretary.
The stay related to provisions including sec 3(adulterant) and 3(1)(Misbrand).
Petitioner, Nellai Merchants Association Secretary M Panneerselvam, contended that the the FSS Act was 'draconian' in nature as the conditions laid down under it were virtually impossible to implement and would result in endangering the existence of the local merchants.
"It offered red carpet welcome to multi-national companies who had high tech production capacity, huge investment and indulge in unethical competition," he submitted.
Also, no distinction was made between adulterated, sub-standard and mis-branded food items under the 14 provisions of the act. Misbranded food product cannot be said to be adulterated and vice versa.
He wondered how the traders were liable to be punished for sub-standard food product for which only the manufacturer was responsible.
Under FSS rules, there were a lot of foods for which no standards had been prescribed. Similarly the manufacturers had been asked to provide various details with respect to ingredients. If food substance is tested in two different labs, using different methods,the results would be different, and the manufacturers would be punished for no fault of them.
The petitioner said such provisions were "unconstitutional, arbitrary, and illegal" and prayed that the court should declare them illegal.
He also sought interim injunction to such provisions relating to misbranding and nutritional information among others.

Pan masala sale soars along Kerala-Karnataka border areas

Kalpetta: The petty shops selling smokeless tobacco products along the Kerala-Karnataka border near here are reaping a windfall on account of the ban imposed by the state government on the sale of pan masala and its variants containing tobacco and nicotine. The customers from the state allege that on certain brands of products, the shops charge more than ten-folds of the original price after the ban. One packet of Hans (a scented chewing tobacco brand), weighing 12 gm, which was being sold for Rs 3 per packet before the ban, is being sold for Rs 30 now.
Though the customers say that the shop owners in towns like Kutta and Bairakuppa near the Wayanad border charge ‘dizzying’ rates, they just cannot resist the impulse. “They charge huge rates. When we complain, they arrogantly say that they are not forcing us to buy,” said Rajkumar, a daily labourer. However, he admits that he often makes up for the loss by smuggling. “Sometimes I buy 10 to 15 packets and sell them among my friends, charging Rs 10 per packet. But, there are frequent surprise checking by the Excise personnel nowadays,” Rajkumar said.
According to the Excise Department officials, the ban imposed from May 22 in the state has increased the smuggling of such chewable products across the border from Karnataka into the district. After the imposition of the ban, large quantities of tobacco products were being frequently seized at the three border check-posts in Bavali, Tholpetty and Muthanga. “It has become a fresh headache for us. This week we seized 2,700 packets of madhu and 330 packets of hans from two persons during our regular inspection.
Pan masala sale soars along Kerala-Karnataka border areas
Both of them were handed over to the police to register a case,” said an official at the Excise Checkpost, Tholpetty, near the Karnataka border. “If the quantity is insignificant, we seize the stuff and destroy it in front of the offender,” the official said. “A case against the proposed ban is still pending in the court. Stringent measures will be initiated if the court upholds a ruling in favour of the ban,” said state Food Safety Commissioner Biju Prabhakar.
The scenario is almost similar to that of 1996, when arrack was banned in the state by the then A K Antony government, said Anil Kumar who runs a hotel near the checkpost in Tholpetty. “At least 10 new petty shops have cropped up on the other side of the border soon after the announcement of the ban. Being a remote border town, the authorities in Karnakata are not bothered to conduct inspections there,” said Anil Kumar.

DINAKARAN NEWS


More time for food joints

The state government has extended the last date for registering firms with concerned registering authorities for outlets and vendors who sell food products for six months, Karnataka Health and Family Welfare Minister Aravinda Limbavali told Karnataka Legislative Council on Friday.
 Replying to a notice issued by the BJP legislator Shashil Namoshi during Zero Hour in the House, the minister announced that the last date for registering firms under the Food Safety and Standard Act 2006 has been extended for six months.
 According to him, the Indian Food Safety and Standard Authority taking into consideration the large number of applications seeking registration under the Act and license to sell food products has issued a circular on the matter.
 As per the circular, the vendors can now register their firms any day between August 5 to February 5, 2013.
 Limbavali said that the Food Safety and Standard Act 2006, which has been implemented in the entire country it is mandatory that firms and business houses which sell food products, including readymade food has to register with the concerned registering authorities under the Act.
 He said that the state government in compliance with the Central Act has constituted registering authorities in all taluks and districts in the state.
 The Food Safety Officer at taluk, district and city corporations are empowered to issue licenses to vendors according to the specifications of the Act.
 Till now, over 12,000 firms have been registered and another 3,500 licenses have been issued.

State acts to curb spurious milk supply

The Karnataka government will crack down on bulk supply of adulterated and spurious milk from neighbouring Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh, within a week.
House leader V. Somanna on Friday assured the Legislative Council that the government will hold a high-level meeting of officials from Karnataka Milk Federation, departments of Health, Food and Civil Supplies, police and Urban Development discuss steps to prevent the supply and sale of lakhs of litres of cheaper milk, which is also of inferior quality.
Earlier, Health and Family Welfare minister Arvind Limbavali informed the House that every day, 7.35 lakh litres of milk is supplied to Bengaluru from other states, of which 6.5 lakh litres is packed milk and the remaining is sold loose.
“The Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006, and its Rules, are in force to check adulteration. We are collecting food samples, including milk, for testing and in case of adulteration, poor quality or misbranding, cases are being booked. We are in the process of appointing 612 food inspectors to strengthen the department,” said Mr Limbavali.
Council member Mr M.C. Nanaiah suggested that co-ordinated efforts by all departments could put an end to milk adulteration in the city. “The KMF produces 41 lakh litres of milk every day, but nearly 11 lakh litres remains unutilized. The milk coming in from other states is a health hazard,” he warned.
On March 26, Kalasipalya police seized 10,000 litres of spurious milk being sold in South Bengaluru.
Hanumanthanagar corporator K. Chandrashekar had said in the council that milk adulterated with chemicals is brought from Erode and sold in South Bengaluru.
Following this, BBMP had slapped a show-cause notice on the Chief Health Officer (CHO) Dr K.E. Manjula and suspended four food inspectors - Naganna, Mallikarjun, Udaykumar and Ataulla Khan - on charges of dereliction of duty. Tight vigil is being maintained against sale of spurious milk, said sources in the BBMP

Govt admits to sale of adulterated milk in City

The government on Friday admitted it was aware of adulterated, contaminated or misbranded milk being sold in Bangalore City.

Health and Family Welfare Minister Aravind Limbavali, replying to a query by MLC M Srinivas (JD-S) in the Legislative Council, said that 7.35 lakh litres of milk was being supplied to Bangalore from outside the State. Of this, about 6.50 lakh litres is packet milk from private companies and 0.85 lakh litres is sold loose.
He said tests (as prescribed under the Food and Safety Standards Act, 2006) conducted by his department had revealed that milk, milk-based products and bottled water were contaminated, adulterated, unsafe, misbranded and of substandard quality.

Srinivas alleged that substandard milk from other states was being sold in Karnataka for last one decade and the government did not do anything about it.

According to Limbavali, on March 26, around 10,000 litres of milk was seized from four Tamil Nadu lorries at Kalasipalyam.

Tests showed the milk was adulterated.  Of the 35 samples taken from across the State in 2012, two samples were adulterated and one was misbranded.