Florida Violation V14: Food contact surfaces

High PrioritySeverity
EquipmentCategory
6,936Citations (12 mo)
Codes 01–28Classification

Under Florida's food safety regulations, V14 (Food contact surfaces) is a high priority violation addressing Equipment standards.

Reference: 61C-4.019(1), FDA Food Code 4-602

What the Code Says

V14 — Food contact surfaces

Food contact surfaces not properly cleaned/sanitized

— Florida Administrative Code 61C-4, FDA Food Code

Why This Matters

CROSS-CONTAMINATION: Improperly cleaned food contact surfaces are a primary vehicle for bacterial transfer. Cutting boards can harbor 200x more fecal bacteria than a toilet seat. Biofilms form on surfaces within 24 hours, protecting Listeria, Salmonella, and E. coli from routine cleaning. One contaminated surface can transfer pathogens to dozens of food items throughout the day.

CDC Risk Factor Classification: Contaminated Equipment - CDC Risk Factor #4

The CDC identifies five major contributing factors to foodborne illness outbreaks: food from unsafe sources, inadequate cooking, improper holding temperatures, contaminated equipment, and poor personal hygiene. Source: CDC Contributing Factors

Real-World Impact

A 2016 E. coli O157:H7 outbreak at a fast-casual chain was traced to inadequately sanitized food preparation surfaces. Investigators found the same cutting boards were used for raw meat and ready-to-eat vegetables without proper cleaning between uses, sickening 55 customers.

Source: CDC — E. coli and Food Safety

Code Requirements

Clean and sanitize ALL food contact surfaces: after each use, between different food types (especially raw meat to ready-to-eat), every 4 hours during continuous use, and when contaminated. Use proper sanitizer concentration: chlorine 50-100 ppm, quaternary ammonium 200-400 ppm. Air dry — do not towel dry. Test sanitizer concentration every 2 hours.

References

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Florida food safety violation V14?
Food contact surfaces not properly cleaned/sanitized This is classified as a high priority violation under the Equipment category.
Why is violation V14 (Food contact surfaces) dangerous?
CROSS-CONTAMINATION: Improperly cleaned food contact surfaces are a primary vehicle for bacterial transfer. Cutting boards can harbor 200x more fecal bacteria than a toilet seat. Biofilms form on surfaces within 24 hours, protecting Listeria, Salmonella, and E. coli from routine cleaning. One contam...
What CDC risk factor does this violation fall under?
This violation is classified under: Contaminated Equipment - CDC Risk Factor #4.

Data source: Florida DBPR public inspection records. Health risk information sourced from CDC, FDA Food Code, and peer-reviewed research. How we collect and verify this data.