Copyright © Global Coalition for Sustained Excellence in Food & Health Protection, 2011 and ALL subsequent years: Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s authors and/or owners is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Global Coalition for Sustained Excellence in Food & Health Protection with appropriate and specific reference and/or link to the original content.

Wednesday 14 May 2014

Food Processing Technology Opportunities not recognized by High School Students in Ontario

I heard a disturbing report recently at a traceability information event hosted by Carlisle Technology. The event took place at the beautiful campus of the Institute of Food Processing Technology in Cambridge, Ontario. During his brief presentation, Luis Garcia, the Chair of the institute mentioned that, even with its well equipped (full line) food production setups, the institute is still looking to attract a larger number of studentsThe report identifies opportunities from two perspectives: 1. High school students in the area may not be sufficiently aware of the opportunities with a short training program that immediately gives them marketable skills. 2. The food industry is starved of competent operation level workers at the entry levels.  
Food companies are significantly populated with graduates from university or longer college programs in food science and/or technology but they mainly seek management roles. Even if they take plant floor roles, they only see these as stepping stones.
The typical business experience is that most employees hired for routine plant floor operations are new and have to go through a learning curve. In the learning period when optimum proficiency level has not been attained, some time and economic loss to the employer is expected and acceptable. Unskilled plant floor employees also typically have higher incidents of mistakes in the early days of employment. These mistakes are significantly costly to the employers and avoiding them is preferred.
Comparatively, the slightly higher wages that employees with specialized skills training may expect do not end up costing as much as the cost of mistakes by unskilled employees. The cost may not necessarily be limited to direct financial losses. Some mistakes may lead to indirect cost of defecting consumers who simply stop buying the products from a manufacturer that disappointed them due to such mistakes.
The reduced amount of required training on the plant floor for employees as a result of the specialized skills acquired through programs like the IFPT technical competence training also provide added cost reduction benefits. With trainer and trainee time reduced, the direct financial gain to the company is indisputable. So why are we not informing and encouraging more high school students who may actually prefer this kind of training and opportunity for joining the workforce quickly?
The stigmatization of non-university education may have something to do with the lack of push. There may even be a deliberate commitment to discouraging students from even considering such opportunities.
Apart from the obvious need to create the awareness and encouragement in the high schools, companies can also take advantage of the IFPT programs. I believe that the Institute will not turn away companies that wish to send their plant floor employees to the specialized training applicable to their operation. To allay the fear of who will be left at the plant to do the work that is necessary in the absence of employees sent to such training, nothing prevents a rotating type of arrangement. Employees could take turns until all have received the training. Trained employees may leave to other companies but if all companies are thinking this way, it may only mean the circulation of skilled workers. The industry still stands to gain.


IFPT Food Tech Tuesdays: If you have miss the previous opportunities, you still have two chances on June 10th and 24th to enjoy a guided tour of the state-of-the-art food processing pilot plant featuring highly automated and robotic equipment and learn more about career and training opportunities within the food and beverage manufacturing industry.  All are welcome.  Closed toed shoes and long pants are required.
Posted By Felix Amiri
____________________________________
Felix Amiri is the current Food Sector Chair of GCSE-Food & Health Protection 

Wednesday 7 May 2014

Limitations of a Short List

I once attended the food safety team meeting of a food company. The team was reviewing their HACCP program and the main purpose was to identify” what could go wrong” in their operation. The operation manufactures prepared entrees that are stored and shipped frozen for customers to re-heat and serve.

Every member contributed suggestions which showed a commendable level of knowledge and interest among the team. The team members’ work experience and commitment in their respective roles was also evident in the suggestions and discussions of the possible solutions.

Although I was eager to let them know what I might also include, I waited until they were sure that they had exhausted everything possible as far as they were able to predict. They of course added the catch-all phrase “and anything else not immediately apparent”.

As I did with the team, I am holding back here as well and providing only the list that the team ended up with before my suggested considerations. The team’s list for what could possibly go wrong included the following categories of considerations:

-       Use of unsafe food items from suppliers
-       Use of poor quality items from suppliers
-     Contaminants such as flaking paint, rust and other debris from building structures or equipment
-       Equipment and processing system failures that could lead to product contamination
-       Poor sanitation leading to cross contamination (allergen, microbial or chemical)
-       Other forms of cross contamination during storage due to improper segregation
-       Contamination from personnel handling/preparing the food items due to poor GMPs
-       Preparation errors such as using the wrong food items
-       Product mislabeling or the use of the wrong packaging materials

While the team’s list was technically sound, it was short. It failed to identify at least one important consideration that needs to be included for all food operations. Your answer may be different from mine. If you wish, you may check out my answer in this article  - “Our Role in the Assurance of Safe and Sufficient Food Supplyunder the "Real Solution" heading.
Posted By Felix Amiri
____________________________________
Felix Amiri is the current Food Sector Chair of GCSE-Food & Health Protection