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Office of Partnerships Overview Working Together Works

Office of Partnerships Overview Working Together Works. O ffice of Partnerships. Objectives for this presentation: Review OP’s organizational structure Provide insight into OP programs and initiatives Increase understanding of our funding and management capabilities

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Office of Partnerships Overview Working Together Works

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  1. Office of Partnerships Overview Working Together Works

  2. Office of Partnerships • Objectives for this presentation: • Review OP’s organizational structure • Provide insight into OP programs and initiatives • Increase understanding of our funding and management capabilities • Review current initiatives • Discuss recommendations for future egg standards • Our Goal: • To provide a clear understanding of what OP does and how we do it – through continual dialogue with partners and competent oversight

  3. What the Office of Partnerships Does Vision Statement: “A global partnership that protects the public health.” Mission Statement: “We make partnerships happen through fostering funding opportunities and promoting domestic and international mutual reliance and systems recognition.”

  4. Office of Partnerships • Waysweaccomplishourmission and protect public health are through funding, promoting national regulatory program standards, analyzing & promoting integration and effectiveness of initiatives: • Contracts,Grants,& CooperativeAgreements • Federal-StateProgramPolicy • CoordinationofStateTrainingwithOfficeofTraining,Education,& Development(ORA/OTED) • RegulatoryProgramStandards • AdvancingNational Integration • InformationSharing • RapidResponseTeams • FoodProtectionTaskForces • International Engagement

  5. Rebecca Dreisch Supervisor, Integration Group Michelle Motsinger Supervisor, Regulatory Program Standards Group Wendy Campbell Chief, Human and Animal Food Branch Alicia Schroder Supervisor, Produce Group As of Feb. 2019

  6. DPIA: Division of Partnership Investments and Agreements • Develops, implements, monitors and evaluates select ORA contracts, grants, cooperative agreements (CAPs) and partnership agreements • Focus is human and animal food, eggs, medical products, & regulatory science • Coordinates outreach to SLTTs, associations, & organizations • Collaborates across FDA to ensure cohesive administration of funding agreements

  7. DSI: Division of Standards Implementation • Provides program management support, technical assistance, guidance in design & implementation of regulatory program standards (MFRPS, AFRPS, VNRFRPS, draft VNSRPS with ISSC) • Collaborates across FDA, external alliances, & associations to implement a system of continuous improvement & training for regulatory program standards • Administers the National Rapid Response Teams Program

  8. DSI: Cooperative Programs • Provides leadership, technical assistance, consultation, guidance, and education with regulatory cooperative programs • Stakeholders: Federal, SLTT regulatory and public health agency officials, regulatory associations, consumers, academia, and industry Programs Include: • Retail Food • Shellfish Sanitation • Grade “A” Milk • Key players • OP • Office of State Cooperative Programs (OSCP) • Office of Training and Education Development • Center for Food Safety & Applied Nutrition

  9. DI: Division of Integration • Reviews an array of processes to implement & promote a national Integrated Food Safety System (IFSS) • Develops, evaluates, and reports on national integration using performance measures of OP programs & awards • Devises strategies for addressing conflicts or duplication related to integration of federal, state & local activities • Provides oversight for ORA’s international interests, establishing and maintaining lines of communication within ORA, other FDA Offices, other domestic and foreign agencies, embassies, and international organizations

  10. Fostering Federal Funding Opportunities to Support SLTT Agencies

  11. Funding Initiative Overview • Coordination of ORA’s non training-focused contracts, grants, CAPs, & partnership agreements with SLTTs and others • Benefits: Emergency response, lab capacity, data sharing • Funding provides an opportunity to develop or enhance state regulatory infrastructure for new and existing programs in various regulated commodities

  12. Results of FSI Funding FY 2018 ORA’s Federal-State Initiative (FSI) Budget ($100M+) directly contributes to the improvement and enhancement of the IFSS: • 20,000 state inspections and visits concerning food, feed, egg, animal tissue and medical devices • 9,746 state-collected samples • 41 state laboratories achieving ISO 17025 accreditation  • 43 states in Flexible Funding Model (MFRPS/RRT/FPTF) • 46 states and one territory in the Produce Safety Infrastructure CAP

  13. ORAInspectionalContractsOverview • 5 contract programs relate to the protection of public health • Human Food • Animal Food • Egg Safety • Medical Devices • Milk Database • FY18 FSI Contract Funding • Human Food $12,776,842 • Animal Food $3,384,953 • Other Contracts $534,223 OP administers, but does not fund, MQSA contracts

  14. Egg Safety Contract Inspections Egg Safety • Currently contracted with 5 states in the inspectional coverage of egg layer farms to assess compliance with 21 CFR Part 118

  15. HumanFood Contract Program • States perform ~60% of the total human food inspections ORA coordinates • 48 state & territorial government agencies hold contracts • In 2018, this program contracted the work of: • 8,334 Inspections • 7,986 Sample collections • 305 Audits • 1,253 Site visits* *Firm found to be Out of Business (OOB), not operational (inspection cannot be performed), not subject to FDA jurisdiction, or have moved more than 50 miles

  16. Animal Food Contract Program • States perform ~80% of the total animal food inspections ORA coordinates • Currently includes 34 state government agencies • In 2018, this program contracted the work of: • 2,072 Inspections • 1,520 Sample collections • 363 Site visits

  17. OtherFSIContractualPrograms • Milk Database • National database that archives milk sample testing results for drug residues submitted by the industry and states • Medical Device Inspection • Currently contracted with TX and CA to obtain state assistance in the inspection of Class I and Class II medical device manufacturers

  18. MQSA Contract Program • Administers 42 contracts with state and territorial government agencies in inspectional coverage of non-federal, certified mammography facilities

  19. ORA’s FSI Cooperative Agreement Overview • 18 major cooperative agreement programs (CAPs) • These programs can be grouped into roughly 6 buckets: • Produce Programs • Retail Standards • Animal Feed Standards • Lab Programs/ISO • Manufactured Foods/Flexible Funding Model • Other Uncategorized Programs • Funding FY18 • FFM (Manufactured Food Stds, RRT and FPTF) $14,465,597 • ISO $7,961,283 • Produce $33,733,547 • Retail Stds $6,700,000 • Animal Feed Stds $12,792,525 • Other Programs $19,960,107

  20. The Flexible Funding Model MFRPS Manufactured FoodsFlexible Funding Model (FFM) RRT • Innovative new Flexible Funding Model • Developed with state/stakeholder input, specific state info, and transparency • Aligns due dates and reporting (2 larger progress reports vs. 5 separate reports) • Moves into a variable rate funding model and requires state sustainability planning (SP) • MFRPS is base and allows bundling pick option choices of RRT, Food Protection Task Force, and Special Project • Two distinct Phases: Development and Maintenance (flexible) FPTF

  21. Supporting Produce Safety Rule (21 CFR 112)FDA’s Largest-Ever Cooperative Agreement • State Government Program • Assists states in creating a produce infrastructure and/or inspection program • Consensus Building Program • Developing a National Consortium for Produce Safety Development • On-Farm Advisory Coordination, Training and Review

  22. Laboratory Funding Programs(Supporting FSMA Section 202) Food Emergency Response Network (FERN) & International Organization for Standardization (ISO) Accreditation Program

  23. Food Emergency Response Network (FERN) CAP • Awarded $8.9M (FY18) • Includes 26 state laboratories contributing to a portfolio of: • 14 Micro labs • 14 Chemistry labs • 5 Radiological labs • Primary goal to provide funding and resources for: • Equipment Service Contracts • Increasing High volume sampling surveillance assignments • Staff Costs • New technology

  24. ISO and Laboratory AssociationCooperative Agreement Programs (CAPs) • ISO 17025 Maintenance Goal: Assist labs to gain/maintain accreditation/expand methods • Whole Genome Sequencing (WGS) (New for FY17) Goal: Perform basic foodborne pathogen identification during foodborne illness outbreaks and applying it in novel ways • $7.9M FY18 Funding Total

  25. Regulatory Program Standards • Supporting human, animal, and retail food safety through integration with national program standards • Bottom Line: Increasing the quality of State/Local regulatory program improves the overall consistency and confidence in the work conducted by these agencies 2017

  26. Manufactured Food Regulatory Program Standards (MFRPS) • Purpose: Establishes a uniform foundation for the design and management of state manufactured food regulatory programs • Promotes quality regulatory programs through continuous self-improvements • Originally released in 2007, Updated September 2016 • Supports FSMA Section 201 and Integrated Food Safety Systems (IFSS)

  27. Animal Feed Regulatory Program Standards (AFRPS) • Developed in collaboration with AAFCO and CVM • Originally released in 2014, Updated February 2017 • 22 states enrolled under the CAP • FY18 Total Funding: $12.7M • Primary Goals: • Strengthen the feed community • Leverage resources • Facilitate program advancement

  28. Voluntary National Retail Food Regulatory Program Standards (VNRFRPS) • Purpose: Guide to regulatory retail food programs managers in the design & management of a retail food program, and foundation for evaluation of effectiveness • 839 regulatory jurisdictions enrolled (as of 10/2/18) • State 61; Territory 5; County 488; District 77 (295 counties, 26 cities, 44 towns, 1 villages); City 117; Town 66; Tribe 11; Univ. 9; Federal Agency 4; Village 1. • 99.74% - US population reside in a state with a retail food regulatory program standard enrollee • Total FY18 Funding (OP): $6.70M* *Retail Association program administered by CFSAN, paid by OP

  29. Rapid Response Teams (RRT) Programs • Focuses on • Developing advanced response capacity (all-hazards food/feed emergency response) • RRT is a team effort • Multi-agency, multi-disciplinary • Sharing what we’ve learned • RRT Best Practices Manual • Mentorship

  30. Initiatives • Integration Assessment Model • Measures national progress towards an IFSS • Mutual Reliance Pilots • Designed to promote data sharing, work planning, and reliance on each other’s work products

  31. Sharing Information with FDA Stakeholders: Commissioning, Credentialing and 20.88 Agreements • Purpose • Delegation of federal authority • Human and animal food, milk, produce, egg, tissue residue, BSE, drugs, devices, tobacco, rad health • Current Numbers • ~3,200 commissioned officials as of Feb. 2019 • Integration – Long Term Goals • Reduce/Replace Certificates of Commissions in human food • 20.88 Information Sharing Agreements

  32. Leveraging resources, talents, expertise to build and achieve integrated food safety systems (IFSS) and public health outcomes Partnership for Food Protection (PFP) Source: https://www.pfp-ifss.org

  33. Recap of Current Egg Standard Cooperative Agreement – Program Objectives • To develop recommendations for elements of a National Egg Regulatory Program Standard for state egg regulatory programs using the MFRPS and AFRPS as guidance • To develop information sharing techniques and systems between FDA and states • To encourage joint inspections between FDA and states • Participating Grantees – CA and IA

  34. National Regulatory Program Standards Elements

  35. Egg Standard Cooperative Agreement ProgramNext Steps • FDA will allow the current Egg CAP to end this summer and focus on development of standards • Collaborate with NERO to facilitate a more effective long-term approach to developing and maintaining standards • Leadership support moving forward • Build on lessons learned and recommendations from pilot states (CA and IA) • Engagement of necessary stakeholders (e.g., NERO, states, FDA, others) • Determine process for development, consensus and timelines • Determine ownership of the standards • Develop communication and education strategies to support the standards

  36. Egg Standard Cooperative Agreement ProgramNext Steps • Workgroup could immediately begin developed to create the process and standards • OP could fund travel for workgroup meetings, as necessary • Decision to develop a new FOA could be made in summer 2019 • Cooperative agreement funding could be made available as early as summer 2021. Dependent on • Annual appropriations • Participation estimates – number of participating states and their funding needs • Commitment and support of NERO members to assist in the development of the standards

  37. Questions

  38. Office of Partnerships

  39. Feedback • OP welcomes your feedback on this presentation and any services provided by OP • Any feedback provided to this address will be reviewed by the Director of Office of Partnerships OP.Feedback@fda.hhs.gov

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