If you run a community food service in Meath - in Navan, Ashbourne, Trim, Kells and Ratoath or anywhere across the county - food safety law applies to you exactly as it does in any Irish kitchen. This guide is written for meals on wheels and community food services in Meath and shows how to meet your HACCP duties and certify your team online with a single HACCP course.
Meath is known for a fast-growing commuter county with new restaurants, cafes and a major beef and tillage farming base. That local mix shapes the food safety pressures a community food service here faces every week, but the legal baseline is the same nationwide: procedures based on the HACCP principles under Regulation (EC) No 852/2004, and trained food handlers.
The hazards a community food service in Meath must control
A typical community food service handles hot meals cooked centrally and delivered to elderly and vulnerable recipients. The risks that bite hardest are vulnerable recipients, long delivery-and-holding times and temperature loss in transit - and they peak during a delivery round dropping hot meals across a wide rural area. The single most valuable control is to treat recipients as high-risk, hold food above 63C in transit and minimise the time between cooking and eating.
What HACCP training covers
- The biological, chemical, physical and allergenic hazards in your food.
- Critical control points and limits: 75C cooking core, cold storage at or below 5C, hot holding at or above 63C.
- Personal hygiene, handwashing and reporting illness.
- Cross-contamination, the 14 EU allergens and cleaning and sanitising.
- The records that prove due diligence when an Environmental Health Officer calls.
Certifying your Meath team online
There is no need to close for a classroom day or travel for training. Staff complete the online HACCP course from Meath - or anywhere - in about an hour and download an FSAI-aligned certificate the same day. See HACCP in Meath for the local landing page, or read the food handlers guide and the owners guide.
Online training gives your people the knowledge and awareness the law requires; you still provide the task-specific training and supervision on site. For meals on wheels and community food services across Meath, that combination is the fastest route to a compliant, confident kitchen.
Related reading
- Full HACCP guide for meals on wheels and community food services
- The temperature danger zone
- What happens during an EHO inspection
Certify your Meath community food service team today
Ready to go? Start the HACCP course now. It takes about an hour, the FSAI-aligned certificate is issued the same day, and you can certify a whole team at once. You can also explore the HACCP training options or read more on the HACCP blog.
Frequently asked questions
Is HACCP training required for meals on wheels and community food services in Meath?
Yes. Irish and EU food law applies across Meath the same as everywhere else. Every community food service must have HACCP-based procedures and trained food handlers. The online course meets the training requirement.
Can my Meath staff do the HACCP course online?
Yes. Staff anywhere in Meath, from Navan outward, complete the online HACCP course in about an hour and receive a certificate the same day.
What is the biggest food safety risk for a community food service here?
The risks that matter most are vulnerable recipients, long delivery-and-holding times and temperature loss in transit. The key control is to treat recipients as high-risk, hold food above 63C in transit and minimise the time between cooking and eating.