On February 28th  U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced that it is withdrawing the 2005 proposed rule, “Food Standards; General Principles and Food Standards Modernization,” in response to comments received in 2005 after publication of the proposed rule and in 2020 after the FDA reopened the comment period for the proposed rule. The proposed rule, jointly published with the U.S. Department of Agriculture Food Safety and Inspection Service (USDA-FSIS), was intended, in part, to establish a set of general principles for the FDA and USDA-FSIS to use when considering whether to establish, revise, or eliminate a food standard.

In public meetings the FDA held in July 2018 and September 2019, stakeholders said that due to changes in manufacturing, food technology, market trends and nutrition science since 2005, the FDA should solicit new data and information when determining next steps for the proposed rule. As a result of that feedback, the FDA reopened the comment period in February 2020, for FDA-specific aspects of the proposed rule.

According to the FDA many of the comments submitted suggested that the general principles be revised and consolidated to make the principles easier to understand and implement. The FDA and USDA-FSIS have agreed to withdraw the proposed rule to allow for reconsideration of how best to approach general principles and food standards modernization to ensure any future revised general principles are consistent with the Federal Meat Inspection Act, the Poultry Products Inspection Act, and the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act.

A joint FDA and USDA effort to publish a new proposed rule on principles for food standards modernization was included in the Fall Unified Agenda.

Published Date

March 6, 2023

Topic

Government & Regulatory Affairs

Region

United States

Sector

Controlled Environment Building, GCCA Transportation, GCCA Warehouse