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Bill > AB544


WI AB544

WI AB544
A statewide retail food establishment food grading system, providing an exemption from emergency rule procedures, granting rule-making authority, and providing a penalty. (FE)


summary

Introduced
10/15/2025
In Committee
10/15/2025
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2025-2026 Regular Session

Bill Summary

Under current law, the Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection is responsible for the administration and enforcement of this state[s food safety laws, including those relating to licensing and inspections of restaurants and other retail food establishments. DATCP is permitted to contract with local health departments to aide in investigating and enforcing the state[s food safety laws. An authorized DATCP inspector may at any time during reasonable hours enter and inspect licensed retail food establishments, and may issue a holding order prohibiting the sale or movement of food if the inspector has reasonable cause to believe the food is adulterated or misbranded and dangerous to health or misleading as to injury or damage that could occur to a consumer. Upon finding a violation of the food safety laws, DATCP may also issue a special order directing compliance with food safety law, and may also by summary order suspend a license or permit issued if it finds there has been a substantial failure to comply with the food safety laws and that the violation constitutes a serious danger to public health. This bill requires DATCP to establish within its current food safety regulatory activities a statewide food safety grading system for retail food establishments. The food safety grading system shall be based on a 100-point scale and shall categorize and assign negative point values that correspond to food safety violations that may occur at retail food establishments and that are based on the risk each food safety violation poses to public health. DATCP or a local health department designated as an agent of the department must at least once annually conduct unannounced inspections of each licensed retail food establishment, identify any food safety violations, and, using the point system developed by DATCP, determine for the retail food establishment a food safety score of A, B, C, or Grade Pending. If a retail food establishment receives a grade of Grade Pending, it must comply with DATCP[s or the local health department[s instructions for immediate corrective action, and the retail food establishment shall be subject to reinspection according to a timeline chosen by DATCP or the local health department. A retail food establishment may within 30 days of receiving a grade request a reinspection. A retail food establishment must comply with certain requirements regarding the posting of the grade it receives as a result of the inspection conducted under the system, including the requirement to display the grade it receives on all its public entrances. Failure to comply with the posting requirements may result in the retail food establishment being subject to a warning for the first violation, a forfeiture of $500 for a second violation committed within 12 months of a previous violation, and a $1,000 forfeiture for a third or subsequent violation committed within 12 months of any two previous violations. The bill requires DATCP to create and maintain an online database that is open to the public and that details the results of inspections conducted and grades determined for retail food establishments. The bill also requires DATCP to promulgate rules to enforce the food safety grading system. For further information see the state and local fiscal estimate, which will be printed as an appendix to this bill.

AI Summary

This bill establishes a statewide food safety grading system for retail food establishments, requiring the state's Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection to develop a uniform grading system based on a 100-point scale. Under this system, restaurants and other food retail businesses will be inspected at least annually, with both unannounced and announced inspections, and will receive grades from A (90-100 points) to Grade Pending (69 or fewer points) based on food safety violations. Establishments must prominently display their most recent grade at all public entrances within 48 hours of receiving it. If a business receives a "Grade Pending," they must take immediate corrective actions and will be subject to reinspection. The bill includes penalties for non-compliance, with warnings for first violations, $500 fines for second violations, and $1,000 fines for third or subsequent violations within 12 months. The department is also required to create a public online database detailing inspection results and grades for all retail food establishments. Additionally, the bill grants the department emergency rulemaking authority to implement this system within one year of the effective date, with a requirement to develop specific rules within six months.

Committee Categories

Business and Industry

Sponsors (4)

Last Action

Fiscal estimate received (on 02/03/2026)

bill text


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