Don't Eat Poop! A Food Safety Podcast

✨ Consistency is key in food safety, and DeVere Chemical helps you deliver it every time. From front-of-house cleaning to back-of-house floor and dish care, their simple, proven solutions keep operations running smoothly. 
Learn more about how DeVere makes food safety easier: DeVere Chemical 

In this episode of Don’t Eat Poop!, our hosts Matt and Francine have just gotten back from the Food Safety Consortium 2024, and they’re sharing everything while it’s still fresh in their minds.

You will hear all about their experience and their biggest takeaways. You will also be in the know about the amazing interviews they have coming your way.

So, don’t miss this event recap!

This is a replay of Episode 89. In this episode:

💩 [02:46] An exciting start to the Food Safety Consortium 2024
💩 [05:33] The best networking event in food safety 
💩 [08:42] The difference being in Washington D.C. made
💩 [10:25] The interviews they did and that are coming your way
💩 [12:24] The Women in Food Safety networking event
💩 [14:48] The sense of community around industry colleagues
💩 [16:49] The missed opportunities of our legal system
💩 [17:58] What you can expect in the upcoming episodes
💩 [18:50] A taste of fame
💩 [19:57] Matt’s and Francine’s biggest takeaways from the Consortium
💩 [22:46] Food safety concerns aren’t the same all over the world
💩 [25:00] Concerns about the FDA’s Reorganization Plan
💩 [26:14] The right reason for wearing black gloves

Disclaimer: Episode title and content do not constitute legal or health advice.

Resources from this episode

Register for the Food Safety Consortium 2025, from October 19-21, here. Use the discount code POOP for $200 OFF. See you there!
Catch up on our interview with Rick Biros, the organizer of the Food Safety Consortium, on last year’s edition, Episode 37 | Integrating Cannabis into The World of Food Safety with Rick Biros.
Learn more about Women in Food Safety.
Catch up on the episode about the FDA’s plans to cut food funding to the states, Episode 69 | A Look at the FDA’s Reorganization Plan and Some Food Safety Mythbusting.

Noteworthy quotes from this episode

Really, truly, the Food Safety Consortium is the best networking event that I have ever been to.” – Matthew Regusci
Corporate culture has got to change before we can change food safety culture, and that's where we need to start. I know that's where the difference is going to be made.” – Francine L Shaw

We hope you enjoy this episode!

Remember to subscribe, rate, and review the podcast on your favorite podcast platform. Together, we can raise awareness and make a positive impact in the world of food safety!

Share your thoughts and feedback on the show, and feel free to offer any topics you would like to hear discussed.

We'd love to hear from you!

📲 Connect with Francine, Matt, and the "Don't Eat Poop!" show on LinkedIn!

📕 Check out Francine's book Who Watches the Kitchen? on Amazon

🎙️ BE A GUEST ON DON’T EAT POOP!

Fill out this form to tell us more about yourself. We’ll reach out via email within 30 days with next steps if you’re selected.
_______
Produced by Ideablossoms


What is Don't Eat Poop! A Food Safety Podcast?

Tune in every Tuesday for a brand new episode of Don't Eat Poop! A Food Safety Podcast. Join Francine L. Shaw, the savvy CEO of Savvy Food Safety, and Matthew Regusci, compliance connoisseur and founder of Fostering Compliance, as they serve up the latest in food safety with a side of laughter.

Explore the ins and outs of food systems, responsible food practices, and food safety regulations. Stay informed about food safety awareness and the not-so-occasional food recall. Delve deep into the complexities of the food supply chain with our dynamic duo, who blend expert insights with a pinch of food safety humor. Whether you're knee-deep in the food safety industry or just passionate about what's on your plate, this podcast promises a fresh take on staying safe while eating well.

Expect candid conversations, personal anecdotes, and occasional guest appearances that spice up the discussion. Shaw and Regusci bring their combined decades of experience to the table, making each episode as informative as it is entertaining. From industry trends to must-know food safety news and regulations, they've got your back (and your lunch).

In essence, Don't Eat Poop! A Food Safety Podcast is not just about imparting information; it's about fostering a culture of food safety. By shedding light on the intricacies of the food supply chain and the latest food safety news, it aims to promote awareness and encourage responsible food practices among consumers and industry professionals alike.

When it comes to food safety, knowledge is power, and a good laugh is the best seasoning. At the heart of every episode is one golden rule: Don't Eat Poop!

DEP E135 REAL
===

Francine L Shaw: [00:00:00] So, hey Matt, it's that time of year again. We are gonna be heading down to Alexandria, Virginia on October 19th through the 21st to the Food Safety Consortium, and I couldn't be more excited.

Matt Regusci: Yes, this is gonna be so much fun. So what we're gonna be doing is the next two episodes are going to be from our archive, and one of 'em is an interview with David Hatch from Neogen.

The next episode after that is gonna be an episode where Francine and I talk about the Food Safety Consortium. I think we recorded this right after we were there, so it was like fresh on our mind and we are excited to be there. We love this conference. It's a great time for us to meet you guys. And also for us to interview you.

So we would love for you to put in the chat. Are you gonna be there and do you want to be interviewed?

Francine L Shaw: It's the only time of year where we get to sit down and do several high level interviews [00:01:00] with many people from across the country, from a lot of corporations. We sit down, we pick their minds, we talk to them, and.

Have a great time just speaking with them. So again, like Matt said, we would love to chat with you. We would love to interview you, and if you're gonna be there, if you haven't registered yet, when you

check out, use the code poop uppercase, POOP for a $200 discount and we'll see you. Yes.

Matt Regusci: Yeah, so just a reminder as you're checking out.

If you haven't registered yet, please register. You still have time. It's gonna be, again, October 19th, the 21st of this year, and when you register, you can use discount code of poop, POOP for $200 off. Exciting times for Ennc. I'm excited about this.

Francine L Shaw: And this is hosted by Food Safety Tech and the American Frozen Food [00:02:00] Institute.

Matt Regusci: Yes, so it's like two conferences at the same time going at the same time. So if you're at the American Frozen Food Institute Conference and you want to be interviewed as well, please let us know as well. See you there. See you there.

intro: Everybody's gotta eat and nobody likes getting sick. That's why heroes, toil in the shadows, keeping your food safe at all points from the supply chain to the point of sale. Join industry veterans, Francine l Shaw and Matt Reci for a deep dive into food safety. It all boils down to one golden rule. Don't eat poop.

Don't eat poop.

Matt Regusci: Hello? Hello, Francine. Hey Matt. We had a very exciting week, didn't we?

Francine L Shaw: We did. We had a very good week. Connected with some old friends. Met some new friends. [00:03:00]

Matt Regusci: Yes. So what we're talking about is we just got back from Food Safety Consortium and Wow, what a difference from the last few years.

How many times was last year, the first time you were at Food Safety Consortium?

Francine L Shaw: No, I actually was on a panel probably three years ago at the consortium, and in the last two years we've done the podcast at the consortium.

Matt Regusci: Right, totally.

Francine L Shaw: No, I've been there. It was probably my third or fourth year at the consortium.

Yes.

Matt Regusci: Yeah.

Francine L Shaw: First of all, that event is much different than the other event. The other conferences that I attend, you attend, and this year it was much different than in years

intro: past.

Francine L Shaw: I walked in a little bit before you did. It was in Washington DC a very nice venue, and when I walked in I felt like, and I wasn't late, but I felt like I was late because of breakfast was set up and it was in [00:04:00] open area, like the, what's that?

Is that an atrium where the sun was coming through that, the glass above and it was a bright sunny day and so the sun was shining through. The room was full and there was so much energy. Everybody was talking and you could hear people laughing and the room was full and the booths were set up and we were there to record to do interviews.

And it was just such a, a welcoming environment and the energy was just incredible. And it was just so. Nice. Imagine that right in the middle of Washington DC

Matt Regusci: just Right, right in the middle of election season too.

Francine L Shaw: But yes, it was very nice.

Matt Regusci: Yeah. And you texted me too. 'cause I mean, we were there the day before prepping everything, getting everything ready.

Mm-hmm. Which was a completely different environment, right. 'cause there were people there, but there, it, there was no need for everybody to be there. Right then there. So that next morning you are like, [00:05:00] we agreed, okay, we're gonna meet at nine o'clock. And we had people set up for interviews and at eight 15, Francine text me, where are you?

Like heading over? We're supposed to meet at nine. You're like, there everybody is here. The environment is amazing. You're missing out. So then I had FOMO going on because I'm like, wait, what's going on? So. Congratulations, Rick and your team at Food Safety Tech for really dialing that in. And yeah, it was funny 'cause we were there last year.

We recorded a bunch of interviews last year in New Jersey and we asked the same two questions to everybody we interviewed. One is, what do you like about Food Safety Consortium? And two is what could be changed. Okay, number one. Everybody loved the networking, loved the content of the conference, loved the intimacy of the conference, and [00:06:00] everybody complained about the location in New Jersey, right?

And this year I felt like the intimacy was 100%. Still there. The buzz was there. The networking was absolutely amazing. If you have not been to Food Safety Consortium, but you've been to multiple different food safety conferences, really truly, the Food Safety Consortium is the best networking event that I have ever been to.

Would you say the same thing?

Francine L Shaw: Yeah, 100%. And the reason for that is it's not overwhelming. You can come with an agenda, do what you. Tend to do if you plan ahead looking at who's gonna be there and what it is you wanna accomplish and have time to have those conversations. When you go to some of these events and I'm gonna next, for example, my God, that is so huge, I get overwhelmed just walking in the door because the, the [00:07:00] energy in the atmosphere is crazy, but there is so much, you almost don't know where to start.

So you need a very specific agenda and you don't really have a lot of time to do what is you want to do or need to do because there is just so much, you need to be very focused on your particular niche to do what you need to do in that arena. Whereas here, there's a fair number of people, but it's intimate enough and there is enough time allotted.

That you can really speak to anybody that you want to speak to within the industry and not feel rushed or you know that you need to hurry up and get to the next booth, or you're not gonna make it to, you know, 16 blocks to the other side of the building if you don't hurry. So, and the [00:08:00] quality of the people.

Everybody from the person in charge of the FDA and the USDA to leaders of multiple corporations are in this building at the same time already and willing to speak to whoever would like to speak to them because they have the time to do that. And if you've not been there, I really would suggest that you take the time to attend.

The other thing is the topics. Of discussion for the breakout events. So there's something there for everybody from what's happening currently in the industry to regulatory discussions that need to happen.

Matt Regusci: Yes, and I think the DC thing changed that in New Jersey there was regulatory conversations and breakouts and that type of stuff, but the people who are doing the presentations.

We're not the actual FDA, the leader of the FDA because it's hard for them to just, [00:09:00] new jersey's pretty close to dc, but it's still further away being in DC or is Arlington, Virginia, which is basically dc. Jim Jones actually was there talking about the food reorg. Like you had the people, Andy Kennedy was there talking about FSMA 2 0 4.

He helped write the rule. Frank Giannis was there, a FISMA 2 0 4, the new traceability rule for the FDA. He helped write the rule. So many people were there that even if DC wasn't easy for them to get into, 'cause they don't live near DC like Andy Kennedy, the people who do live in DC were able to get there easier and it's just more of a destination place.

It's easier to get to DC and like the heavy hitters of people giving presentations was. On par. It was crazy. Good. We were two minutes from the airport. Literally. Literally two minutes from the airport. Actually two minutes from the airport. It was exactly right. 'cause you dropped me off at the airport. It was two minutes from the [00:10:00] hotel to the airport, right?

Yeah.

Francine L Shaw: It was like we were so close to the airport, so it was very easy to get in and out of, and for the people that lived in DC which the people from the USDA, the FDA and all these organizations were like literally right there. So it didn't take a lot out of their schedule to come speak. Talk and hang out for a little while with the industry leaders, which was very nice.

So I think it was a great change for them. So, yeah.

Matt Regusci: Yeah, and so Rick invited us back next year, so we will be back at the Food Safety Consortium of again next year. Excited about interviewing a bunch of people. Again, our interviews at that conference are just absolutely gold. We had did an interview with Roger Hancock again to talk about recalls from Recall, info Link.

We talked with Andrew Kennedy about what's going on with I Food Ds and newer partners. He and I helped create that business a couple, few years ago, and how the implementation [00:11:00] of BMA 2 0 4 is going. We talked with. Tina from GFSR about what's going on with training, and we talked with Steve from Afto.

That is fascinating about what's going on with the vr. Yeah, yeah. The decrease in funds are going to affect the states. We talked with Rick by the guy who owns Food Safety Tech and puts on Food Safety consortium. That was a great. Talk and then Sharon Biles, what a hoot she is. Oh my gosh. She's a hoot.

Francine L Shaw: Yeah, she, she's amazing.

Matt Regusci: Yeah. So those interviews we're gonna be dropping. Francine and I are gonna be scheduling those out to drop about. Every two weeks of a normal episode, we'll have an interview from Food Safety Consortium, or we still have some interviews that we did at the I-E-H-A-F-D-A conference too.

Right?

Francine L Shaw: And these, God, the interviews that we do at these events [00:12:00] are so amazing. That's something that we need to do more of the interviews at these events. I'm happy to go back at the boot safety. Consortium next year, but like the people from the FDA and these, these conferences and the input and the takeaways from those are amazing.

Matt Regusci: So it was a lot of fun. So, okay. Yeah. What was the biggest, so you went to the food safety or Woman's breakfast? I wasn't invited. Okay. Whatever.

Francine L Shaw: How did that job was there? It was good. So that started a few years ago with just four women. Melody spearheaded that with three other women, and to think that there are now women in food safety has over a thousand women from around the world as part of that organization is absolutely just [00:13:00] incredible and.

The room was full, absolutely full, and is so full that as people were getting up and leaving from the breakfast, our seats were being taken by other women that were coming in. So it's nice to see that many women in food safety, because it's still a male dominated industry. So it, yes, it was nice to see that many women involved in taking part in that breakfast networking.

It was a networking event.

Matt Regusci: What was the, to like, was there like a topic, like a talk? No, it would, no, it wa No, it wasn't. Oh, so it was just networking, women getting together, right.

Francine L Shaw: Yes. Now they meet monthly. I'm not sure what day it is, but it's a great organization. It's for women to help mentor other women and just to get together, share ideas, and.

It's a good organization. I had joined the group probably two years [00:14:00] ago, but for some reason they had to change their LinkedIn page or website or something. And when that happened, I think some of us accidentally ended up being take something. There was a glitch because I stopped getting the information.

I think I took care of it this week so that I would be added back to that list. But there's like a monthly speaker, I believe there's a newsletter. Some of us are aging out. Of the industry. I hope not to be there for a while, but there are a lot of women that have been doing this for a long time. Sharon talked about that have been doing this for a long time and there's a new generation of women that need to and want to be heard and it gives them a resource.

Matt Regusci: I think that's this amazing group and yeah, people should check them out. Speaking about food safety and women, and something that I saw at Food Safety Consortium that I thought was really interesting was, we're not gonna name names or companies or anything right now, but someone pretty high up in a company just having an [00:15:00] outbreak was at the conference and she was doing a talk and she had to go.

She gave her talk and then she had to fly out and it was like, boom. And

Francine L Shaw: she's in the midst of a very serious outbreak. Say that. Very serious

Matt Regusci: outbreak. Safe to say that. Yes. Everybody there was wrapping around her, Hey, is there anything I could do to help? And no one was asking details, but everybody there was just there to like, and we're talking about.

Competitors of hers. Mm-hmm. We're talking about people just randomly in the industry. There was consultants, there are people in the food safety, VPs of food safety and everybody there was just cons, consultatory and helpful. And I just thought, this is such a beautiful environment that we have within our community, frankly, people who have our product in their freezers.

Yes. Yes.

Francine L Shaw: That is true. Good point. Yes, but, but that's not what it is about. The other side of that is that Sharon's point [00:16:00] that she made during our interview, the seriousness that these companies take when something like this happens. It's not 99% of the time, like something that's taken lightly or because they've had three years of reports that they weren't reacting to.

Something just went terribly wrong somewhere.

Matt Regusci: Yes. And with this particular one, it's one where it could happen in any facility and it's more you have to figure out where it came from and what's going on, but I just gonna fix it and how are we gonna fix it? Yeah. I just thought that was beautiful that people just wrapping around her

Francine L Shaw: and she did an entire presentation and nobody beat her up on that stage over what she's going through.

Right? Yes. Which is amazing.

Matt Regusci: Yes. We even said, Hey, we need to have you on the show. And she's, oh my gosh, I love your show. I wanna be a part of the show. And I said, we won't talk about what's going on right now. And she's good because legally [00:17:00] I can't. So well for, yeah, for a couple reasons.

Francine L Shaw: We know that she can't discuss that.

Yes, we know that. And we wouldn't, not just because it was her, but we can't ask anybody, frankly, if Boar's Head were to step in the door. There are certain questions we know that we can't ask them either, so it doesn't really matter who it is.

Matt Regusci: Which is so unfortunate about the legality of our country because those are the people that we need to be asking questions from.

Not in a gotcha type of a way, but in a, what have you learned so we can make sure not to replicate this

Francine L Shaw: up to this point. Understanding where we are in the litigation process. Where are you, what would you have done differently and. From this point going forward, what would you do differently? Not like beat them up or just let's talk about this.

Like a white paper kind of, or case study, A case study type of Right. But yeah, no, we can't do that.

Matt Regusci: So we had an experience like [00:18:00] that. We have next week's episode is going to be the episode with Steve from Afto, which is gonna be great. So we have like. Huge heavy hitters that we were talking to. And then we also spent a half hour talking to some guy who's brand new in the food safety industry.

He's a chef. He's been in the industry for 18 months. He helped someone write up an SQF program and he spent like a half hour talking to Francine and I about what his career path could be. You have like super heavy hitters and you have people who are just beginning in food safety, all connected together.

Everybody was talking to everybody. It was awesome.

Francine L Shaw: I shouldn't have given him my card and been like, I can help you with that. Have safety. He set up an appointment with you? Yeah, no.

Matt Regusci: I know like Francine and I walked in, we got invited to every night, we, we were invited to some event and party or whatever, which is great and we love going to [00:19:00] all of those.

I think we look like zombies. 'cause after talking to people and interviewing people all day long, our braid is pretty shot. We went to events every night and it was funny, like one guy who was running the event walks up to Francine and I and looks at us, instantly recognizes us and then says, you guys are famous.

And then Francine and I are like looking around us, like behind us. Did somebody behind us go? Are you talking? Did Howard Stern just walk in? Or that was Duran, right? Right, right. We are in dc. Did Biden walk in? Did somebody like that walk in? No. It was fun. So what was your, what would you say your biggest takeaway or learning was from Food Safety Consortium?

Francine L Shaw: Oh my God. I don't know. How many times did we say? I didn't know that

Matt Regusci: a lot,

Francine L Shaw: Steve said so much.

Matt Regusci: I know that's gonna be my takeaways from Steve, but I didn't know if you had another one.

Francine L Shaw: I don't know if there was any [00:20:00] one takeaway. I think overall. It's not any one takeaway. It's just that as an industry, we work with really good people.

Yeah, we really do. We work with a lot of really good people, and people truly do care. We need to find a way, and we talked about this with Sharon. We need to find a way for this to filter through the industry. It's not all about the bottom line. We need to stop focusing. The bottom line will take care of itself if we take care of our people.

And I've been saying that for years and so have many other people. It's like the bottom line truly will take care of itself if we take care of our people. That's part of what Tia and Jill talk about and food safety culture is food safety culture, and it has become somewhat [00:21:00] of a buzzword and. Corporate culture, again, we talked about this with Sharon, has got to change before we can change food safety culture.

And that's where we need to start, I think. Well, I know and that's where the difference is gonna be made.

Matt Regusci: One of the biggest takeaways I had was the conversation we had with Steve from Afto. That's again gonna be next week's episode, so please everybody tune into that one. 'cause that was really eye-opening in a lot of ways.

One of the things I thought was fascinating was we had a, and I think we should link in our previous conversation, Francine, about the FDA reorg. 'cause we had a previous podcast about the FDA reorg and about the. DA eliminating $34 million from their budget. I think for the state departments and local departments.

Steve had a really good [00:22:00] point and he said if that money disappears from the FDA to the state departments, those people are going to disappear 200 to 400 inspectors and they probably won't come back again. Scared me. That was scary.

Francine L Shaw: Which I think is a given though. Anytime you eliminate positions from a company.

People don't come back. No. Just sitting around waiting for their jobs to open back up and be like, oh, you know what? They're waiting for you to gimme a call. They move on to bigger and better things.

Matt Regusci: Yes.

Francine L Shaw: Because now they'd move on to something that they've discovered isn't as difficult or near as stressful.

Yes. And make more money. And like I said to him, I would never do it again.

Matt Regusci: I never did it. Yeah.

Francine L Shaw: I had zero desire to do it again.

Matt Regusci: That was eyeopening to me. And also with, uh, Tina from Global Food Safety Resource, GFSR. When she talked about that new bug that she got in Barbados, she got a food safety [00:23:00] bug that Francine and I didn't even know existed, and she didn't know existed either.

Until then, I can't remember what it was, but I was like. How many more of these things are out there that we just don't even know? Obviously they're not on the top 10 for any recalls or anything like that, so, or top 30 or 40. This was just some unique bug that got her sick in food. Yeah. Fascinating.

Francine L Shaw: I was working with a gentleman a few years ago and we were starting a program that we were rolling out in the hospitality industry, and I was helping him with this.

He wanted to use the FDA food code as his guideline for every country that he was working in. And I was like, we can't do that because the foodborne illnesses that are prevalent in the states aren't gonna be the same things that we need to worry about in [00:24:00] Peru. Right. For example. And. So the what she got, she feels certain in Barbados, was something we'd never heard of.

So you need to research and know the areas that you're talking about before you start setting up programs in these countries. We can't go into Barbados and say, okay, this is the food safety program that we wanna use in this country and base it on the FDA food code when you can't do that. You understand what I'm saying?

100%. And I couldn't make him under. I ended up pulling the plug on my portion because I couldn't make him understand. We just couldn't do this because the food safety world doesn't work like that.

Matt Regusci: And that's part of things that we just would not have heard of if we weren't at that conference. And the same with other conferences too.

Like every single time we go to some sort of food safety conference, we learn, at least I learn something new every single time. And so that was fascinating though. Both of those. [00:25:00] You and I had a full blown conversation about the impact of that. It's just a small amount of money compared to everything else the FDA spends money on.

We're talking like less than $40 million and 400 people are out outperforming inspections using that money. And the FDA has a hard time getting a thousand inspections done in a year from their own internal staff. And you're gonna can the state departments that are doing your work for you, because you are gonna put that money into raises for people who aren't really doing any.

The FDA does a lot of stuff. The mandate from the government is you need to go out and inspect plants. And they're not, they're doing like everything else, but that in terms of what they do, they do, but like it's minuscule compared to what they're supposed to do. Food's on the ground [00:26:00] doing it and they don't wanna pay 'em.

Francine L Shaw: So the thing is, and the average consumer doesn't know this, they do so few inspections already and we're gonna cut the ones that they do.

Matt Regusci: I know

Francine L Shaw: what the hell,

Matt Regusci: we've already got a problem. Alright, well anything else you wanna talk about with Food Safety Consortium before we head off this episode? Steve?

Francine L Shaw: So when we were talking to him, he has all those multicolored colored gloves there, right? Oh,

Matt Regusci: you're talking about Steve from Eagle Gloves? Yes.

Francine L Shaw: Yes. Eagle Gloves. He has all those different colored gloves there and we were talking to him. I love the lime green gloves, by the way, I should have stole one of those 'cause they matched my brand colors.

Did not. He was talking about those gloves. And I once had somebody say to me, and I think I've probably brought this up on the podcast before about the black gloves. Kitchens love the black gloves because they hide the dirt. Not a good reason to wear the black gloves. Just saying you wanna see the dirt when you're in a kitchen.

He was saying that he had a customer that wanted to use those for taking out the trash. [00:27:00]

Matt Regusci: Yes.

Francine L Shaw: Perfect reason to have the black gloves. Yay. That. And for cleaning. Anyway, when we were talking to him, I wanted to mention that's a perfect reason for the black gloves, not for necessarily for use in a kitchen.

And I didn't get to say that to him. So anyway, I just thought to bring that up.

Matt Regusci: Awesome. Yeah, that's a really,

Francine L Shaw: yeah.

Matt Regusci: Well, I, well, anyway, yeah, don't forget to tune in next week to Steve from Aptos interview. That was very enlightening and eyeopening, and other than that. Don't eat poop, any poop,

Francine L Shaw: and don't forget to come see us. It's a food safety consortium, October 19th through the 21st. And if you haven't registered yet, enter the code poop for a $200 discount.

Matt Regusci: That's POOP. Don't misspell this POOP. Poop. Poop. [00:28:00] Don't eat it, but type it

in.