[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 9, Volume 2]
[Revised as of January 1, 2008]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 9CFR307.2]

[Page 102-103]
 
                  TITLE 9--ANIMALS AND ANIMAL PRODUCTS
 
     CHAPTER III--FOOD SAFETY AND INSPECTION SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF 
                               AGRICULTURE
 
PART 307_FACILITIES FOR INSPECTION--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 307.2  Other facilities and conditions to be provided by the establishment.

    When required by the circuit supervisor, the following facilities 
and conditions, and such others as may be found to be essential to 
efficient conduct of inspection and maintenance of sanitary conditions, 
shall be provided by each official establishment:
    (a) Satisfactory pens, equipment, and assistants for conducting 
ante-mortem inspection and for separating, marking and holding apart 
from passed livestock those marked ``U.S. suspect'' and those marked 
``U.S. condemned'' (pens, alleys, and runways shall be paved, drained, 
and supplied with adequate hose connections for cleanup purposes);
    (b) Sufficient light to be adequate for proper conduct of 
inspection;
    (c) Racks, receptacles, or other suitable devices for retaining such 
parts as the head, tongue, tail, thymus gland, and viscera, and all 
parts and blood to be used in the preparation of meat food products or 
medical products, until after the post-mortem examination is completed, 
in order that they may be identified in case of condemnation of the 
carcass; equipment, trucks, and receptacles for the handling of viscera 
of slaughtered animals so as to prevent contact with the floor; and 
trucks, racks, marked receptacles, tables, and other necessary equipment 
for the separate and sanitary handling of carcasses or parts passed for 
cooking;
    (d) Tables, benches, and other equipment on which inspection is to 
be performed, of such design, material, and construction as to enable 
Program employees to conduct their inspection in a ready, efficient and 
clean manner;
    (e) Watertight metal trucks or receptacles for holding and handling 
diseased carcasses and parts, so constructed as to be readily cleaned; 
such trucks or receptacles to be marked in a conspicuous manner with the 
phrase ``U.S. condemned'' in letters not less than 2 inches high, and, 
when required by the circuit supervisor, to be equipped with facilities 
for locking or sealing;
    (f) Adequate arrangements, including liquid soap and cleansers, for 
cleansing and disinfecting hands, for sterilizing all implements used in 
dressing diseased carcasses, floors, and such other articles and places 
as may be contaminated by diseased carcasses or otherwise;
    (g) In establishments in which slaughtering is done, rooms, 
compartments, or specially prepared open places, to be known as ``final 
inspection places,'' at which the final inspection of retained carcasses 
may be conducted (competent assistants for handling retained carcasses 
and parts shall be provided by the establishment; final inspection 
places shall be adequate in size and their rail arrangement and other 
equipment shall be sufficient to prevent carcasses and parts passed for 
food or cooking, from being contaminated by contact with condemned 
carcasses or parts; they shall be equipped with hot water, lavatory, 
sterilizer, tables, and other equipment required for ready, efficient, 
and sanitary conduct of the inspection; the floors shall be of such 
construction as to facilitate the maintenance of sanitary conditions and 
shall have proper drainage connections, and when the final inspection 
place is part of a larger floor, it shall be separated from the rest of 
the floor by a curb, railing, or otherwise);
    (h) Retention rooms, cages, or other compartments, and receptacles 
in which carcasses and product may be held for further inspection (these 
shall be in such number and in such locations as the needs of the 
inspection in the establishment may require; they shall be equipped for 
secure locking or sealing and shall be held under locks or official 
seals furnished by the Department; the keys of such locks shall not 
leave the custody of Program employees. Every such room, compartment, or 
receptacle shall be marked conspicuously with the phrase ``U.S. 
retained''

[[Page 103]]

in letters not less than 2 inches high; rooms or compartments for these 
purposes shall be secure and susceptible of being kept clean, including 
a sanitary disposal of the floor liquids; establishment employees shall 
not enter any retention rooms or compartments or open any retention 
receptacles unless authorized by Program employees);
    (i) Adequate facilities, including denaturing materials, for the 
proper disposal of condemned articles in accordance with the regulations 
in this subchapter (tanks or other rendering equipment which, under the 
regulations in this subchapter, must be sealed, shall be properly 
equipped for sealing as specified by the regulations in part 314 of this 
subchapter or by the circuit supervisor in specific cases);
    (j) Docks and receiving rooms, to be designated by the operator of 
the official establishment, with the circuit supervisor, for the receipt 
and inspection of all products as provided in Sec. 318.3 of this 
subchapter.
    (k) Suitable lockers in which brands bearing the official inspection 
legend and other official devices (excluding labels) and official 
certificates shall be kept when not in use (all such lockers shall be 
equipped for sealing or locking with locks or seals to be supplied by 
the Department; the keys of such locks shall not leave the custody of 
Program employees);
    (l) Sanitary facilities and accommodations as prescribed by Sec. 
416.2(c), (d), (e), (f), and (h) of this chapter.
    (m) In addition to any facilities required to accomplish sanitary 
dressing procedures, the following inspection station facilities for 
cattle and swine slaughter lines described in Sec. 310.1(b) of this 
subchapter are required:
    (1) An inspection station consisting of 5 feet of unobstructed line 
space for each head or carcass inspector and, for viscera table kills, 8 
feet for each viscera inspector on the inspector's side of the table.
    (2) A minimum of 50 foot candles of shadow-free lighting at the 
inspection surfaces of the head, viscera, and carcass.
    (3) A handwash lavatory (other than one which is hand operated), 
furnished with soap, towels, and hot and cold water, and located 
adjacent to the inspector's work area. In addition, for each head and 
viscera inspector on cattle slaughter lines, and each head inspector on 
swine slaughter lines, a sterilizer located adjacent to the inspector's 
work area.
    (4) For mechanized operations, a line control switch located 
adjacent to each inspection station.
    (5) Facilities to position tally sheets or other recording devices, 
such as digital counters, and facilities to contain condemned brands.
    (6) For swine slaughter lines requiring three or more inspectors, 
and for those one- and two-inspector configurations where the 
establishment installs a mirror: At the carcass inspection station one 
glass or plastic, distortion-free mirror, at least 5 feet x 5 feet, 
mounted far enough away from the vertical axis of the moving line to 
allow the carcass to be turned, but not over 3 feet away, and so mounted 
that any inspector standing at the carcass inspection station can 
readily view the back of the carcass.

[35 FR 15560, Oct. 3, 1970, as amended at 47 FR 33676, Aug. 4, 1982; 50 
FR 19902, May 13, 1985; 64 FR 56415, Oct. 20, 1999]