Title 21 › Chapter CHAPTER 10— - POULTRY AND POULTRY PRODUCTS INSPECTION › § 454
Congress wants people safe from spoiled or wrongly labeled poultry. The Secretary can work with a single state agency to help create and run state poultry inspection programs when the state has a law that requires inspections before and after slaughter, reinspections, and sanitation rules that are at least as strict as the federal ones. The Secretary can use state officers to do inspections. The federal government can give advice, technical and lab help, training, equipment, and money. Federal money can pay up to 50% of a program’s estimated cost each year and is shared fairly among cooperating states. The Secretary can appoint advisory committees of state representatives to help make state and federal programs more uniform and to protect consumers. If the Secretary thinks a state has not set up or is not enforcing equal rules, he must tell the Governor by 30 days before the end of the two-year period after August 18, 1968. If the state still does not act, the Secretary can declare that federal poultry rules apply inside that state. He can delay that declaration for one more year if the state is likely to start enforcement. The Secretary must publish the declaration and it takes effect 30 days after publication. If any plant is making poultry that clearly threatens public health, the Secretary will warn the Governor and the advisory committee. If the state does not act quickly, the Secretary can immediately make that plant follow federal rules. Normal retail operations at stores and restaurants are not covered, and restaurant central kitchens are treated like restaurants when they make ready-to-eat food only for their own restaurants, though such facilities can be inspected if needed. When a state later meets the federal standard, the Secretary will end the federal designation. The Secretary must review state programs at least once a year and report to Congress. “State” includes Puerto Rico and organized territories.
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Food and Drugs — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
21 U.S.C. § 454
Title 21 — Food and Drugs
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73