Washington State Department of Agriculture. The Washington State Department of Agriculture (WSDA) Animal Health Program is charged with protecting animals and the public from communicable animal diseases. The WSDA Food Safety Program licenses custom meat businesses to slaughter or process uninspected meat food animals such as cattle, sheep, goats, and swine for the sole consumption of the owner.
Public Sale of Meat. All meat for public sale is inspected by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) in compliance with the federal Meat Inspection Act. USDA delegated to WSDA authority to conduct meat inspections for certain facilities that only slaughter or prepare meat for consumption by the owner of the animal. USDA also delegated authority to WSDA to allow for the slaughter, preparation, and sale of 1000 or fewer birds per calendar year.
Custom Meat. Custom farm slaughterers, custom slaughtering establishments, and custom meat facilities must be licensed by WSDA. Before issuing any license to operate as a custom farm slaughterer, custom slaughtering establishment, and a custom meat facility, WSDA must inspect the facility and equipment. Custom farm slaughterers are mobile slaughter units to prepare meat food animals for the consumption of the owner of the animals, done on the owner's farm or at an approved site. A custom slaughtering establishment is a fixed facility to slaughter meat food animals for the owner. A custom meat facility is a facility operated by a person licensed to prepare uninspected meat for the sole consumption of the owner.
WSDA may establish a meat and poultry inspection program in the state only if WSDA has full federal approval for the program. WSDA may enter into a cooperative agreement with USDA in order to operate a state meat and poultry inspection program that is at least equal to federal requirements. WSDA may enter into a cooperative interstate shipping program agreement with USDA to allow establishments to ship products in interstate commerce.
The WSDA director may adopt rules to establish a meat and poultry inspection program and an interstate shipping program. The director may establish requirements and fees for licensing and license establishments under either program.
Under the meat and poultry inspection program, WSDA must:
An animal showing symptoms of disease must be set apart and slaughtered separately from other livestock and poultry. Condemned animals must be destroyed under supervision of an inspector.