By Anne Schieber
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (WOOD) - With the number of farmers markets increasing in Michigan and throughout the country, food safety inspectors are working harder to make sure consumers get safe products when they shop.
Abbey Harding is a food safety inspector for the Michigan Department of Agriculture. Part of her job is to inspect farmers markets, like the one in Grand Rapids, to make sure venders are complying with current regulations.
Each farmers market has dozens of vendors and there are more than 250 farmers markets in Michigan; more than double the number there were ten years ago.
One thing an inspector looks at is the labeling. Vendors need to specify where their products are grown. Typically with packaged goods, vendors must list weights, ingredients, and whether the product requires refrigeration.
"If it's coming from a licensed source, we'd check with license control," Abbey Harding said.
Michigan vendors need to be licensed and if they process food, they may be subjected to inspection at their facility.
Link to this comment:
All Comments (0)