Homemakers, maids to get food safety training
AUTHORITY PLANS ONE-DAY PROGRAMME FOR A NOMINAL FEE
Homemakers and housemaids in the emirate will soon have an opportunity to get a formal training on food safety by paying a nominal fee.
The Abu Dhabi Food Control Authority (ADFCA) will offer a one-day training programme in cooperation with private training institutions to ensure food safety at homes, a senior official told Gulf News.
“It will be an optional training programme and not mandatory at all,” Thamer Al Qasimi, director of Communications and Community Services Department at ADFCA, said in an interview.
The initiative is in response to many enquiries the authority received from homemakers, he said.
“Most of them wanted to train their housemaids and some of them wanted training for themselves.” Therefore, he said, the authority has decided to extend an ongoing programme ‘the Essential Food Safety Training programme (EFST)’ [for food handlers] to homemakers and housemaids.
The programme will be launched after Ramadan and all related details such as fee, names and contact details of private institutions offering the training etc will be announced beforehand, Al Qasimi said.
When asked about the fee to charged for the training programme, he said: “It will be nominal.”
As the successful trainees get a certificate, it will help housemaids in their career. “They are coming from different countries … most of them are uneducated. This will be a golden opportunity for them to get a formal training and certification,” the official said.
Violations reduced
The authority has already trained more than 264,000 food handlers working in food businesses across the emirate under the EFST since 2008. This has helped improve the food safety standards considerably and the number of violations has been falling down over the years, he said.
“The number of violations in 2017 went down by 19 per cent, compared to 2016,” Al Qasimi said. The food safety related incidents at homes have also gone down over the years, he said, although figures were not readily available with him as other government departments are involved in handling food poisoning cases at homes.
“Our continuous awareness campaigns targeting homemakers have played a big role in reducing the incidents,” the official said.
He said the training programme for homemakers and housemaids will further enhance the food safety standards in the emirate.
264,000
food handlers already trained by the food authority