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Food Act 2001 (DHW 2022-23 Annual Report)

Part 9 – Administration

Division 2 – Functions of enforcement agencies

S 93 - Reports by enforcement agencies

(1) The head of an enforcement agency (other than the relevant authority) is to report to the relevant authority, at such intervals as the relevant authority requires, on the performance of functions under this Act by persons employed or engaged by the agency.

Division 4 – Agreement and consultation with local government sector on administration and enforcement of Act

S 96 – Agreement and consultation with local government sector

(1) The Minister must take reasonable steps to consult with the Local Government Association (LGA) from time to time in relation to the administration and enforcement of this Act.

(2) If the Minister and the LGA enter into an agreement with respect to the exercise of functions under this Act by councils, then the Minister must prepare a report on the matter and cause copies of the report to be laid before both Houses of Parliament.

(3) A report under subsection (2) must be accompanied by a copy of any relevant written agreement between the Minister and the LGA.

(4) The Minister must consult with the LGA before a regulation that confers any function on councils is made under this Act.

(5) The annual report of the Minister under this Act must include a specific report on -

(a) the outcome of any consultation undertaken under subsection (1) or (4); and

(b) the operation of any agreement referred to in subsection (2).

S 109 - Annual report

(1) The Minister must, on or before 30 September in each year, prepare a report on the operation of this Act for the financial year ending on the preceding 30 June.

(2) The Minister must, within 6 sitting days after completing a report under this section, cause copies of the report to be laid before both Houses of Parliament.

The objectives of the Food Act 2001 (the Act) are defined in Section 3 of the Act as:

  1. Ensuring that food for sale is safe and suitable for human consumption.
  2. Preventing misleading conduct in connection with the sale of food.
  3. Providing for the application of the Food Standards Code.

The Act closely follows the content and structure of national model food provisions, which provide for the consistent administration and enforcement of food legislation in Australia. This uniform approach to national food legislation was formalised by the Inter-Governmental Food Regulation Agreement 2002. Under the Agreement all states and territories have adopted the Australia New Zealand Food Standards Code (the Code) through their Food Acts. While the Act contains important legal and administrative issues, such as defining offences and penalties, the Code details the specific requirements with which food businesses must comply.

The objectives of the Food Act 2001 (the Act) and Food Regulations 2017 are to:

To meet the objectives of the Act, the Act requires the Department for Health and Wellbeing (the Department) to:

The Department administers the Act in partnership with local government and Biosecurity SA, a division of the Department of Primary Industries and Regions South Australia (PIRSA). Activities undertaken by local government under the Act are detailed in Appendix 1, activities undertaken by Biosecurity SA are detailed in this report. Within the Department, the Food Safety and Regulation Branch is responsible for day-to-day administration of the Act with assistance from the Health Protection Operations Section of the Health Protection and Regulation Directorate.

1. Activities of the Food Safety and Regulation Branch

Monitoring Compliance with the Food Act 2001

The Food Safety and Regulation Branch (FSRB) of the Department carries out functions under the Act to ensure the supply of safe and suitable foods to the South Australian community. This includes investigating foodborne illness incidents, ensuring compliance with compositional and labelling requirements of the Code, assisting businesses to manage food recalls (and mandating recalls where necessary), risk assessing notifications of contaminants in food, managing the food safety audit system across the state, and responding to food safety complaints and general enquiries. Further detail on those activities is presented below.

Food sampling 2022-23

The FSRB conducts sampling of various foods that are of public health concern as part of local or national food safety surveys or to confirm compliance with the compositional and labelling requirements of the Code. A key performance indicator was established to analyse 800 food samples per year. For the 2022-23 financial year, a total of 847 food samples were collected as part of food compliance investigations and food surveys.

Investigation of food safety issues 2022-23

Food safety related issues come to the attention of the FSRB from a variety of sources including food surveys, complaints from members of the public, reports from the food industry, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC), Environmental Health Officers (EHOs) in local government, other regulatory agencies, or notification of illness from the Communicable Disease Control Branch (CDCB).

During 2022-23 after notification from CDCB, the FSRB collaborated with local councils and/or PIRSA to investigate three foodborne illness outbreaks. Details of the major outbreaks can be found in Appendix 2. Investigations included onsite assessment of food handling practices in food businesses, sampling of food and environmental swabbing. The objectives of these investigations are to remove any risk to public health, establish the cause of the outbreak, ensure food businesses implement short-term and long-term corrective actions and to determine if an offence has been committed against the Act.

FSRB regularly conducts post-incident debriefs to review the effectiveness of policies and procedures applied during incident investigation.

Notifiable contaminants

The South Australian Public Health (Notifiable Contaminants) Regulations 2020 require specified microorganisms to be reported to the Food Safety and Regulation Branch of SA Health when they are found in food and water samples. Food and water samples include all raw, partly processed and ready-to-eat foods, bottled water and ice, and may also include live plants and animals.

During this reporting period there were 754 notifications received by SA Health as summarised in Table 1. The notification process resulted in three recalls that affected 11 products.

Notifiable contaminants include pathogens such as Salmonella, Campylobacter, Listeria monocytogenes which cause foodborne illness, and indicator (non-pathogenic) organisms such as Listeria species and E. coli. Indicator organisms do not cause illness but can be used by the business to indicate there may be suitable conditions in their environment for pathogenic bacteria to grow. Further information about pathogenic and indicator organisms can be found in the Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ) Compendium of Microbiological Criteria for Food (the Compendium).

When notifications are received, SA Health conducts a risk assessment to determine what, if any, actions are required. In many instances action was not required as there was no risk to public health e.g. indicator (non-pathogenic) organisms, food not available for sale to the public or food to be cooked by the consumer to destroy foodborne pathogens.

Most of the notifications were for indicator organisms such as Listeria species and E. coli. Businesses may test multiple samples from one product resulting in multiple notifications for one product. Extra testing may also occur as businesses look for the reason indicator organisms are present.

However, there are limits for E. coli specifically related to dairy products in the Compendium, and two recalls affecting 5 dairy products were conducted for levels considered 'unsatisfactory'.

One business had multiple Listeria monocytogenes notifications from a variety of products made in a short time frame. This resulted in one recall affecting 6 products. Refer to the 'Food recalls' section.

All Campylobacter and 124 of 125 Salmonella notifications came from raw meat and poultry products, highlighting the importance of cooking.

There were 42 Listeria monocytogenes notifications, and all were investigated by SA Health. Of these, 34 did not require action as the risk assessment deemed them to be of low risk to public health. This included product that meets the limits of the Australia New Zealand Foods Standards Code, product that was on test and hold and subsequently destroyed or product not considered ready to eat. All the Listeria monocytogenes isolates were whole genome sequenced and are not linked to human cases of listeriosis.

Food recalls

Standard 3.2.2 of the Code requires food businesses that engage in the wholesale supply, manufacture or importation of food, to have a system in place to ensure the recall of unsafe food. All food recalls are coordinated nationally by FSANZ, with the food business undertaking the recall being responsible for carrying out the recall as soon as an issue is identified. There are two levels of recall, a trade level and a consumer level recall. A trade level recall is conducted when the food has not been available for direct purchase by the public, such as food sold to wholesalers and caterers. A consumer level recall is conducted when the food has been available for retail sale and usually involves advertisements on social media to inform consumers of the recall. The FSRB informs local councils of all recalls affecting South Australia (SA) and requests that they check food businesses in their area are complying with the recall.

FSANZ was the coordinator for 92 food recalls nationally during the 2022-23 financial year as summarised in Table 1. In total, SA was affected by 45 recalls meaning recalled product was distributed in the state.

In year 2022-23, there were two major incidents of toxic effect in humans that resulted in multiple recalls. Summary of these recalls provided here.

In late October/early November 2022, a number of cases of significant adverse health reactions were reported across Australia. Further investigation linked the cases to consumption of poppy seed tea. Investigations found that non-culinary (not for human consumption) poppy seeds entered the food supply chain as culinary grade poppy seeds. More information is available on FSANZ website.

In December 2022, a substantial number of food related toxic reactions occurred, typical of tropane alkaloid poisoning. Tropane alkaloid poisoning in humans includes symptoms such as; delirium or confusion, hallucinations, dilated pupils, rapid heartbeat, flushed face, blurred vision and dry mouth and skin. Investigations found the cause of confirmed cases was the consumption of baby spinach products due to contamination with a toxic weed (thornapple/jimsonweed) at the time of harvesting of baby spinach. More information on FSANZ website.

Table 1: Summary of recalls conducted in 2022-23

Summary of recalls conducted in 2021-22
Type of Recall Number of recalls Reason for Recall Number of recalls by reason Reason for Recall Number of recalls by reason Recalls affecting SA Number of recalls affecting SA
Consumer 80 Undeclared allergens 32 Foreign matter 10 SA & other jurisdictions 39
Trade 6 Microbiological contamination 24 Labelling 3 National 17
Consumer and trade 6 Chemical contamination 10 Other 11 SA only 6


Biotoxin contamination 2

SA not affected 47
Total 92

Total 92

Enforcement actions

The FSRB is responsible for monitoring compliance with Chapters 1 and 2 of the Code for SA based food businesses, and is also involved in investigating matters of non-compliance with Chapters 3 and 4 found during audits, surveys, complaints, and investigations of illness. SA Health’s Public Health Services Enforcement Framework provides authorised officers with guidance on the process for conducting enforcement activities.

Local government is responsible for conducting routine food business inspections to monitor compliance with Chapter 3 of the Code and for investigating complaints made against businesses within their jurisdiction. Statistics about local government activities under the Act are provided in Appendix 1.

Where the FSRB identifies non-compliance in a food business, corrective actions are addressed through a graduated and proportionate response. Once effective corrective action is confirmed, no further enforcement action is undertaken. Should non-compliance remain unresolved, enforcement action can be escalated. Table 2 provides a summary of the enforcement activities undertaken by the FSRB.

Table 2: Enforcement activities undertaken in 2022-23

Activities and enquiries

Table 3 details the number and type of enquiries, complaints, referrals and incident management requests actioned by FSRB in the 2022-23 financial year.

Table 3: Activity requests in 2022-23