The Principles of Sanitation digital seminar examines how sanitation programs continue to evolve as a cornerstone of modern food safety systems. Hosted by Kristie Grzywinski from SQFI, featuring speakers Kathy Wybourn from DNV and Angela Anandappa from the Alliance for Advanced Sanitation, the session reinforces sanitation as a foundational prerequisite program while exploring practical expectations under SQF Edition 10, best practices for validation and verification, and the growing role of artificial intelligence (AI) in sanitation and environmental monitoring.
Key Topics Covered
1. Sanitation as a Foundational Food Safety Program
Sanitation is directly connected to environmental monitoring, allergen control, pest management, and preventive maintenance, reinforcing overall safety and quality.
Effective sanitation practices apply across the entire facility, from receiving and storage to processing, shipping, and warehousing—creating a consistent culture of safety.
2. SQF Edition 10: Sanitation Expectations
Clearer expectations for accountability, including defined roles, responsibilities, documentation, and verification activities.
3. Core Elements of an Effective Sanitation Program
A structured, risk-based application of the Seven Steps of Sanitation, ensuring effective soil removal through appropriate chemistry, time, temperature, and methods.
Site-specific, well-defined sanitation SOPs that are practical to execute, risk-based, and consistently applied across shifts and teams.
Hygienic design of equipment and facilities, enabling effective cleaning, reducing harborage points, and preventing contamination.
4. Validation, Verification, and Continuous Improvement
Emerging technologies strengthen sanitation and allergen verification, improving sensitivity, speed, and confidence in results, including:
Sanitation data is leveraged for continuous improvement, using trends to optimize Master Sanitation Schedules (MSS), anticipate risks, and prevent recurrence.
5. Food Safety Culture and Leadership
6. The Role of AI in Sanitation Programs
AI serves as a tool to enhance—rather than replace—risk-based sanitation systems, supporting faster insights, improved consistency, and proactive risk management.
Automated cleaning systems, optimizing water, chemical use, and downtime while maintaining effectiveness
7. Challenges and Risk Management for AI
AI effectiveness depends on data quality, security, and system integration, ensuring outputs are reliable and aligned with existing food safety management systems.
Ethical considerations, workforce impacts, and resistance to change must be actively managed, reinforcing that AI supports people and processes rather than replacing accountability.
ISO 42001 establishes a management system framework for AI governance, helping organizations manage risks while promoting transparency, oversight, and continuous improvement.
Key Takeaways
The following points summarize the essential elements that define effective, SQF-aligned sanitation programs in today’s food safety environment:
Effective sanitation programs rely on GMPs, hygienic design, validated procedures, and strong verification systems.
AI offers powerful opportunities to improve sanitation efficiency, monitoring, and risk prediction, but must be implemented thoughtfully within existing management systems.
For more information on sanitation programs, here are some additional resources: