Florida Violation V56: Compliance records

BasicSeverity
ComplianceCategory
0Citations (12 mo)
Codes 45–58Classification

Under Florida's food safety regulations, V56 (Compliance records) is a basic violation addressing Compliance standards.

Reference: 61C-4.023(6), FDA Food Code various sections

What the Code Says

V56 — Compliance records

Required records not maintained

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

Why This Matters

DOCUMENTATION FAILURE: Without required records (temperature logs, employee health, shellfish tags, HACCP plans, pest control), the establishment cannot demonstrate compliance with food safety requirements. Missing records prevent traceability during outbreak investigations. Temperature logs are critical evidence that food was held safely. Lack of documentation suggests lack of monitoring.

CDC Risk Factor Classification: Management & Personnel - Documentation

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

Code Requirements

Maintain all required records: daily temperature logs for coolers/freezers, employee health agreements, shellfish tags (90 days), HACCP plans for specialized processes, pest control reports, equipment maintenance records, food safety training documentation, variance approvals. Records must be available during inspections.

References

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Florida food safety violation V56?
Required records not maintained This is classified as a basic violation under the Compliance category.
Why is violation V56 (Compliance records) dangerous?
DOCUMENTATION FAILURE: Without required records (temperature logs, employee health, shellfish tags, HACCP plans, pest control), the establishment cannot demonstrate compliance with food safety requirements. Missing records prevent traceability during outbreak investigations. Temperature logs are cri...
What CDC risk factor does this violation fall under?
This violation is classified under: Management & Personnel - Documentation.

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.