The U.S. food safety system is based on strong, flexible, and science-based federal and state laws and industry's legal responsibility to produce safe foods. The system is guided by the following principles:
Principal federal regulatory organisations responsible for providing consumer protection are:
The FDA is charged with protecting consumers against impure, unsafe, and fraudulently labelled food other than in areas regulated by FSIS. FSIS has the responsibility for ensuring that meat, poultry, and egg products are safe, wholesome, and accurately labelled. EPA's mission includes protecting public health and the environment from risks posed by pesticides and promoting safer means of pest management. No food or feed item may be marketed legally in the U.S. if it contains a food additive or drug residue not permitted by FDA or a pesticide residue without an EPA tolerance or if the residue is in excess of an established tolerance. APHIS' primary role in the U.S. food safety network of agencies is to protect against plant and animal pests and diseases.
Precaution and science-based risk analyses are long-standing and important traditions of U.S. food safety policy and decision-making. U.S. food safety statutes, regulations, and policies are risk-based and have precautionary approaches embedded in them.
In general, substances intentionally added to foods are broadly classified as belonging to one of the following categories:
The labelling of products as “organic” is regarded strictly as a commercial activity and falls under the jurisdiction of USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS).