The WSDA Custom Meat Program licenses persons that slaughter or
process uninspected meat food animals such as cattle, sheep, goats
and swine for the sole consumption of the owner. The license
categories are: Custom Meat Facility, Custom Slaughtering
Establishment & Custom Farm Slaughterer.
Review Chapter 69.04 RCW - Intrastate Commerce in Food, Drugs, and
Cosmetics (formerly: Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act).
Review Chapter 16-19 WAC - Custom Slaughterer-Handling of Custom
Meat Food Animal Carcasses at Meat.
Review Chapter 16.49 RCW - Custom Slaughtering.
Review the requirements for sanitary operations of custom meat
facilities, custom farm slaughtering and custom slaughtering
establishments as found in Title 21 CFR Part 110-Current good
manufacturing practice
Complete the application and send it with the required license fee
to the Olympia office. (Once the application and license fee have
been received a Food Safety Officer will contact you and set up a
date and inspection). If you are not approved for licensing we will
refund your licensing fee.
The license is non-transferable. Therefore if you sell your business
the new owners must pass a licensing inspection and obtain a new
license, if you move to a new location you must pass a licensing
inspection to obtain a new license for the new location,
Custom Slaughter Licenses expire June 30th each year, regardless of
the date the original license was issued.
Custom Meat Facility means the facility operated by any person
licensed by WSDA who engages in the business of preparing
uninspected meat for the sole consumption of the owner.
The custom meat facility must meet the requirements for sanitary
operations under the provisions of Chapter 16-19-300 WAC.
Before issuing any license to operate as a custom meat facility, the
department must inspect the applicant’s premises and slaughtering
equipment to determination that the facility is properly
constructed, has the proper sanitary and mechanical equipment, and
is capable of being maintained in a sanitary manner as required.
WAC 16-620-250 Brand identification on slaughtered cattle by owner.
Any person slaughtering his own cattle shall, in lieu of brand
inspection prior to slaughter, make the same identification as
required of a licensed slaughterer under WAC 16-620-230 on a
certificate of permit as prescribed in RCW 16.57.275 if the carcass
is to be transported to a custom cutting and wrapping facility. No
custom cutting and wrapping facility may receive a carcass from
other than a custom farm slaughterer mobile or fixed location or an
officially inspected slaughterhouse unless it is accompanied by the
certificate of permit. Such custom cutting and wrapping facility
shall, when the carcass is accompanied by a certificate of permit,
place an official Washington slaughter tag on each quarter of the
carcass. These tags must remain on the quarters, for identification,
until processing.
Custom Slaughtering Establishment means the facility operated by any
person licensed by WSDA who may engage in the business of
slaughtering meat food animals only for the consumption of the owner
at a fixed location.
The custom slaughtering establishment must meet the requirements for
sanitary operations under the provisions of Chapter 16-19-200 WAC.
Upon receipt of application, the director will provide for a hearing
to be held in the area where the applicant intends to operate a
custom slaughtering establishment.
No person shall operate a custom slaughtering establishment without
first establishing the need for such an establishment (chapter
16.49.454 RCW).
Additional information required with your application at time of
submission:
The location of the facility to be used.
The day or days of planned operation.
The distance to the closest official slaughtering establishment
(USDA/WSDA).
Whether the facility already exists or is to be constructed.
Floor plan and elevation drawing of existing or proposed facility.
Statement as to "WHAT IS THE NEED".
Before issuing any license to operate as a custom meat facility, the
department must inspect the applicant’s premises and slaughtering
equipment to determination that the facility is properly
constructed, has the proper sanitary and mechanical equipment, and
is capable of being maintained in a sanitary manner as required.
WAC 16-620-250 Brand identification on slaughtered cattle by owner.
Any person slaughtering his own cattle shall, in lieu of brand
inspection prior to slaughter, make the same identification as
required of a licensed slaughterer under WAC 16-620-230 on a
certificate of permit as prescribed in RCW 16.57.275 if the carcass
is to be transported to a custom cutting and wrapping facility. No
custom cutting and wrapping facility may receive a carcass from
other than a custom farm slaughterer mobile or fixed location or an
officially inspected slaughterhouse unless it is accompanied by the
certificate of permit. Such custom cutting and wrapping facility
shall, when the carcass is accompanied by a certificate of permit,
place an official Washington slaughter tag on each quarter of the
carcass. These tags must remain on the quarters, for identification,
until processing.
Custom Farm Slaughterer means any person licensed by WSDA to engage
in the business of slaughtering meat food animals only for the
consumption of the owner through the use of an approved mobile unit.
The mobile custom farm slaughtering units must meet the requirements
for sanitary operations under the provisions of Chapter 16-19-100
WAC.
Mobile custom farm slaughtering units must have:
A van body completely covering the unit, but which may exclude the
driver’s cab and the hoist. The van body must be made of material
that is nonporous and impervious to moisture.
A hoist of 2,000 pound capacity, capable of lifting a beef carcass
to a height that enables the carcass to clear the ground for
bleeding and evisceration.
A sterilizing tank constructed of smooth, cleanable, impervious and
durable material, large enough to allow complete sanitizing of tools
used in the slaughtering operation.
A water tank built into the vehicle constructed of smooth,
cleanable, impervious and durable material with a minimum capacity
of forty gallons.
Custom farm slaughtering-Identification of carcass and parts of
carcasses. Each operator must obtain from WSDA prior to slaughtering
an animal, an approved tagging device for identifying each carcass
slaughtered (Chapter 16-19-130 WAC).
Before issuing any license to operate as a custom farm slaughterer,
the department must inspect the applicant’s mobile unit and
slaughtering equipment to determination that the mobile unit is
properly constructed, has the proper sanitary and mechanical
equipment, and is capable of being maintained in a sanitary manner
as required.
Beef Slaughter Tags
WAC 16-620-240 Slaughter Tag.
Any person licensed as a custom farm slaughterer shall, in lieu
of mandatory brand inspection, complete and attach an official
department of agriculture paper slaughter tag to each of the four
quarters of all slaughtered cattle handled by that slaughterer.
These tags must remain on the quarters until the quarters are cut
and wrapped. The department will maintain a surveillance and
enforcement program to assure compliance with these regulations).
WAC 16-620-250 Brand identification on slaughtered cattle by owner.
Any person slaughtering his own cattle shall, in lieu of brand
inspection prior to slaughter, make the same identification as
required of a licensed slaughterer under WAC 16-620-230 on a
certificate of permit as prescribed in RCW 16.57.275 if the carcass
is to be transported to a custom cutting and wrapping facility. No
custom cutting and wrapping facility may receive a carcass from
other than a custom farm slaughterer mobile or fixed location or an
officially inspected slaughterhouse unless it is accompanied by the
certificate of permit. Such custom cutting and wrapping facility
shall, when the carcass is accompanied by a certificate of permit,
place an official Washington slaughter tag on each quarter of the
carcass. These tags must remain on the quarters, for identification,
until processing.
Carcasses or parts of carcasses processed by a custom farm
slaughterer, custom meat facility or custom slaughtering
establishment must be identified by an approved tagging device
obtained from WSDA.