Food Safety Standards for Washington Agricultural Producers

Washington State produces more than 300 commodities — from Yakima Valley apples to Whatcom County raspberries — and every one of them moves through a food safety framework that has grown considerably more demanding since the federal Food Safety Modernization Act took effect. This page covers the specific standards that apply to Washington agricultural producers, how those rules are enforced at the state level, the scenarios most producers actually encounter, and where the key decision points sit. Understanding where federal law ends and Washington State authority begins matters enormously when an inspector shows up at the packinghouse door.

Definition and scope

Food safety standards for agricultural producers are the documented requirements governing how raw commodities are grown, harvested, packed, and held to prevent biological, chemical, and physical contamination before the food reaches a processor or consumer. In Washington, those requirements come from three overlapping sources.

The first is federal: the FDA's Produce Safety Rule, finalized under the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA), sets enforceable standards for agricultural water, worker training, equipment sanitation, and biological soil amendments for farms above specified sales thresholds.

The second is state: the Washington State Department of Agriculture (WSDA) holds a cooperative agreement with FDA to conduct on-farm inspections under the Produce Safety Rule, making WSDA the primary boots-on-the-ground enforcement body for most Washington farms.

The third is commodity-specific: individual industries — particularly tree fruit, dairy, and shellfish — operate under additional standards set by WSDA's commodity inspection programs, the Washington State Department of Health, and in the case of shellfish, the National Shellfish Sanitation Program (NSSP).

Scope and coverage note: This page addresses standards applicable to agricultural producers operating within Washington State. Operations that ship across state lines remain subject to FDA federal oversight regardless of state compliance status. Processing facilities (distinct from farms) fall under different licensing requirements administered by WSDA's Food Safety Program. Tribal lands operate under separate jurisdictional frameworks and are not covered by WSDA's standard enforcement authority. Interstate commerce rules, import requirements, and foreign supplier verification programs are outside the scope of this page.

How it works

The practical machinery of food safety compliance for a Washington producer runs roughly as follows:

  1. Coverage determination. A farm first establishes whether it is a "covered farm" under the FSMA Produce Safety Rule. Farms with average annual produce sales below $25,000 (21 CFR §112.4) are exempt. Farms between $25,000 and $500,000 in sales that sell primarily to consumers, restaurants, or retailers within the same state or within 275 miles may qualify for a qualified exemption with modified requirements.

  2. Standard application. Covered farms must comply with six major rule subparts: agricultural water quality, biological soil amendments, worker training and health, equipment and tools sanitation, wildlife and domesticated animals, and growing, harvesting, packing, and holding.

  3. WSDA inspection. WSDA inspectors conduct on-farm Produce Safety Rule inspections using FDA's standardized protocol. Inspections are announced in advance for initial visits. WSDA publishes its inspection findings, and farms that receive an "Official Action Indicated" (OAI) classification face follow-up requirements.

  4. Training compliance. The Produce Safety Alliance (PSA) Grower Training, developed by Cornell University in collaboration with FDA, is the recognized training pathway. At least one supervisor or responsible party per covered farm must complete PSA training before an inspection.

For Washington's dairy industry, compliance pathways diverge significantly: fluid milk operations fall under Grade A standards administered jointly by WSDA and the Washington State Department of Health, referencing the Pasteurized Milk Ordinance (PMO) rather than the Produce Safety Rule.

Common scenarios

Three situations account for the majority of compliance questions Washington producers encounter.

Agricultural water testing. The Produce Safety Rule's water quality requirements — particularly microbial testing of surface water used for direct crop contact — have been revised multiple times since original publication. FDA published a revised agricultural water rule in 2022 that replaced the original numeric microbial standards with a systems-based approach. Washington producers using surface water irrigation need to confirm which version of the water standard applies to their operation given the ongoing implementation timeline.

Worker health and hygiene. Outbreaks linked to infected food handlers harvesting fresh produce have driven significant regulatory attention. WSDA inspectors pay particular attention to toilet and handwashing facility access in fields, adequate supply of clean water, and documentation of worker training.

Packinghouse and cold storage. Operations that pack or hold produce — even on-farm packinghouses — must address equipment sanitation, pest exclusion, and temperature control. A farm that also runs a packing operation touches both the Produce Safety Rule and, depending on sales channels, potentially Washington food processing regulations.

Decision boundaries

The most consequential decisions a Washington producer faces in this framework:

The broader landscape of Washington's agricultural regulatory environment — including pesticide rules, water rights, and labor law — is mapped across the Washington Agriculture Authority.

References

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