WAC 16-19-200
Additional requirements for sanitary
operation of custom slaughtering establishments. Custom
slaughtering establishments must have:
(1) Hot water of sufficient temperature in sufficient
quantity to thoroughly clean and sanitize all equipment subject
to contamination from dressing or handling of diseased carcasses.
For the purpose of this section "sufficient temperature" means at
least 160°F for cleaning purposes and 180°F for purposes of
sanitizing. If an approved chemical sanitizing agent is used in
the sanitizing step, a temperature of 160°F is considered
adequate.
(2) Properly located sanitizing facilities of approved
construction and of sufficient size for complete immersion of
butcher tools, and other implements must be provided in the
slaughter room and at any other place where the operation is
likely to result in the contamination of such equipment and
utensils. Such receptacles must have means of heating the water
contained therein to 180°F and maintaining it at that temperature
during the entire operation. The sanitizers must be designed so
that they can be drained after each day's use.
(3) Inedible and condemned storage and handling facilities.
(a) Adequate facilities for sanitary handling and storage of
inedible offal and for sanitizing equipment in which inedible
materials were transported must be provided, including one or
more properly located enclosed rooms. Hot and cold water must be
provided at outlets in or adjacent to the inedible handling room.
The necessary doors connecting inedible storage rooms with rooms
where edible products are handled must be metal clad,
self-closing and tight fitting.
(b) A separate refrigerated room capable of maintaining a
temperature of 45°F or less must be provided for the storage of
inedible material at plants that store such material for a period
longer than twenty-four hours. Such rooms must be of sanitary
construction and must have impervious floors, walls and ceilings.
The floors must be watertight, properly sloped and provided with
drains leading to the plant sewage disposal system.
(c) All tanks and equipment used for rendering or preparing
inedible meat must be in rooms or compartments separate from
those used for rendering or preparing edible products.
(4) The slaughter floor must be kept reasonably free of
blood, fat, scraps, etc. Water must not be permitted to splash
from the floor upon unprotected carcasses on the bed or on the
half hoist. The bed must be reasonably clean before the carcass
is lowered. Clean watertight metal containers in good repair and
free from objectionable odors must be provided at convenient
locations for the reception of feet, tails, ears, pizzles, or
other inedible material. Evisceration must be performed so as to
avoid contamination of the carcass with ingesta or fecal
material.
(5) Carcasses must be washed with water under pressure from
a spray nozzle. Towels, rags, cloths, brushes of any kind, or
water dipped out of a drum or containers must not be used. Metal
drums of containers of water must not be used for washing hands,
tools, or parts of carcasses, or for flushing the floor. A
carcass that has been contaminated by manure or by pus must have
the contaminated portion removed by trimming before being washed.
(6) Inedible material must not be placed on the slaughter
room floor and must be kept in suitable watertight containers or
vehicles until removed from the slaughter room.
(7) Skinned beef, calf and vealer heads must not be
permitted to come in contact with the floor. The horns,
hornbutts, muzzles, and all pieces of hide must be removed before
the head is washed. If the meat from the head is to be saved,
the head must be thoroughly washed individually, and flushed in a
head flushing cabinet. This must include a thorough flushing of
the mouth, nostrils, and pharynx while the head is hanging in an
inverted position.
(8) In removing the front feet of cattle and calves, care
should be taken to expose as little of the flesh of the foreshank
as possible.
(9) Calves of such size that there is not a clearance of at
least eight inches above the floor, or whose viscera cannot be
transported manually and unaided to the inedible room, must be
skinned and eviscerated as cattle.
(10) Calves dressed hide-on must be thoroughly washed and
cleaned prior to making any incision into the carcass other than
the sticking wound, except the heads of calves and vealers
slaughtered in the "Kosher" method should be skinned prior to
washing the carcasses.
(11) In slaughtering lambs and sheep, the pelt must be
removed and the carcass thoroughly washed and cleaned before any
incision is made for evisceration. Adequate care must be taken
to prevent soilage of the carcass when removing the pelt.
(12) Hog carcasses must be thoroughly washed, cleaned, and
singed (when necessary) to remove all hair, scale, scurf, dirt
and toenails on the slaughtering floor before any incision is
made other than the sticking wound. The forefeet need not be
cleaned if discarded in the slaughtering room. Hog heads left on
the carcass or saved intact must be thoroughly washed and flushed
(nostrils, mouth and pharynx) and have ear tubes and eyelids
removed.
(13) Paunches must not be opened in the slaughtering room,
except when a power operated paunch lift table is provided for
this purpose.
(14) Carcasses must be removed from the slaughter room to
the chill cooler immediately after dressing and washing is
completed. Improperly washed or unclean carcasses must not be
brought into the coolers.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 16.49.680. 99-12-021, § 16-19-200,
filed 5/24/99, effective 6/24/99.]