FDACS Stop-Sale Orders: POTENTIALLY HAZARDOUS FOOD MEETS

Overview

FDACS has issued 1 POTENTIALLY HAZARDOUS FOOD MEETS stop-sale orders affecting 1 Florida food establishments, with 0 orders in the past 12 months. Legal basis: FS 500.04; FS 500.10 Adulterated.

Sourced from Florida FDACS public inspection records, Jan 2022–present.

0Orders (12 mo)
1Total Orders
1Facilities Hit

FDACS issues POTENTIALLY HAZARDOUS FOOD MEETS stop-sale orders when food products violate FS 500.04; FS 500.10 Adulterated — requiring immediate removal from sale or use until corrective action is taken.

Legal basis: FS 500.04; FS 500.10 Adulterated

What This Stop Order Means

FDACS stop-sale orders issued for POTENTIALLY HAZARDOUS FOOD MEETS violations under Florida food safety law. Products subject to stop-sale or stop-use orders cannot be sold or used until the violation is corrected.

When FDACS issues a POTENTIALLY HAZARDOUS FOOD MEETS stop-sale order, the establishment must immediately cease selling or distributing the flagged products. Products remain under stop-sale order until FDACS inspectors verify corrective action has been taken.

Related Stop-Sale Order Categories

References

Frequently Asked Questions

What is an FDACS POTENTIALLY HAZARDOUS FOOD MEETS stop-sale order?
An FDACS POTENTIALLY HAZARDOUS FOOD MEETS stop-sale order requires a Florida food establishment to immediately stop selling or using a product that violates FS 500.04; FS 500.10 Adulterated. FDACS stop-sale orders issued for POTENTIALLY HAZARDOUS FOOD MEETS violations under Florida food safety law. Products subject to stop-sale or stop-use orders cannot be sold or used until the violation is corrected. FDACS has issued 1 such orders across 1 Florida facilities.
What happens when FDACS issues a stop-sale order for POTENTIALLY HAZARDOUS FOOD MEETS?
When FDACS issues a POTENTIALLY HAZARDOUS FOOD MEETS stop-sale order, the affected products must immediately be removed from sale or use. The establishment cannot sell, distribute, or use the flagged products until FDACS approves corrective action. Violating a stop-sale order can result in additional penalties under Florida Statutes Chapter 500.
Which Florida businesses receive POTENTIALLY HAZARDOUS FOOD MEETS stop-sale orders?
FDACS inspects and issues stop-sale orders to grocery stores, convenience stores, food manufacturers, bakeries, mobile food vendors, and vending machine operators. POTENTIALLY HAZARDOUS FOOD MEETS stop-sale orders have been issued at 1 Florida facilities, with 0 orders in the past 12 months.
What law covers FDACS POTENTIALLY HAZARDOUS FOOD MEETS stop-sale orders?
FDACS POTENTIALLY HAZARDOUS FOOD MEETS stop-sale orders are issued under FS 500.04; FS 500.10 Adulterated. The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) enforces Florida Statutes Chapter 500 and Florida Administrative Code 5K-4, which adopt FDA Food Code standards for food safety and labeling compliance.

This page is maintained by FloridaFoodSafety.org. How we collect and verify this data.