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Public Act 099-0732 Public Act 0732 99TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 099-0732 | HB6287 Enrolled | LRB099 16919 MJP 41266 b |
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| AN ACT concerning health.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Illinois Egg and Egg Products Act is amended | by adding Section 3.21a and by changing Sections 6 and 15 as | follows: | (410 ILCS 615/3.21a new) | Sec. 3.21a. "Lot consolidation" means the removal of | damaged eggs from consumer labeled cartons and replacement of | the damaged eggs with eggs of the same grade, size, sell-by | date, brand, lot, and source.
| (410 ILCS 615/6) (from Ch. 56 1/2, par. 55-6)
| Sec. 6. Candling; labeling; sales by producers; retail | sales; temperature
requirements. All eggs sold at retail or | purchased by institutional
consumers must be candled for | quality and graded for size.
| A producer may sell on his own premises where eggs are | produced,
direct to household consumers, for the consumer's | personal use and
that consumer's
non-paying guests, nest run | eggs
without candling
or grading those eggs.
| All eggs designated for sale off the premises where the | entire flock is located,
such as at farmers' markets, and at |
| retail or for institutional use must be
candled and graded and
| held in a place or room in which the temperature may not exceed | 45 degrees
Fahrenheit after processing. Nest run eggs shall be | held at 60 degrees
Fahrenheit or less at all times. During | transportation, the egg
temperature may not exceed 45 degrees | Fahrenheit.
| Hatcheries buying eggs for hatching purposes from | producers under
contract may sell their surplus eggs to a | licensed packer or handler
provided that the hatchery shall | keep records which indicate the
number
of cases sold, the date | of sale and the name and address of the packer
or handler | making the purchase.
| All eggs candled or candled and graded outside the State | must meet
Federal standards before they can be sold or offered | for sale in the
State. No eggs may be offered for sale for | consumer use 45 days or more after the date of candling after | the original
30-day candling date .
| Each container of eggs offered for sale or sold at | wholesale or retail
must be
labeled in accordance with the | standards established by the Department
showing grade, size, | packer identification, and candling date,
and must be labeled | with an
expiration date, or other similar language as specified | by USDA standards,
that is
not later than 45 30 days from the | candling date
for
grade A eggs and not later than 30 15 days | after the candling date for grade AA
eggs.
| The grade and size of eggs must be conspicuously marked in |
| bold face
type on all consumer-size containers.
| The size and height of lettering or numbering requirement | shall be
set by regulation and shall conform as near as | possible to those
required by Federal law.
| All advertising of shell eggs for sale at retail for a | stated price
shall contain the grade and size of the eggs. The | information
contained in such advertising shall not be | misleading or deceptive.
In cases of food-borne disease | outbreaks in which eggs are identified as the
source of the | disease, all eggs from the flocks from which those
| disease-causing eggs came shall be identified with a producer | identification or
flock code number to control the movement of | those eggs.
| (Source: P.A. 96-1310, eff. 7-27-10.)
| (410 ILCS 615/15) (from Ch. 56 1/2, par. 55-15)
| Sec. 15. Samples; packing methods. | (a) The Department shall prescribe
methods in conformity
| with the United States Department of Agriculture | specifications for selecting
samples of lots, cases or | containers of eggs or egg products which shall be
reasonably | calculated to produce fair representations of the entire lots | or
cases and containers sampled. Any sample taken shall be | prima facie evidence
in any court in this State of the true | condition of the entire lot, case
or container of eggs or egg | products in the examination of which the sample
was taken.
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| It shall be unlawful for any handler or retailer to pack | eggs into
consumer-size
containers other than during the | original candling and grading operations
unless the retailer | performs a lot consolidation. :
| (b) A retailer that wishes to consolidate eggs shall | implement and administer a training program for employees that | will perform the consolidation as part of their duties. The | program shall include, but not be limited to, the following: | (1) Laws governing egg lot consolidation: | (A) same lot code; | (B) same source; | (C) same sell-by date; | (D) same grade; | (E) same size; | (F) same brand; | (2) temperature requirements; | (3) egg is a hazardous food (FDA Guidelines); | (4) sanitation; | (5) egg quality (USDA guidelines); | (6) original packaging requirements (replacement | cartons shall not be utilized); and | (7) record keeping requirements. | (c) Training shall be conducted annually and may be | conducted by any means available, including, but not limited | to, online, computer, classroom, live trainers, and remote | trainers. |
| (d) A copy of the training material must be made available | upon request from the Department. A copy of the training | material may be kept electronically. | (e) Eggs shall be consolidated in a manner consistent with | training materials required by subsection (b). | (f) Each store shall maintain a record of each egg carton | consolidated. The records shall be maintained by the store at | the physical location the eggs were consolidated at for a | period not less than one year past the last sell-by date on the | cartons consolidated. The records must be available for | inspection upon request from the Department. The records may be | kept electronically. | Each lot consolidation shall be documented. The | information documented shall include, but not be limited to, | the following: | (1) date of consolidation; | (2) brand; | (3) egg size; | (4) distributor; | (5) USDA plant number; | (6) grade; and | (7) best-by (sell-by/use-by) date. | (g) An Illinois-based egg producer or Illinois-based egg | producer-dealer may prohibit its brands from being included in | an egg lot consolidation program. Any Illinois-based egg | producer or Illinois-based egg producer-dealer that chooses to |
| prohibit its brands from being included in an egg lot | consolidation program shall notify a retailer in writing before | entering into an agreement to distribute its eggs to the | retailer. Producers or producer-dealers with agreements | entered into prior to the effective date of this Act shall have | 90 days after the effective date of this Act to notify | retailers in writing of their choice to prohibit consolidation | of their egg brands. | Upon notification from an Illinois-based producer or | Illinois-based producer dealer, a retailer shall not | consolidate those brands.
| (a) The loose eggs to be so transferred are in master | case
stamped no more than 5 days previous indicating that | the size and quality have
been
verified.
| (b) The process of transferring is done in a licensed | establishment.
| (c) (Blank).
| (d) The loose eggs to be transferred are reprocessed in | the
same manner as nest-run eggs and each egg is recandled | for quality and
regraded for size in an establishment | recognized as a competent grading
facility by the Director | or his authorized representative.
| (e) (Blank).
| If procedures described in paragraph (a) or (b) of this
| Section are executed, the mandatory
labeling as it appears on | the master cases with respect to name, address,
grade, size and |
| candling date must be identical to the labeling on the
| consumer-size containers into which the eggs are transferred | except that
the name and address may be changed, provided that | the words "packed
for",
"packed by" or words of similar import | do not appear.
| (Source: P.A. 92-677, eff. 7-16-02.)
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Effective Date: 1/1/2017
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