[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 21, Volume 2]
[Revised as of April 1, 2008]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 21CFR111.15]

[Page 231-233]
 
                        TITLE 21--FOOD AND DRUGS
 
CHAPTER I--FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN 
                          SERVICES (CONTINUED)
 
PART 111_CURRENT GOOD MANUFACTURING PRACTICE IN MANUFACTURING, PACKAGING, LABELING, OR HOLDING OPERATIONS FOR DIETARY SUPPLEMENTS--Table of Contents
 
                  Subpart C_Physical Plant and Grounds
 
Sec.  111.15  What sanitation requirements apply to your physical plant and grounds?


    (a) Grounds. You must keep the grounds of your physical plant in a 
condition that protects against the contamination of components, dietary 
supplements, or contact surfaces. The methods for adequate ground 
maintenance include:
    (1) Properly storing equipment, removing litter and waste, and 
cutting weeds or grass within the immediate vicinity of the physical 
plant so that it does not attract pests, harbor pests, or provide pests 
a place for breeding;
    (2) Maintaining roads, yards, and parking lots so that they do not 
constitute a source of contamination in areas where components, dietary 
supplements, or contact surfaces are exposed;
    (3) Adequately draining areas that may contribute to the 
contamination of components, dietary supplements, or contact surfaces by 
seepage, filth or any other extraneous materials, or by providing a 
breeding place for pests;
    (4) Adequately operating systems for waste treatment and disposal so 
that they do not constitute a source of contamination in areas where 
components, dietary supplements, or contact surfaces are exposed; and
    (5) If your plant grounds are bordered by grounds not under your 
control, and if those other grounds are not maintained in the manner 
described in this section, you must exercise care in the plant by 
inspection, extermination, or other means to exclude pests, dirt, and 
filth or any other extraneous materials that may be a source of 
contamination.
    (b) Physical plant facilities. (1) You must maintain your physical 
plant in a clean and sanitary condition; and
    (2) You must maintain your physical plant in repair sufficient to 
prevent components, dietary supplements, or contact surfaces from 
becoming contaminated.
    (c) Cleaning compounds, sanitizing agents, pesticides, and other 
toxic materials. (1) You must use cleaning compounds and sanitizing 
agents that are free from microorganisms of public

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health significance and that are safe and adequate under the conditions 
of use.
    (2) You must not use or hold toxic materials in a physical plant in 
which components, dietary supplements, or contact surfaces are 
manufactured or exposed, unless those materials are necessary as 
follows:
    (i) To maintain clean and sanitary conditions;
    (ii) For use in laboratory testing procedures;
    (iii) For maintaining or operating the physical plant or equipment; 
or
    (iv) For use in the plant's operations.
    (3) You must identify and hold cleaning compounds, sanitizing 
agents, pesticides, pesticide chemicals, and other toxic materials in a 
manner that protects against contamination of components, dietary 
supplements, or contact surfaces.
    (d) Pest control. (1) You must not allow animals or pests in any 
area of your physical plant. Guard or guide dogs are allowed in some 
areas of your physical plant if the presence of the dogs will not result 
in contamination of components, dietary supplements, or contact 
surfaces;
    (2) You must take effective measures to exclude pests from the 
physical plant and to protect against contamination of components, 
dietary supplements, and contact surfaces on the premises by pests; and
    (3) You must not use insecticides, fumigants, fungicides, or 
rodenticides, unless you take precautions to protect against the 
contamination of components, dietary supplements, or contact surfaces.
    (e) Water supply. (1) You must provide water that is safe and 
sanitary, at suitable temperatures, and under pressure as needed, for 
all uses where water does not become a component of the dietary 
supplement.
    (2) Water that is used in a manner such that the water may become a 
component of the dietary supplement, e.g., when such water contacts 
components, dietary supplements, or any contact surface, must, at a 
minimum, comply with applicable Federal, State, and local requirements 
and not contaminate the dietary supplement.
    (f) Plumbing. The plumbing in your physical plant must be of an 
adequate size and design and be adequately installed and maintained to:
    (1) Carry sufficient amounts of water to required locations 
throughout the physical plant;
    (2) Properly convey sewage and liquid disposable waste from your 
physical plant;
    (3) Avoid being a source of contamination to components, dietary 
supplements, water supplies, or any contact surface, or creating an 
unsanitary condition;
    (4) Provide adequate floor drainage in all areas where floors are 
subject to flooding-type cleaning or where normal operations release or 
discharge water or other liquid waste on the floor; and
    (5) Not allow backflow from, or cross connection between, piping 
systems that discharge waste water or sewage and piping systems that 
carry water used for manufacturing dietary supplements, for cleaning 
contact surfaces, or for use in bathrooms or hand-washing facilities.
    (g) Sewage disposal. You must dispose of sewage into an adequate 
sewage system or through other adequate means.
    (h) Bathrooms. You must provide your employees with adequate, 
readily accessible bathrooms. The bathrooms must be kept clean and must 
not be a potential source of contamination to components, dietary 
supplements, or contact surfaces.
    (i) Hand-washing facilities. You must provide hand-washing 
facilities that are designed to ensure that an employee's hands are not 
a source of contamination of components, dietary supplements, or any 
contact surface, by providing facilities that are adequate, convenient, 
and furnish running water at a suitable temperature.
    (j) Trash disposal. You must convey, store, and dispose of trash to:
    (1) Minimize the development of odors;
    (2) Minimize the potential for the trash to attract, harbor, or 
become a breeding place for pests;
    (3) Protect against contamination of components, dietary 
supplements, any contact surface, water supplies, and grounds 
surrounding your physical plant; and

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    (4) Control hazardous waste to prevent contamination of components, 
dietary supplements, and contact surfaces.
    (k) Sanitation supervisors. You must assign one or more employees to 
supervise overall sanitation. Each of these supervisors must be 
qualified by education, training, or experience to develop and supervise 
sanitation procedures.