The most pressing worry for many executives and managers working in food safety isn't compliance with FSMA provisions. It's not auditing vendors for FSVP compliance. It's not stricter FDA Food Defense inspections that started in September. It's probably not even the increase in recalls we've seen over the last few years.
All of those are important challenges, and getting them right is critical for food producers who care about quality and safety or want to avoid a costly food recall. But they're also normal food safety challenges: the things you expect to deal with in the everyday work of protecting public safety.
The real crisis keeping managers up at night is that there are not enough trained food service professionals to handle even standard workloads, let alone take up the growing list of emerging food safety challenges on the horizon. And with output forecasted to rise significantly, these staffing shortages will worsen.
Food safety managers need to understand the root causes of these shortages and address them before they turn a nightmare into a public health crisis. One key area of focus is food safety specialist attrition. Getting experienced, qualified personnel to not leave the field is the first step to stopping the bleeding and beginning to recover from this historical labor shortage.
Nobody working in food safety would disagree that there's a crisis brewing in staffing and labor availability. But it's difficult to get a handle on the scope of the problem without seeing the stats:
None of these stats should be surprising to industry veterans. The truth is, the pandemic just accelerated trends that had been developing for years: older food safety professionals were retiring or changing careers, and younger workers weren't especially interested in the field. Something needs to change.
Exploring every problem with food safety as a career is well beyond the scope of a single article, so we'll focus on the low-hanging fruit: attrition. Attrition has been a major post-pandemic problem across most industries, with many older workers choosing to retire early or exit their demanding careers for easier jobs as they wait to reach retirement age.
This is especially true in food safety due to a number of factors specific to this career:
What can companies do to stem this tide of attrition? The obvious answer is to increase pay scales, but that's not really a satisfactory long-term solution for companies or workers. Especially as younger workers (who prioritize development, company culture, and work/life balance over pay) come into the field and quickly burn out.
Instead, companies should prioritize structural issues that improve culture and work quality. Some suggestions include:
More pay would also likely be appreciated — it almost always is — but the reality is that solving attrition problems is about addressing workplace culture rather than adjusting the total compensation matrix.
Meanwhile, companies still having difficulties filling critical food safety positions can look at outsourcing roles while determining the right approach to overcome this challenge.
If you need help replacing a skilled food safety professional, contact AIB International to learn about our Assign an Expert program. This service provides temporary placements to ensure business continuity during transitions. In just seven days, we can have a food safety expert at your facilities in any role you need. After all, food safety is too vital to be hindered by a shortage of qualified applicants and high turnover rates.