Title 21 › Chapter 9— FEDERAL FOOD, DRUG, AND COSMETIC ACT › Subchapter IV— FOOD › § 350h
Create science-based minimum safety rules for growing, harvesting, packing, and storing certain raw fruits and vegetables that could make people sick. Federal officials must publish a proposed rule within 1 year after January 4, 2011, hold at least 3 public meetings in different parts of the country while they take comments, and write a final rule within 1 year after that comment period ends. The rules must cover things like soil treatments, worker hygiene, packaging, temperature control, animals in growing areas, and water. They must be flexible for different kinds and sizes of farms and sellers, including small farms and those that sell directly to consumers. The rules must consider natural, accidental, and intentional hazards (including terrorism), respect environmental and conservation practices where possible, avoid conflicting with organic certification rules while giving the same public health protection, and define what counts as a “small” and “very small” business. Small businesses must follow the rules 1 year after the rule takes effect; very small businesses have 2 years. States and foreign countries can ask for exceptions (variances) if local growing conditions make different practices necessary and still protect public health; officials will review, approve, deny, or change those requests and can revoke them after notice and a hearing. The agencies must work with the Department of Agriculture and state officials on outreach and enforcement. Within 1 year after January 4, 2011, updated guidance on good agricultural practices must be published and explained in at least 3 public meetings. A farm is exempt for a year if, over the prior 3 years, it sold more directly to nearby end-users than to other buyers and its average annual food sales were under $500,000 (adjusted for inflation); exempt farms must show the farm name and address on labels or at the point of sale (including online). Exemptions can be withdrawn during an outbreak or to protect public health. The rules do not apply to produce grown only for personal use or to activities already covered by another federal produce-safety rule. Qualified end-user means the consumer or a restaurant/retailer in the same State as the farm or within 275 miles; “consumer” does not include a business.
Full Legal Text
Food and Drugs — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
21 U.S.C. § 350h
Title 21 — Food and Drugs
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60