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Violation V55 (Employee training) is a Basic food safety violation in the Personnel category with 30 citations in the past 12 months. KNOWLEDGE GAP: Inadequately trained employees are more likely to commit food safety violations.
Summary generated from Florida DBPR public inspection records and CDC food safety data.
Violation V55 — Employee training — is classified as a basic violation in Florida's food safety code under the Personnel category.
Reference: F.S. 509.039, 61C-4.023
V55 — Employee training
Employee food safety training inadequate
— Florida Administrative Code 61C-4, FDA Food Code
KNOWLEDGE GAP: Inadequately trained employees are more likely to commit food safety violations. Studies show untrained food handlers have 2.5x more handwashing violations and are 3x more likely to cross-contaminate food. Lack of training on proper temperatures, allergens, and hygiene practices directly increases foodborne illness risk for every customer served.
CDC Risk Factor Classification: Management & Personnel - Training Requirements
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
Provide food safety training to all food handlers within 60 days of employment and annually thereafter. Training must cover: personal hygiene, temperature control, cross-contamination prevention, allergen awareness, cleaning/sanitizing, and pest prevention. Document all training. At least one certified food manager must be present during operations per F.S. 509.039.
China Lee Buffet in Ocala logged 8 high-severity violations May 4, including undercooked food and improperly stored toxi…
Data Source: This reference is based on official public inspection records from the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) and the FDA Food Code.
Editorial Process: Content generated using AI to synthesize complex regulatory data and CDC food safety research, then reviewed and verified for accuracy by our editorial team.
Disclaimer: Violation descriptions reflect Florida Administrative Code Chapter 61C-4 and the FDA Food Code current at time of publication. Health risk information sourced from CDC, FDA, and peer-reviewed research.
Editor: All content reviewed and verified by Christopher F. Nesbitt, Sr., Nationally Registered EMT & BU-trained Paralegal.
This page is maintained by FloridaFoodSafety.org. How we collect and verify this data.