23 LC 33 9221 H. B. 287 - 1 - House Bill 287 By: Representatives Thomas of the 65 th , Schofield of the 63 rd , and Marin of the 96 th A BILL TO BE ENTITLED AN ACT To amend Chapter 2 of Title 26 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to 1 standards, labeling, and adulteration of food, so as to provide for the operation of2 microenterprise food kitchens; to provide for a short title; to provide for definitions; to3 provide for the issuance of permits; to provide for qualifications for permits; to provide for4 rules and regulations regarding sanitation, equipment, and maintenance; to provide for5 inspections; to provide for operating requirements; to provide for fees; to provide for6 limitations on permits; to provide for statutory construction; to provide for conforming7 changes; to provide for related matters; to repeal conflicting laws; and for other purposes.8 BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF GEORGIA:9 PART I10 SECTION 1-1.11 Chapter 2 of Title 26 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to standards,12 labeling, and adulteration of food, is amended by adding a new article to read as follows:13 23 LC 33 9221 H. B. 287 - 2 - "ARTICLE 1914 26-2-470.15 This article shall be known and may be cited as the 'Microenterprise Home Kitchen16 Operations Act.'17 26-2-471.18 As used in this article, the term:19 (1) 'Food' has the same meaning as in Code Section 26-2-21.20 (2)(A) 'Microenterprise home kitchen' means a noncommercial kitchen facility:21 (i)(I) Located in a private home and operated by a resident of the home where22 ready-to-eat food is handled, stored, prepared, or offered for sale for consumption23 off the premises; or24 (II) Located on a farm where ready-to-eat food is handled, stored, prepared, or25 offered for sale for consumption on or off the premises;26 (ii) That prepares no more than 30 meals per day; and27 (iii) That meets the criteria to be a microenterprise as established by the Department28 of Economic Development.29 (B) Such term does not include:30 (i) A food service establishment;31 (ii) A food sales establishment;32 (iii) Nonprofit food sales and food service provided under a permit issued pursuant33 to Article 14 of this chapter;34 (iv) Food items produced in compliance with a license issued by the Department of35 Agriculture pursuant to Article 2 of this chapter;36 (v) A bed and breakfast inn, as defined by the Department of Public Health pursuant37 to Chapter 28 of Title 31; or38 23 LC 33 9221 H. B. 287 - 3 - (vi) A group-care facility, as defined in Code Section 49-5-3.39 (3) 'Microenterprise home kitchen permit' means a permit issued by a county board of40 health to an operator for the purpose of operating a microenterprise home kitchen.41 (4) 'Operator' means an individual who resides in the private home and who manages or42 controls the microenterprise home kitchen.43 26-2-472.44 (a) A person shall not operate a microenterprise home kitchen without having first45 obtained a valid microenterprise home kitchen permit pursuant to this article from the46 county board of health in which the microenterprise home kitchen is located.47 (b) County boards of health shall have the power and authority to issue permits to operate48 microenterprise home kitchens in accordance with the provisions of this article and the49 rules and regulations established by the department pursuant to this article.50 (c) A county board of health shall impose a fee for a microenterprise home kitchen permit51 in an amount limited to the administrative costs incurred by the county board of health in52 issuing permits and regulating microenterprise home kitchens.53 (d) A county board of health shall be authorized to deny, suspend, or revoke a54 microenterprise home kitchen permit if the operator of the microenterprise home kitchen55 fails to meet or violates the terms of the permit, this article, or the rules and regulations56 established by the department pursuant to this article.57 26-2-473.58 An operator may qualify for a microenterprise home kitchen permit if:59 (1) Food that is handled, stored, or prepared at the microenterprise home kitchen is60 processed in compliance with state and federal regulations;61 23 LC 33 9221 H. B. 287 - 4 - (2) The kitchen facility used to handle, store, or prepare food for the microenterprise62 home kitchen meets the requirements established by the department pursuant to this63 article;64 (3) The microenterprise home kitchen operates only during the hours approved in the65 microenterprise home kitchen permit; and66 (4) The microenterprise home kitchen complies with the requirements of this article and67 the rules and regulations established by the department.68 26-2-474.69 (a) The department shall establish rules and regulations to implement the provisions of this70 article, including sanitation, equipment, and maintenance requirements for microenterprise71 home kitchens.72 (b) When establishing rules and regulations pursuant to this Code section, the department73 shall not be authorized to make rules regarding:74 (1) Handwashing facilities, except to require that a handwashing station supplied with75 warm water, soap, and disposable hand towels is conveniently located in food76 preparation, food dispensing, and warewashing areas;77 (2) Kitchen sinks, kitchen sink compartments, and dish sanitation, except to require that78 the kitchen sink has hot and cold water, has a sanitizing agent, and is fully operational79 and that dishes are sanitized between each use;80 (3) The individuals allowed access to the food preparation areas, food storage areas, and81 washing areas, except during food preparation;82 (4) Display guards, covers, or containers for display foods, except to require that83 ready-to-eat food is protected from contamination during storage, preparation, handling,84 transport, and display;85 (5) Outdoor display and sale of food, except to require that food is maintained at proper86 holding temperatures;87 23 LC 33 9221 H. B. 287 - 5 - (6) Utensils and equipment, except to require that utensils and equipment used in the88 home kitchen:89 (A) Retain their characteristic qualities under normal use conditions;90 (B) Are properly sanitized after use; and91 (C) Are maintained in a sanitary manner between uses;92 (7) Food contact surfaces, except to require that food contact surfaces are smooth, easily93 cleanable, in good repair, and properly sanitized between tasks;94 (8) Nonfood contact surfaces, if those surfaces are made of materials ordinarily used in95 residential settings, except to require that those surfaces are kept clean from the96 accumulation of residue and debris;97 (9) Clean-in-place equipment, except to require that the equipment is cleaned and98 sanitized between uses;99 (10) Ventilation, except to require that gases, odors, steam, heat, grease, vapors, and100 smoke are able to escape the kitchen;101 (11) Fixed temperature measuring devices or product mimicking sensors for the holding102 equipment for time- or temperature-controlled food, except to require nonfixed103 temperature measuring devices for hot and cold holding of food during storage, serving,104 and cooling;105 (12) Fixed floor-mounted and table-mounted equipment, except to require that106 floor-mounted and table-mounted equipment be in good repair and sanitized between107 uses;108 (13) Dedicated laundry facilities, except to require that linens used for the109 microenterprise home kitchen are stored and laundered separately from household110 laundry and that soiled laundry is stored to prevent contamination of food and equipment;111 (14) Water, plumbing, drainage, and waste, except to require that:112 (A) Sinks be supplied with hot and cold potable water from:113 (i) An approved public water system;114 23 LC 33 9221 H. B. 287 - 6 - (ii) A source that meets the county board of health's regulations regarding the safety115 of drinking water, if the county board of health with jurisdiction over the116 microenterprise home kitchen has regulations regarding the safety of drinking water;117 or118 (iii) A water source that is tested at least once per month for bacteriologic quality,119 and at least once in every three-year period for lead and copper; and120 (B) Food preparation and service be discontinued in the event of a disruption of potable121 water service;122 (15) The number of and path of access to toilet facilities, except to require that toilet123 facilities are equipped with proper handwashing stations;124 (16) Lighting, except to require that food preparations are well lit by natural or artificial125 light whenever food is being prepared;126 (17) Designated dressing areas and storage facilities, except to require that items not127 ordinarily found in a home kitchen are placed or stored away from food preparation areas,128 that dressing takes place outside of the kitchen facility, and that food items are stored in129 a manner that does not allow for contamination;130 (18) The presence and handling of animals, except to require that all animals are kept131 outside of food preparation and service areas;132 (19) Food storage, floor, wall, ceiling, and toilet surfaces, except to require that surfaces133 are smooth, of durable construction, easily cleanable, and kept clean and free of debris;134 (20) Kitchen facilities open to living areas, except to require that food is only prepared,135 handled, or stored in kitchen and food storage areas;136 (21) Submission of plans and specifications before construction or remodel of a kitchen137 facility;138 (22) The number and type of time- or temperature-controlled food offered for sale,139 except:140 23 LC 33 9221 H. B. 287 - 7 - (A) A raw time- or temperature-controlled food such as raw fish, raw milk, and raw141 shellfish;142 (B) Any food requiring special processes that would necessitate a hazard analysis and143 critical control points plan; and144 (C) Fish from waters of the state;145 (23) Approved food sources, except to require that:146 (A) Food in a hermetically sealed container is obtained from a regulated food147 processing plant;148 (B) Liquid milk and milk products are obtained from sources that comply with state149 and federal standards;150 (C) Fish for sale or service are commercially and legally caught;151 (D) Mushrooms picked in the wild are not offered for sale or service;152 (E) Game animals offered for sale or service are raised, slaughtered, and processed in153 accordance with state laws and regulations; and154 (F) At least 25 percent of ingredients are sourced locally from Georgia farmers and155 small businesses;156 (24) The use of items produced under this article; or157 (25) The use of an open-air barbeque, grill, or outdoor wood-burning oven.158 26-2-475.159 (a) A county board of health shall be authorized to inspect a microenterprise home kitchen160 to ensure compliance by an operator with the provisions of this article and the rules and161 regulations established by the department pursuant to this article.162 (b) A county board of health shall inspect a microenterprise home kitchen only:163 (1) For an initial inspection, no more than one week before the microenterprise home164 kitchen is scheduled to begin operation;165 (2) For an unscheduled inspection, if the county board of health:166 23 LC 33 9221 H. B. 287 - 8 - (A) Conducts the inspection within three days before or three days after the167 microenterprise home kitchen is scheduled to begin operation;168 (B) Conducts the inspection during operating hours of the microenterprise home169 kitchen; or170 (C) Has a valid reason to suspect that the microenterprise home kitchen is the source171 of an adulterated food or of an outbreak of illness caused by a contaminated food; or172 (3) If the county board of health provides the operator with reasonable advanced notice173 of the inspection.174 (c) The county board of health shall document the reason for any inspection subsequent175 to the initial inspection, maintain a copy of such documentation on file with the176 microenterprise home kitchen's permit, and provide a copy of such documentation to the177 operator of the microenterprise home kitchen.178 26-2-476.179 (a) A microenterprise home kitchen shall:180 (1) Take steps to avoid any potential contamination to:181 (A) Food;182 (B) Equipment;183 (C) Utensils; or184 (D) Unwrapped single-service and single-use articles;185 (2) Prevent an individual from entering the food preparation area while food is being186 prepared if the individual is known to be suffering from:187 (A) Symptoms associated with acute gastrointestinal illness; or188 (B) A communicable disease that is transmissible through food; and189 (3) Comply with the following requirements:190 (A) Time- or temperature-controlled food shall be prepared, cooked, and served on the191 same day;192 23 LC 33 9221 H. B. 287 - 9 - (B) Food that is sold or provided to a customer may not be consumed onsite at the193 microenterprise home kitchen operation, except if the microenterprise home kitchen194 operation is a farm;195 (C) Food that is sold or provided to a customer shall be picked up by the consumer or196 delivered within a safe time period based on holding equipment capacity;197 (D) Food preparation may not involve processes that require a hazard analysis and198 critical control points plan, or the production, service, or sale of raw milk or raw milk199 products;200 (E) Molluscan shellfish may not be served or sold;201 (F) The operator may only sell or provide food directly to consumers and may not sell202 or provide food to any wholesaler or retailer; and203 (G) The operator shall provide the consumer with a notification that, while a permit has204 been issued by the county board of health, the kitchen may not meet all of the205 requirements of a commercial retail food establishment.206 (b) An operator applying for a microenterprise home kitchen permit shall provide to the207 county board of health:208 (1) Written consent to enter the premises where food is prepared, cooked, stored, or209 harvested for the microenterprise home kitchen; and210 (2) Written standard operating procedures that include:211 (A) All food that will be stored, handled, and prepared;212 (B) The proposed procedures and methods of food preparation and handling;213 (C) Procedures, methods, and schedules for cleaning utensils and equipment;214 (D) Procedures and methods for the disposal of refuse; and215 (E) A plan for maintaining time- or temperature-controlled food at the appropriate216 temperatures for each time- or temperature-controlled food.217 23 LC 33 9221 H. B. 287 - 10 - 26-2-477.218 In addition to the fee charged pursuant to Code Section 26-2-472, if the county board of219 health conducts an inspection because it has a valid reason to suspect that a microenterprise220 home kitchen is a source of an adulterated food or of an outbreak of illness caused by a221 contaminated food and, as a result of such inspection, finds that the microenterprise home222 kitchen was the source of an adulterated food or of an outbreak of illness caused by a223 contaminated food, the county board of health may charge and collect a fee from the224 operator of the microenterprise home kitchen in a reasonable amount not to exceed the total225 direct and indirect costs of conducting the inspection.226 26-2-478.227 (a) A microenterprise home kitchen permit:228 (1) Is nontransferable;229 (2) Is renewable on an annual basis;230 (3) Is restricted to the location and hours listed on the permit;231 (4) Shall include a statement that reads: 'This location is permitted under modified FDA232 requirements'; and233 (5) Shall provide the operator the opportunity to update the food types and products234 handled without requiring the operator to renew the permit.235 (b) This article shall not be construed to prohibit an operator from applying for a different236 type of food service related permit from a county board of health.237 (c) A microenterprise home kitchen permit shall not be considered a public benefit for238 purposes of Code Section 50-36-1."239 23 LC 33 9221 H. B. 287 - 11 - PART II 240 SECTION 2-1.241 Said chapter is further amended in Article 2, relating to adulteration and misbranding of food,242 by revising paragraph (5) of subsection (a) of Code Section 26-2-21, relating to definitions,243 as follows:244 "(5) 'Food sales establishment' means retail and wholesale grocery stores; retail seafood245 stores and places of business; food processing plants, except those food processing plants246 which are currently required to obtain a license from the Commissioner under any other247 provision of law; bakeries; confectioneries; fruit, nuts, and vegetable stores or roadside248 stands; wholesale sandwich and salad manufacturers, including vending machines and249 operations connected therewith; and places of business and similar establishments,250 mobile or permanent, engaged in the sale of food primarily for consumption off the251 premises. Within a food sales establishment, there may be a food service component, not252 separately operated, which may serve customers on site. This food service component253 shall be considered as part of the food sales establishment. This Such term shall not254 include:255 (A) The food sales component of any food service establishment defined in Code256 Section 26-2-370;257 (B) Food service establishments as defined in Code Section 26-2-370;258 (C) Establishments engaged in the sale of food primarily for consumption off the259 premises if such sale is an authorized part of and occurs upon the site of a fair or260 festival which:261 (i) Is sponsored by a political subdivision of this state; and262 (ii) Lasts 120 hours or less;263 (D) Establishments engaged in the boiling, bottling, and sale of sugar cane syrup or264 sorghum syrup within this state, provided that such bottles contain a label listing the265 23 LC 33 9221 H. B. 287 - 12 - producer's name and street address, all added ingredients, and the net weight or volume 266 of the product; or 267 (E) Nonprofit food sales and food service provided under a permit issued pursuant to268 Article 14 of this chapter; or269 (F) Microenterprise home kitchens as defined in Code Section 26-2-471."270 SECTION 2-2.271 Said chapter is further amended in Article 13, relating to food service establishments, by272 revising paragraph (2) of Code Section 26-2-370, relating to definitions, as follows:273 "(2) 'Food service establishment' means establishments for the preparation and serving274 of meals, lunches, short orders, sandwiches, frozen desserts, or other edible products275 either for carry out or service within the establishment. Such term includes restaurants;276 coffee shops; cafeterias; short order cafes; luncheonettes; taverns; lunchrooms; places277 which retail sandwiches or salads; soda fountains; institutions, both public and private;278 mobile food service establishments; industrial cafeterias; catering establishments; and279 similar facilities by whatever name called. Within a food service establishment, there280 may be a food sales component, not separately operated. This food sales component shall281 be considered as part of the food service establishment. Such term shall not include:282 (A) A food sales establishment, as defined in Code Section 26-2-21, except as283 otherwise stated in this paragraph;284 (B) The food service component of any food sales establishment defined in Code285 Section 26-2-21;286 (C) Any outdoor recreation activity sponsored by the state, a county, a municipality,287 or any department or entity thereof, any outdoor or indoor (other than school cafeteria288 food service) public school function, or any outdoor private school function;289 (D) Any organization which is operating on its own property or on the property of a290 party that has provided written consent for the use of such property for such purpose291 23 LC 33 9221 H. B. 287 - 13 - and which is exempt from taxes under paragraph (1) of subsection (a) of Code Section 292 48-7-25 or under Section 501(d) or paragraphs (1) through (8) or paragraph (10) of293 Section 501(c) of the Internal Revenue Code for the purpose of operating a house or294 other residential structures where seriously ill or injured children and their families are295 provided temporary accommodations in proximity to their treatment hospitals and296 where food is prepared, served, transported, or stored by volunteer personnel;297 (E) Establishments for the preparation and serving of meals, lunches, short orders,298 sandwiches, frozen desserts, or other edible products if such preparation or serving is299 an authorized part of and occurs upon the site of an event which:300 (i) Is sponsored by a political subdivision of this state;301 (ii) Is held on the property of such sponsor or on the property of a party that has302 provided written consent for use of such property for such event; and303 (iii) Lasts 120 hours or less; or 304 (F) Nonprofit food sales and food service provided under a permit issued pursuant to305 Article 14 of this chapter; or306 (G) Microenterprise home kitchens as defined in Code Section 26-2-471."307 SECTION 2-3.308 Said chapter is further amended in Article 14, relating to nonprofit food sales and food309 service, by revising subsection (i) of Code Section 26-2-392, relating to standards for food,310 labeling, and containers, protection from contamination, temperature, prohibited foods,311 utensils and equipment, ice, transport to other location, reuse at another event, handwashing312 facilities, unapproved facilities, and use of offsite kitchens, as follows:313 "(i) This Code section shall in no way be construed to allow the sale of food items which314 have been packaged, bottled, or canned in unapproved facilities. Food items prepared in315 private homes are prohibited; provided, however, that this shall not apply to:316 23 LC 33 9221 H. B. 287 - 14 - (1) Any any food item produced in compliance with a license issued by the Department317 of Agriculture pursuant to Article 2 of this chapter; or318 (2) Microenterprise home kitchens permitted in accordance with Article 19 of this319 chapter."320 PART III321 SECTION 3-1.322 All laws and parts of laws in conflict with this Act are repealed.323