Bill

Bill > SF359


IA SF359

IA SF359
A bill for an act limiting liability for food dealers and owners of commercial vehicles who donate food to an Iowa food bank association.(See SF 590.)


summary

Introduced
02/18/2025
In Committee
02/18/2025
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

91st General Assembly

Bill Summary

GENERAL. Code chapter 190B currently consists of two subchapters; subchapter I provides for the farm to food donation tax credit and subchapter II provides for the Iowa emergency food purchase program. This bill creates a new subchapter shielding a food dealer or the owner of a commercial vehicle from civil liability when donating food to an Iowa food bank association (IFBA). SHIELD FROM CIVIL LIABILITY. The shield from civil liability applies to a food dealer when preparing or distributing the food under the regulatory authority of the department of inspections, appeals, and licensing (DIAL), or the department of agriculture and land stewardship (DALS). The shield also applies to the owner of a commercial vehicle when transporting such food. However, the shield only applies under certain circumstances. The food dealer or owner must not have had actual knowledge that the food would likely cause harm to an individual consuming the food in a normal manner. The shield only applies to a food dealer or to an owner of a commercial vehicle operating under a valid license. In addition, the food dealer or commercial vehicle owner must comply with required time and temperature controls for safety to limit pathogenic microorganism growth or toxin formation. The food dealer or owner cannot have declared the evidently safe food to be unsafe, or intentionally falsely advertised the evidently safe food to the IFBA. EVIDENTLY SAFE FOOD. Evidently safe food is defined as food that a reasonable person would consider to be safe to consume, if such person had all information regarding why the food could be considered unfit or unmarketable for retail sale due to a failure to comply with health and safety requirements. Evidently safe food does not include food that is regulated as alcohol, or subject to a government-issued stop order or court-issued injunction. FOOD DEALER, OWNER, AND IFBA. A food dealer refers to a food establishment or food processing plant regulated (licensed) by DIAL under Code chapter 137F. A food establishment includes an operation that stores, prepares, packages, serves, vends, or otherwise provides food for human consumption (Code section 137F.1). A food processing plant is a commercial operation that manufactures, packages, labels, or stores food for human consumption but does not provide food directly to a consumer (Code section 137F.1). A food dealer also includes a meat and poultry slaughter and processing establishment regulated (licensed) by DALS (Code section 189A.3), and a milk plant also regulated (permitted) by DALS (Code sections 192.111 and 194.3A). An owner refers to the owner of a commercial vehicle required to be regulated (licensed) by the state department of transportation under Code chapter 321. A commercial vehicle is a motor vehicle that has a gross weight of 10,001 or more pounds (Code section 321.1), among other things. IFBA refers to a nonprofit organization formed under Iowa law, exempt from federal income taxation, whose members include food banks, or affiliations of food banks, that together serve all counties in this state, and whose principal office is located in this state (Code section 190B.201).

AI Summary

This bill creates a new legal framework to limit civil liability for food dealers and commercial vehicle owners who donate food to the Iowa Food Bank Association (IFBA). Under the proposed law, food dealers and commercial vehicle owners would be protected from lawsuits when donating "evidently safe food," which is defined as food that a reasonable person would consider safe to consume after understanding why it might be unfit for retail sale. The liability protection applies only if the food dealer or vehicle owner has a valid license, had no actual knowledge that the food would cause harm, and meets specific safety requirements like proper temperature controls. The protection does not apply if the food is subject to a government stop order, declared unsafe by the donor, or falsely advertised to the IFBA. The bill defines food dealers as licensed food establishments, food processing plants, meat and poultry processing facilities, and milk plants, while commercial vehicles are defined as motor vehicles weighing over 10,001 pounds. This legislation aims to encourage food donations by reducing legal risks for donors while maintaining food safety standards.

Committee Categories

Government Affairs

Sponsors (1)

Last Action

Committee report approving bill, renumbered as SF 590. S.J. 479. (on 03/10/2025)

bill text


bill summary

Loading...

bill summary

Loading...
Loading...