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• Contacts Resources for Learn more about • Office of Environmental Health, Safety, and Toxicology • Other Environmental Health Programs and Services
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Local Health Food Safety ResourcesInvestigating and Reporting Foodborne IllnessNotifiable Conditions: Foodborne Disease Outbreaks has forms and guidelines for investigation and reporting. Food Service RulesWashington State food service rules/codes. Food Safety Review CouncilFood Safety Review Council is a partnership among industry, government, academia, and the consumer. The purpose of the council is to promote food safety through improving consistency in the interpretation of the food service rules statewide. Recalls and Safety AlertsFood product recalls affecting Washington. GuidelinesCharity Food Donation Guidelines (PDF 245KB) Food Safety During Power Outages - Guidance for Food Establishments (PDF 209KB) Publication OrderingLocal health agencies can order the following publications in bulk through the Department of Printing's PRTonline: Washington State Retail Food Code Working Document, Food & Beverage Workers' Manual, Food & Beverage Service Worker's Permit (Food Worker Card), and Food Establishment Inspection Report Forms.
Food & Beverage Workers' Manual
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English |
Food Safety is Everybody’s Business (PDF 678KB) |
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Chinese |
食物安全人人有責 (PDF 991KB) |
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Korean |
음식위생은 모든 사람의 책임입니다 (PDF 995KB) |
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Russian |
Безопасность пищи касается всех (PDF 1MB) |
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Spanish |
La Seguridad Alimentaria es Asunto de Todos (PDF 554KB) |
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Vietnamese |
Thực Phẩm An Toàn là Việc Của Mọi Người (PDF 582KB) |
Download for printing or order from our limited supply by contacting Ted Dale.
Food service establishments are required to post hand washing reminder signs for employees.
Germs are easy to spread. Sick food workers may not work with food or food-contact surfaces.
Bare hands may have germs that can spread to food. Ready-to-eat foods may not be handled with bare hands.
Cross contamination is the spread of bacteria from raw meat to other foods.
The food in this unit must be kept at or above 140 degrees F.
The food in this unit must be kept at or below 41 degrees F.
Bacteria may grow in potentially hazardous foods. Keep foods out of the Danger Zone (41 degrees F - 140 degrees F) for safety.
Cooling hot foods rapidly is important to prevent illness-causing bacteria from growing in food.
No bare hand contact with ready-to-eat foods.
Food safety fact sheets on foodborne diseases such as E. coli and Salmonellosis and tips for keeping food safe during a power outage, barbecue, picnic, or holiday.
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Dave Gifford, Program Manager, 360-236-3074 |
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Ted Dale, Administrative Assistant, 360-236-3322 |
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Joe Graham, Food Safety Lead, 360-236-3305 |
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Larry French, Food Safety Specialist, 360-236-3334 Local health agency support for: Benton-Franklin, Chelan-Douglas, Clallam, Grant, Jefferson, King, Kitsap, Kittitas, Klickitat, Mason, Pierce, Walla Walla, and Yakima. |
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Helena Barton, Food Safety Specialist, 360-236-3339 Local health agency support for: Adams, Asotin, Clark, Columbia, Cowlitz, Garfield, Grays Harbor, Lewis, Lincoln, NE Tri-Counties, Pacific, Skamania, Spokane, Thurston, Wahkiakum, and Whitman. |
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Janet Anderberg, Food Safety Specialist, 425-745-1726 Local health agency support for: Island, Okanogan, San Juan, Skagit, Snohomish, and Whatcom. |
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