1 / 21

with SANC

Growing Better…. with SANC. A S ystems A pproach to N ursery C ertification An Update for HIS Chapters September 2012. Nursery Certification Challenges . Increased volume of trade Diminished resources Varying state laws and regulations More quarantine and regulated pests.

vern
Download Presentation

with SANC

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Growing Better…. with SANC A Systems Approach to Nursery Certification An Update for HIS Chapters September 2012

  2. Nursery Certification Challenges Increased volume of trade Diminished resources Varying state laws and regulations More quarantine and regulated pests

  3. What Could We Gain from a Systems Approach? Focus resources to manage risk most effectively Increase compatibility among state programs Reduce pest risk More direct interaction between nursery production staff and regulators (Partners in quality). Tiered approach to certification to meet the economic needs and means of individual producers and state regulatory agencies.

  4. The SANC Framework What is a Systems Approach?

  5. A Systems Approach Strategy: • Incorporates specific operational nursery practices to minimize the likelihood of incursion, establishment and spread of plant pests and pathogens in a nursery • Requires 2 or more control measures that are independent of each other • Is flexible to address variability and uncertainty • Improves our understanding of a plant product beyond just that single end-product inspection snapshot.

  6. For any nursery, the framework is built on several elements: • Risk analysis for the nursery • Critical control points identified by/for the nursery • Development and implementation of appropriate best management practices • Monitoring and recording of pests found on plants when received and grown in the nursery and when plants are shipped • Recording of actions at the nursery, including IPM practices, staff training and production methods • Documenting the source and distribution of plants to allow for traceability

  7. This Framework for SANC is based on a HACCP-type approach and reduced to a Critical Control Point System (CCPS)

  8. Accomplishments What has the SANC initiative done so far?

  9. Created Draft revisions of the Plant Pest and Nursery Model Bills Last versions are now 12 years old…. New versions will help harmonize programs across states, & suggest ways to incorporate systems approaches into nursery certification.

  10. Immediately addressed the threat of boxwood blight: Developed a compliance agreement template to facilitate orderly shipment of boxwood… http://nationalplantboard.org/policy/index.html

  11. Compliance templates in the works: • Brown Garden Snail -- drafted • Japanese Beetle -- begun Knock, Knock !!! Brown Garden Snail; Image: OR State Univ

  12. Compliance Agreement Committee …Now Working on “Mother” Document and Guidelines for preparing Compliance Agreements.Imagine headers (Critical Control Points) that would be standard to consider in developing a compliance agreement for new pest…. EXCLUSION OF THE PATHOGEN WATER MANAGEMENT SANITATION INSPECTION TRAINING RECORD KEEPING/TRACEABILITY

  13. Began development of outreach mechanisms such as the NPB website, Snapshots for SPROs, and SANC Fact Sheet http://nationalplantboard.org/committee/nonnpb.html#sanc

  14. Began development of uniform training tools and mechanisms: • Collaboration with HIS chapters to facilitate interstate inspections (CHIS – Quad Cities and SHIS – McMinnville) to test the principles of SANC

  15. Development of uniform training tools and mechanisms, cont’d: • Working with USDA’s PDC to promote audit training. • New SANC training modules for States and for Nurseries, coming in 2013! • Collaboration with the CHIS to distribute Inspection Manuals to all chapter membership

  16. Development of Best Management Practices Document for Nursery Industry is Well Underway • Tool developed by a group at USDA-APHIS-PPQ CPHST • Provided to an Industry team, who is working on it now. • Will then be available through SANC as a foundation for our work. Available 2013/2014

  17. Inspectors and SANC What Can Inspectors Do Right Now?

  18. What Can I DO? • Keep a look-out for new materials and mechanisms to explain this effort & share what you find : website, brochures, fact sheets, directed to both regulatory staff and industry • Work with SPROs and Nursery Managers to use the compliance agreement templates as they become available. • Participate in training as it becomes available • Let a SANC Committee Member know what works, what doesn’t, and what you still need.

  19. The SANC Team Core Group Gray Haun TN * Aurelio Posadas NPB * Carl Schulze NJ * Mike Cooper ID * Geir Friisoe MN * Wayne Dixon, FL * Ken Rauscher, Project Associate Training Subcommittee Collin Wamsley MO * Gary McAninch OR * Ann Gibbs ME * John Rochelle TN * Terry Walker AR, Kara Spofford, APHIS Education and Outreach Subcommittee Carol Holko MD * Ruth Welliver PA * Karen Rane MD * Tad Hardy LA * Susan Ehlenbeck MO Compliance Agreements Subcommittee Dan Kenny OH * Mike Colvin CA * Sarah Scally ME * Dana Rhodes PA * Tyson Emery FL * Tom Wessels WA * David Gordon CO Model Law Subcommittee Wayne Dixon FL * Gene Cross NC * Gray Haun TN * Dan Hilburn OR * Jeff Zimmer MI * Vicki Smith CT * David Blackburn AR * Mark Taylor * MD USDA Liaison Scott Pfister

  20. Thank you!

More Related