Wash. Admin. Code § 246-282-006 - Washington state Vibrio parahaemolyticus control plan
(1) This section establishes the Washington
state Vibrio parahaemo-lyticus control plan (control plan) for
the months of May 1st through September 30th (control months). The requirements
of this section are an extension of the NSSP Model Ordinance.
(2) All harvesters and shellfish dealers
harvesting or delivering oysters to a certified shucker packer for shucking or
postharvest processing (PHP) during the control months must label the oysters
with a harvest tag stating "For shucking by a certified dealer" or "For PHP by
a certified dealer." Oysters harvested and tagged in compliance with this
subsection are exempt from subsections (3) through (20) of this
section.
(3)The following
definitions apply throughout this section:
(a) "Single-source Vibrio
parahaemolyticus case" or "case" means a laboratory-confirmed
Vibrio parahaemolyti-cus-associated illness or illnesses with
a common exposure that are reported to the department. The case must:
(i) Be associated with commercially harvested
shell-stock;
(ii) Not involve
documented postharvest abuse; and
(iii) Be traced back to a single growing
area.
(b)"Control
months" means May 1st through September 30th.
(c)"Cool" or "cooling" means to:
(i) Adequately ice or place in a controlled
environment with a temperature of 45°F (7.2°C) or less; and
(ii) Reach and maintain an internal oyster
tissue temperature of 50°F (10°C) or less.
(d) "Harvest temperature" means the water
temperature or internal oyster tissue temperature at the time of harvest. The
harvester or shellfish dealer shall state whether they use water temperature or
internal oyster tissue temperature for harvest temperature in their harvest
plan.
(4) All harvesters
and shellfish dealers harvesting oysters during the control months shall report
the volume of oysters harvested. This information must be reported by month,
oyster species, size class, and growing area for all control months. This
information must be reported by December 31st each year. Harvesters and
shellfish dealers that do not submit this information to the department may not
harvest oysters during the control months during the next calendar
year.
(5) Harvesters and shellfish
dealers harvesting oysters during the control months shall complete, submit to
the department, and keep on file a current Vibrio
parahaemolyti-cus harvest plan. In order for the department to review
the harvest plan prior to May 1st, the harvest plan must be submitted by March
1st each year unless no changes have been made to the existing harvest plan.
Harvesters and shellfish dealers shall sign and date their harvest plan each
year and make it available to the department upon request.
(6)The harvest plan must:
(a)Describe the harvest, temperature
collection, cooling, and conveyance methods.
(b)Include an example of the harvest
temperature record designed to meet the requirements in subsection (11) of this
section.
(c)Identify if water
temperature or internal oyster tissue temperature is used to meet the
requirements in subsection (11) of this section and specifically how this
measurement will be taken.
(7) The department shall review and either
approve or deny the harvest plan within thirty days of receipt. If the
department denies approval of the harvest plan, the department shall notify the
applicant of the decision in writing stating the reasons for the denial and
providing the opportunity to correct the deficiencies. Harvesters and shellfish
dealers may not harvest oysters during the control months unless the department
has approved the plan.
(8)Time of
harvest to cooling requirements and harvest controls are based on a risk
categorization of each growing area. The department shall assign each growing
area a category of 1, 2, or 3 (where 1 corresponds to the least stringent and 3
the most stringent controls) based on the number of cases that occurred during
the previous consecutive five-year period within the control months and were
attributed to that growing area.
(9) The department shall categorize coastal
growing areas in Willapa Bay and Grays Harbor as Category 1 for the first year
of implementation attributing no illnesses to these areas for the years 2010 to
2014. For subsequent years, the department shall categorize coastal growing
areas based on the criteria in subsection (8) of this section.
(10) The department shall complete risk
categorization and publish a list of all growing areas by risk category no
later than February 1st annually. The department shall use a rolling five-year
average number of cases to calculate risk categories as follows:
(a) Category 1: An average of 0.2 or fewer
cases attributed to the growing area over a five-year period.
(b) Category 2: An average of more than 0.2,
but less than 1.0 cases attributed to the growing area over a five-year
period.
(c) Category 3: An average
of 1.0 or more cases attributed to the growing area over a five-year
period.
(11) Time of
harvest begins after the first oysters to be harvested are exposed to the air.
Time of harvest to cooling requirements and harvest controls are as follows:
(a) Category 1:
Requirements: | Time to Cooling: |
Except as noted below, the time of harvest to cooling requirement from June 1st through September 30th is: | 9 hours |
When ambient air temperature at harvest is greater than 90°F, the time of harvest to cooling requirement is: | 7 hours |
When harvest temperature is between 68°F and 70°F from July 1st through August 31st, the time of harvest to cooling requirement is: | 5 hours |
Harvest Control: From July 1st through August 31st, harvest is not allowed for twenty-four hours when harvest temperature is above 70°F. |
(b)
Category 2:
Requirements: | Time to Cooling |
Except as noted below, the time of harvest to cooling requirement from May 1st through September 30th is: | 7 hours |
When ambient air temperature at harvest is greater than 85°F, the time of harvest to cooling requirement is: | 5 hours |
When harvest temperature is between 66°F and 68°F from July 1st through August 31st, the time of harvest to cooling requirement is: | 3 hours |
Harvest Control: From July 1st through August 31st, harvest is not allowed for twenty-four hours when harvest temperature is above 68°F. |
(c)
Category 3:
Requirements: | Time to Cooling |
Except as noted below, time of harvest to cooling requirement from May 1st through September 30th is: | 5 hours |
Requirements: | Time to Cooling |
When ambient air temperature at harvest is greater than 80°F, the time of harvest to cooling requirement is: | 3 hours |
When harvest temperature is between 64°F and 66°F from July 1st through August 31st, the time of harvest to cooling requirement is: | 1 hour |
Harvest Control: From July 1st through August 31st, harvest is not allowed for twenty-four hours when harvest temperature is above 66°F. |
(d)
When a harvester or shellfish dealer places oysters in a container or
conveyance, but does not remove them from the tide flat as part of their
harvest and the harvest exceeds the time to cooling requirements in subsection
(11) of this section, then the oysters in the container or conveyance must be
covered by the tide for a minimum of four hours before harvest can be
completed.
(12)Harvesters and shellfish dealers shall
take the following measurements at the times specified below and record this
information in a harvest temperature record for each harvest site for all
harvests occurring within the control months. Harvesters and shellfish dealers
shall take these measurements with a thermometer that is verified weekly using
manufacturer specifications or with a method approved in a harvest plan.
Thermometer verification must be documented and maintained with operational
records. Harvesters and shellfish dealers shall record the following
measurements and the date and time they were taken in the record, maintain the
record for three years, and make the record available to the department upon
request:
(a)Air temperature at time and
location of harvest; and
(b)Harvest
temperature at time and location of harvest. Harvesters and shellfish dealers
using water temperature for harvest temperature shall take water temperature at
depth of oysters unless another method is documented in their harvest
plan.
(13)Harvesters and
shellfish dealers shall initiate cooling as soon as practical from the time of
harvest and within the time of harvest to cooling requirements for the growing
area where the oysters were harvested to ensure that the maximum number of
hours is not exceeded.
(14) If the
required time of harvest to cooling requirements are not met after removal from
the tide flat, the harvester or shellfish dealer shall dispose of the oysters
using one of the methods below and record the disposition on the harvest
record:
(a)Destroy the oysters;
(b)Place the oysters within the original
growing area or another approved growing area and allow a minimum of fourteen
days before reharvesting; or
(c)Deliver the oysters to a certified shucker
packer for shucking or PHP and attach a harvest tag meeting the requirements in
subsection (2) of this section.
(15) If ownership of oysters is transferred
prior to the oysters being cooled in accordance with the time of harvest to
cooling requirements, the harvester shall include in the harvest record
required under WAC
246-282-080 the:
(a)Temperatures recorded under subsection
(12) of this section;
(b)Date,
time, and person or entity to whom the oysters were transferred; and
(c)Growing area risk category for the
harvested product.
(d)The receiving
shellfish dealer shall meet the time of harvest to cooling requirements for the
original harvest time.
(16)Vibrio parahaemolyticus
training requirements are as follows:
(a)Harvesters and shellfish dealers shall
complete an initial department-approved training specific to the requirements
of this section prior to harvesting or shipping oysters during the control
months.
(b) Harvesters and
shellfish dealers shall complete department-approved refresher training within
one year following any revision of this rule considered significant under
RCW
34.05.328 or at least every five
years.
(c)Those responsible for the
on-site management of harvest activities must be trained by either:
(i) Harvesters and shellfish dealers at their
operation who completed the department-approved training; or
(ii) The department.
(d) Harvesters and shellfish dealers shall
record those trained in their operational records.
(17)A harvester or shellfish dealer may
request a waiver from specific requirements of this section. The request must:
(a)Be in writing;
(b)Identify the requirement requested to be
waived;
(c)State the reason for the
waiver; and
(d)Provide supporting
information.
(18)The
department may grant a waiver request if it:
(a) Is consistent with the applicable
standards and the intent of this section; and
(b)Provides a comparable level of public
health protection to the requirement being waived.
(19) If the department approves a waiver
request, the department shall notify the requestor of the decision in
writing.
(20) If the department
denies a waiver request, the department shall notify the requestor of the
decision in writing stating the reasons for the denial. The requestor shall
comply with the provision that was the subject of the waiver request.
(21)The department shall review this section
to evaluate the effectiveness of the rules and determine areas where revisions
may be necessary by November 2017.
Notes
Statutory Authority: RCW 69.30.030. 09-08-122, § 246-282-006, filed 4/1/09, effective 5/2/09. Statutory Authority: Chapter 69.30 RCW. 08-11-051, § 246-282-006, filed 5/15/08, effective 5/19/08.
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