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Consumer Protection © ORCA Education Limited 2005 New Words Shopping with Confidence People have a wide choice of where to shop for their food and food equipment. This may depend on their age, means of transport, wealth, customs, culture, family size and type, access to technology and individual preference. There are different methods of buying goods including everything from your local market to the internet. Where do you shop and can you shop with confidence? * © ORCA Education Limited (2005) and suppliers, all rights reserved Shopping and the Law The Sale and Supply of Goods Act 1994 is a law which protects the consumer. It states that goods should be: fit for their purpose of a satisfactory quality (appearance and finish, free from minor defects and that they are durable) that they are as they are described. These are statutory regulations which means they are law. What do you do if you there is a problem? * © ORCA Education Limited (2005) and suppliers, all rights reserved Consumer Confidence There are other organisations and laws The advertisement had not been misleading that protect the consumer when buying goods from advertising to hygiene. You see a new ready meal advertised on the T.V. and you decide to buy it at your local shop. All of the following expectations are covered by some form of consumer protection: Shop where you buy it is clean The person or shop selling the food was reliable © ORCA Education Limited (2005) and suppliers, all rights reserved Contents and weight were clearly marked The food was fit to eat and would not make you ill The label was accurate You could choose to buy the meal at a competitive price. * Advertising People object to misleading or offensive advertising. The Advertising Standards Authority is independent and polices the rules in the advertising codes. The codes of practice created by the advertising industry require that adverts are legal, decent, honest and truthful. The ASA can ask that an advert is changed or amended, impose sanctions such as bad publicity or take away advertising space. The ASA can refer a complaint to the Office of Fair Trading for legal action. © ORCA Education Limited (2005) and suppliers, all rights reserved Safe to Eat? We expect food to be prepared, stored and sold in a safe way. The Food Safety Act came into force in 1990 to make sure that our food is safe to eat and will not make us ill. The act applies to the whole industry from the farm to the shop or restaurant. This person is an Environmental Health Officers. What can he do to enforce the Food Safety Act? investigate complaints seize food or products condemn food inspect premises for hygiene and safety.* © ORCA Education Limited (2005) and suppliers, all rights reserved Food Regulations In the UK we have strict regulations Can the raw meat contaminate about food hygiene. cooked meat? The Food Safety (General Food Hygiene) Regulations 1995 and The Food Safety (Temperature Control) Is the temperature Regulations set the rules. controlled? Businesses making food products must asses the risks at each stage of production. Is the raw meat too A Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points (HACCP) system close to the customers? would pick out risks and action to ensure safety. What risks can you see in a butcher shop like this? © ORCA Education Limited (2005) and suppliers, all rights reserved Are the counter tops clean? The Law and Food Labelling The Food Labelling Regulations 1996 state the type of information that must be displayed on a food product label. All pre-packed food has to be marked with the following: What other information appears on the label? * The name of the food Place of origin Storage instructions The weight or volume Manufacturer information List of ingredients Shelf life/Use by date © ORCA Education Limited (2005) and suppliers, all rights reserved Instructions for use Date Coding Date coding is the date by which the food needs to be eaten. After this date the food may deteriorate as harmful bacteria grow which may cause food poisoning. Food is date coded in these ways: The ‘use-by’ date, often used for high risk cook-chill foods or sandwiches. The ‘best before’ date for foods with a shelf life of less than 3 months like bread, shown as day, month and year. The ‘best before end’ may be used for DISPLAY UNTIL more than 3 months, only the month and 08DEC05 year are stated. FRANCE X7 125-152g The ‘display-until’ code is usually a few CLASS1 16451/GER days before the ‘use-by’ date and tells the shop to remove the product. * © ORCA Education Limited (2005) and suppliers, all rights reserved Nutritional Labelling Rules Nutritional labels must be easily seen and in tabular form (with numbers aligned) or linear form (appearing as a paragraph). Nutritional labelling must comply with EU regulations and be given using one of the following systems: Group 1 – energy, protein, carbohydrate and fat Group 2 – as group 1 but also sugars, saturates, fibre and salt Other information can be given e.g. cholesterol, vitamins, minerals, polyunsaturates and monounsaturates. Any claim regarding nutrition, such as ‘low fat,’ must be true. * Why is it important to give nutritional information? * © ORCA Education Limited (2005) and suppliers, all rights reserved Specific Labelling There are other labels and logos for foods that meet certain standards or are a particular type. For example: organic foods vegetarian foods health mark British Farm Standards suitable for freezing environmentally friendly disposal packaging GM foods Fairtrade * © ORCA Education Limited (2005) and suppliers, all rights reserved This is an example of a food label. Courtesy of the Food Standards Agency * © ORCA Education Limited (2005) and suppliers, all rights reserved Vocabulary Some words or terms to learn access to technology statutory regulations consumer ready meal codes of practice sanctions hygiene © ORCA Education Limited (2005) and suppliers, all rights reserved HACCP pre-packed shelf life GM Fairtrade * The Task You can enter here a task for your students. © ORCA Education Limited (2005) and suppliers, all rights reserved End End Show Acknowledgements All images used in these presentations are the property of their owners, ORCA Education Limited and suppliers inc. Hemera Images, Jupiter Media Corp. and Animation Factory All rights are reserved. The Licence agreement applies to all elements of these presentations. ORCA.VT is a trademark of ORCA Education Limited Microsoft Agent is the property of Microsoft Corporation, Redmond WA. ORCA Education Limited are licensed distributors of Microsoft Agent technology Licence 276899. The Microsoft Agent Technology elements including Peedy character may not be distributed beyond the constraints of this product licence Microsoft Agent characters Susan and Tom are packaged with this product as part of the Vox Proxy development tools used by ORCA Education. They are not for resale or distribution beyond their use in these products © ORCA Education Limited (2005) and suppliers, all rights reserved