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Industrial Sanitation: Elements of Facility Cleaning and Sanitation

Aging plants, increasing retailer pressure, and new regulations can make food facility cleaning a complex task.

Sanitation managers should conduct visual verifications to ensure chemical sprays and foams are applied safely and properly. Photo courtesy of PSSI.
Sanitation managers should conduct visual verifications to ensure chemical sprays and foams are applied safely and properly. Photo courtesy of PSSI.

Each year, FDA releases information on food and beverage processing facilities’ violations cited during the agency’s routine visits. Some of the most commonly documented food safety problems in plants have involved industrial sanitation monitoring, including checking food-contact surfaces and plant cleanliness.

Maintaining a clean and sanitary plant is essential in building and executing an effective food safety program. Facilities must be vigilant in combatting bacterial contamination and cross-contamination. They can then meet federal regulations and protect their brands and reputation, as well as their customers and consumers as well.

"Every year, it’s estimated that 1 in 6 Americans gets sick by eating contaminated food,” says Aaron Patch, marketing director for Remco Products, a provider of color-coded cleaning tools. “Adequate cleaning and sanitizing of equipment are of great importance to public health. These processes can eliminate or significantly minimize biological, chemical and physical hazards appropriate for food safety.”

The equipment, as well as the procedures used to clean and sanitize a food and beverage plant, are crucial. But aging facilities, increased pressures from retailers, and regulations weigh down on processors. Keeping a facility up to snuff to protect reputations and consumers can be tricky in this environment.

“There is a new level of complexity around sanitization in today’s world of food processing. It requires a much deeper level of knowledge and expertise to stay ahead,” says Ted Moffett, technical service director for PSSI, a contract sanitation service provider.

Fortunately, there is no dearth in the availability of new tools, products and expert advice to help facilities achieve the No. 1 goal in food and beverage production: to produce high-quality and safe products.

   

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Coming clean

Facility cleaning/ industrial sanitation refers to the physical removal of food or other types of debris from a surface to control contamination.

“Cleaning largely removes extraneous material and allergens from a surface,” says Patch. “This can go a long way in reducing extraneous or foreign material recalls and allergen cross-contact-related recalls, especially in FDA-regulated products.”

A sanitized surface contains no risk of pathogens or contaminants through either pathogen elimination or microbial load reduction to safe levels. Sanitizing agents are usually an EPA-approved chemical used to ensure the safety of food products. They achieve 5-log kill, or elimination of almost 100 percent of the organisms from a food-contact surface.

“Cleaning is a basic must-have. Equipment, tools, and the processing environment need to be kept clean and in a good hygienic condition to allow for effective sanitation,” says Moffett. “The sanitation process is a prerequisite to a modern, compliant food safety program.”

Cleaning is a precursor to sanitation because a surface must be free of pathogens, allergens and contaminants to produce safe food.

“Surfaces must first be cleaned, or free of soil, and sanitized by either chemical or heat,” says Bryan Downer, vice president of sales and marketing for Sani-Matic, Inc., a manufacturer of sanitary process cleaning systems and solutions. “If soil is present on a surface, the chemical cannot reach the area covered by that soil and cannot be sanitized.”

Debris adhering to a soiled surface might become more attached to the tool or equipment when in contact with a heat source. The debris is then more difficult to clean. Generally, there are four factors that affect the cleaning and sanitation process. Firstm the time it takes to complete the process. Second, the temperature of water to remove debris from surfaces. Third, the chemistry of the detergents required to remove soil. And fourth, mechanical action of removal such as scrubbing and water pressure.

“If one of the factors is not within the optimal range — such as too little time to clean or insufficient water temperature or pressure — then the imbalance will affect the sanitation process and risks for buildups can occur,” says Steve Weiland, corporate microbiologist for PSSI.

Finally, plants’ sanitation standard operating procedures (SSOP) cannot overlook allergen control. More consumers are avoiding certain ingredients for health or diet-related reasons. And regulations on labeling products containing the “Big 8” allergens are in force. Thus, processors should be aware of allergen contamination.

“The control of allergen risks is a challenging situation for food processing. Dedicated lines of equipment and items that are ‘allergen-specific’ help reduce risks for other allergens to be mixed into foods,” says Weiland. “However, this is not always possible. So a thorough cleaning process must be tested for allergen residue by the food QA (quality assurance) staff. Then, final sanitizing and setup process can occur to produce foods.”

   

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Best practices

The basics of a cleaning and sanitation process, as mentioned above, are time, action, chemicals and temperature, or TACT. However, Remco has added two other key factors that can influence the efficacy of a sanitation program: employees and resources.

“Trained personnel are more effective and efficient in cleaning tasks,” says Patch. “[And having] resources, proper cleaning tools, protective clothing, equipment, etc., are as necessary as the other requirements listed.”

Once a facility establishes the appropriate parameters for TACT, says Downer, the company must reproduce these conditions consistently. “Minimizing the risk of human error is critical to ensure repeatable cleaning and sanitation results,” he says.

To have an effective food facility cleaning and sanitation program, qualified supervisors and managers should train and monitor staff. This entails regular assessments of workers to ensure they are following SSOPs.

Videos from Sani-Matic, Inc.
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