Environmental Health 

Food - Information for General Public

Environmental Health Officers
Environmental Health Officers employed by the Timaru District Council inspect registered food businesses to ensure that the premises and food handling practices of the staff, comply with relevant food legislation to ensure that public health is not compromised.

Some premises can now operate under an Off the Peg Food Control Plan, which is an approved template Food Safety Programme developed by the New Zealand Food Safety Authority (NZFSA). TDC’s Environmental Health Officers are also approved as verifiers by the NZFSA. Premises operating a Food Control Plan are audited to ensure that they are complying with the plan.

New Zealand Food Safety Authority (NZFSA)
NZFSA's role is to protect consumers of New Zealand food and food-related products, no matter where in the world they may be. It is NZFSA's role to ensure that the food produced and sold in New Zealand is safe, suitable and meets all requirements.
http://www.nzfsa.govt.nz/consumers

Fundraising Events – selling Food
(e.g. school or church fairs, sausage sizzles)
Jam Jars
The Council is permitted under the Food Hygiene Regulations* to treat fund raising operations  as “Occasional Food Premises”, allowing the organisers to operate without a Registered Food Premises being used, on a LIMITED number of occasions.

While some of the strict physical requirements of the Food Hygiene Regulations are relaxed for such situations, it is important to note that the conduct and maintenance provisions of the Regulations are still required.

All food must be sourced from registered food premises.

Pamphlets:
Advice for Occasional Food Premises - Preparing Food in the home    
Food Protection  
                                                                                                        

Homekill & Recreational catch (source- NZFSA website)
Homekill is the slaughtering and butchering of your own animal, either by yourself or by a listed homekill and recreational catch service provider, for your own use and consumption. The word 'use' means that animal owners can feed homekill meat to their animals.
Homekill cannot be traded for human or animal consumption. Those who use or consume homekill or recreational catch product do so at their own risk. As homekill and recreational catch meat has not been subject to any hygiene or processing standards or control, or any assessment, e.g. ante- or post-mortem inspection, no assurances can be given on its fitness for consumption.

Can you feed homekill meat to paying guests?
Those who supply a meal as part of a tourist package including farm-stays, hunting lodges, or tourist barbecues, cannot use homekill product as part of the food provided to their customers.
Paying guests also include those who pay board, fees or other forms of payment as part of an accommodation package. Institutions such as boarding schools, universities, hospitals and prisons cannot serve homekill and must provide inspected meat from a regulated source.

Can you supply homekill meat as a prize e.g. in a raffle?Homekill product is for the use or consumption of the animal owner including his or her family1 or household2 and must not be traded3 (includes barter, supply as part of a service, public prize or reward etc). What is allowed for homekill?The requirements for homekill activity are set out in section 67 of the Animal Products Act.
  1. Those who can homekill are animal owners who are actively engaged in the day-to-day maintenance of the animal, or animals of the same kind, for a period of at least 28 days.
  2. Such owners may kill and process the animal themselves on their own property (includes property leased, or where there is other legal right to occupy or use the property), or they may have the animal killed or processed by a listed homekill or recreational catch service provider on the service provider's premises or place or the animal owner's own property.
  3. Homekill product is for the use or consumption of the animal owner including his or her family1 or household2 and must not be traded (includes barter, supply as part of a service, public prize or reward etc).
  4. A farmer may supply homekill product to an employee of the farmer who is employed in an ongoing manner in the farmer's daily farming operations, for the use or consumption of that employee (including his or her family or household).
The parts of the homekill animal that are not for human or animal consumption (such as the hide, skin, horns, antlers) may be traded and waste material may be sold to a render.

The Animal Products Act also allows animals to be killed for humane reasons at a location other than the animal owner's own property or a listed service provider's premises or place, or by a person other than the owner or a listed service provider

1  A family is anyone who can claim direct family lineage e.g. children, parents, grandparents. It is not intended to include extended family living elsewhere.
2 A household is defined as the occupants of a house or similar, residential unit, but does not include an institution.
3 - Section 4 of the Animal Products Act defines trade.

More Information
http://www.nzfsa.govt.nz/animalproducts/publications/manualsguides/homekill/homekill.pdf

Disclaimer:
This information is not a legal interpretation of the Animal Products Act or the Animal Products (Ancillary and Transitional Provisions) Act and is intended only as a guide.


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