Food Imports Interim Final Rule Addresses Industry Concerns On Prior Notice
This article was originally published in The Tan Sheet
Executive Summary
FDA has shortened the deadline by which prior notice of dietary supplement and imported food shipments must be submitted in response to industry concerns in an interim final rule announced Oct. 9. The rule is part of the agency's bioterrorism defense package
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Prior notice
A revised compliance policy guide will allow prior notice submissions between five and 10 days "before the anticipated date of arrival of the food at the anticipated port of arrival," according to an FDA notice slated to appear in the Federal Register Nov. 9. The revision is meant to "provide additional guidance" to FDA and Customs & Border Protection staff regarding some specific prior notice submissions. The interim rule on prior notice was released in October (1"The Tan Sheet" Oct. 13, 2004, p. 5)...
Prior notice
A revised compliance policy guide will allow prior notice submissions between five and 10 days "before the anticipated date of arrival of the food at the anticipated port of arrival," according to an FDA notice slated to appear in the Federal Register Nov. 9. The revision is meant to "provide additional guidance" to FDA and Customs & Border Protection staff regarding some specific prior notice submissions. The interim rule on prior notice was released in October (1"The Tan Sheet" Oct. 13, 2004, p. 5)...
Prior notice
A revised compliance policy guide will allow prior notice submissions between five and 10 days "before the anticipated date of arrival of the food at the anticipated port of arrival," according to an FDA notice slated to appear in the Federal Register Nov. 9. The revision is meant to "provide additional guidance" to FDA and Customs & Border Protection staff regarding some specific prior notice submissions. The interim rule on prior notice was released in October (1"The Tan Sheet" Oct. 13, 2004, p. 5)...