11.6.2 Cold Storage, Freezing, and Chilling of Foods
11.6.2 Cold Storage, Freezing, and Chilling of Foods
11.6.2.1
The site shall provide confirmation of the effective operational performance of freezing, chilling, and cold storage facilities. Chillers, blast freezers, and cold storage rooms shall be designed and constructed to allow for the hygienic and efficient refrigeration of food and be easily accessible for inspection and cleaning
11.6.2.2
Sufficient refrigeration capacity shall be available to chill, freeze, store chilled, or store frozen the maximum anticipated throughput of product with allowance for periodic cleaning of refrigerated areas
11.6.2.3
- The site shall have a written procedure for monitoring temperatures, including the frequency of checks, and corrective actions, if the temperature is out of specification.
- Freezing, chilling, and cold storage rooms shall be fitted with temperature monitoring equipment that is located to monitor the warmest part of the room and be fitted with a temperature measurement device that is easily readable and accessible. Records shall be kept of frozen, cold, and chilled storage room temperatures
I caught something on my Internal Audit that was not included on the previous year's audit (Marked as N/A), and when raising these concerns to upper management, I'm getting some push back as it's "not a concern". So I'll display all the nuanced but obfuscated details and listen to your wisdom on how to proceed:
The second paragraph of the section you cited says that there should be sufficient storage space chill and freeze and store chilled or frozen the maximum anticipated throughput of product allowing for periodic cleaning.
I don't know what your production runs are like now, but it's not impossible for your food grade product to go up in required amount and require additional storage space. Depending on what happens, you may need more or less space for that product as things develop. The easiest way to make sure there is enough space available is to clearly label non-food-grade storage areas and monitor the temperature in all of them.
Besides, I would want to know if a non-food-grade product degrades regardless. I would want to tell Sales and sell it to less critical clients who don't mind slightly degraded product. If you don't measure, you know nothing and those costs could pile up.
I would push for an investment on this point unless there's no chance of the required storage for each product type changing, but even then it seems to me to just be the smart choice to do it anyway.
If the only thing you store in cold storage is an ingredient for a non-food item you should request an exemption from your CB for this unit/area - as in an exemption for compliance with the standard, there is cause for this and you should be able to get it.
Contact your CB for direction on filing an exemption.
Keep in mind that the area would still be subject to inspection during your SQF Audits as that will ensure that no food grade items or food contact packaging, etc is stored in that area as well.
The exemption is formal, so it needs to be in writing/documented, accepted, etc.