New food safety course designed for apple packinghouses

This course from Penn State Extension covers practices and procedures to ensure safe handling of the produce.

Visitors in a private tour of Pomona Packing in Wolcott, N.Y., saw how the apple-sorting lines worked using new technology to streamline the sorting and packing process. Pomona started in 2010 to serve local apple growers, as well as New York Apple Sales, in the fresh apple arena.
Apple sorting
(File photo: Amy Sowder)

Penn State Extension is offering a new online course, “Keeping Apples Safe in the Packinghouse,” which provides resources on commercial food processing best practices, regulations and related topics.

The course is designed for apple packinghouse operators looking to provide food safety training to employees. This digital curriculum covers essential practices and procedures to ensure product safety, the university said.

The course includes 21 videos recorded in commercial packing facilities, addressing topics such as microbial, chemical and physical hazards that can cause foodborne illness or injury, potential contamination routes, sanitation and personal hygiene best practices and guidelines for record-keeping.

A teaching guide with discussion questions helps reinforce topics introduced in the videos. Videos and discussion questions are available in both English and Spanish.

Apple packinghouse operators can stream and use these videos alongside their company’s training materials and facilitate discussion using the provided questions. An internet connection is required to stream videos.

Through the course, employees will learn how to:

  • Understand the importance of food safety and the potential negative impacts of a food safety incident.
  • Identify how microorganisms can spread throughout the packinghouse and implement strategies to minimize cross-contamination.
  • Demonstrate good personal hygiene practices.
  • Apply basic sanitation concepts to meet the goals of the company’s sanitation program.
  • Implement best practices for documentation and record-keeping.

The registration fee is $300. More information is available on the Penn State Extension website.

The Packer logo (567x120)
Related Stories
The award, first presented by The Packer in 1964, recognizes an individual who has shown leadership and commitment to the advancement of the apple industry.
The company says it’s leveraging its more than 25 years of supply chain expertise to help grower-packer-shippers, retailers, foodservice operators and distributors simplify the supply chain, reduce food waste, optimize inventory levels, mitigate compliance risk and increase profitably.
Fresh from securing key advocacy wins, the International Fresh Produce Association CEO brought a clear message to the recent Washington Conference: The produce industry’s voice is actively shaping federal policy, but the fight for fresh is far from over.
Read Next
Dante Galeazzi joins “The Packer Podcast” to share why ignoring the trade pact will trigger a damaging domino effect of soaring inflation and small harvests.
Get Daily News
GET MARKET ALERTS
Get News & Markets App