Food facilities failing to comply with Bioterrorism Act of 2002

Published 19 January 2010

There are approximately 420,000 domestic and foreign food facilities – not including farms, retail facilities, and restaurants — doing food-related business in the United States; the Bioterrorism Act of 2002 requires these food facilities to register with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and provide information which could be used in the event of a bioemergency (farms, retail facilities, and restaurants are exempt from registration), many have done so yet

The Bioterrorism Act of 2002 requires food facilities to register with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), but a recent government review revealed that nearly half of food facilities have failed to give correct information. Farms, retail facilities, and restaurants are exempt from registering under the Bioterrorism Act of 2002. All told, the FDA expected approximately 420,000 domestic and foreign food facilities to register. In total, 157,395 U.S. facilities and 234,822 foreign facilities exporting to the United States, for a total of 392,217, registered.

Nick Rees writes that the goal of the registration is to provide a valid emergency contact name or a physical address to contact the parent company or owner or operator in times of bioemergency. Twenty-three of the 130 facilities surveyed failed to provide this information.

Of those surveyed by the government review, nearly half were found to have failed to give correct information. Forty-eight percent of those surveyed failed to either provide accurate information upon first registering or failed to provide updated information after making changes at their facilities as required.

The report noted that, of the 130 facilities surveyed, 30 failed to provide correct information. Those facilities main reason for the failure, according to the report, was that they did not update their information as required. Another main reason for the failures was that the responsibility for maintaining the registration was transferred to someone else, who then reregistered the facility rather than updating it.

The report advised that the FDA should seek statutory authority that would allow it to require that food facilities reregister on a routine basis. A registration fee was also advised, which would deter facilities from submitting multiple registrations.

In addition, the report calls for civil penalties for facilities that fail to comply with the registry requirements.