Highway maintenance; Town of New Market.
Requires all food handlers to complete training on celiac disease and safe gluten-free handling, with managers also trained on broad allergen awareness.
Requires all food handlers to complete training on celiac disease and safe gluten-free handling, with managers also trained on broad allergen awareness.
Status and effective date
- Enacted as Public Act 104‑0090. Governor approved August 1, 2025. Effective January 1, 2026.
- Amends the Food Handling Regulation Enforcement Act (410 ILCS 625), principally Section 3.07, and adds a new Section 3.09.
Purpose
- To expand and standardize allergen‑awareness training for food service managers and to require training for all food handlers on celiac disease and safe handling of gluten‑free foods. The measure clarifies accreditation, content, transferability, and enforcement expectations.
Key provisions
- Certified food service sanitation managers (employed by restaurants as defined in the Act) must:
- Complete basic allergen awareness training within 30 days of employment and every 3 years thereafter.
- Use training programs accredited to the ASTM E2659‑09 standard (e.g., ANSI‑accredited certificate programs).
Required training topics (allergen awareness) include:
New Section 3.09 — Gluten‑free / celiac training for all food handlers:
Accreditation and transferability:
Documentation and enforcement:
Who is affected
- Primary: certified food service sanitation managers employed by restaurants (restaurants are defined as businesses with ≥51% ready‑to‑eat immediate‑consumption food sales).
- Broad: all food handlers covered by the Act are required to complete gluten/celiac training.
- Secondary: training providers (must meet accreditation standards), multi‑state food businesses (may need to align internal programs), and health department inspectors (will review proof of training).
Potential impacts
- Increased compliance costs and administrative tasks for restaurants and food service employers to ensure timely, accredited training and retraining every three years.
- Training market implications: demand for accredited courses and providers will increase; standardized content may improve consistency in allergen and gluten handling.
- Public‑health benefit: aims to reduce allergic reactions and gluten cross‑contamination incidents for consumers with food allergies or celiac disease.
Notes
- The Act replaces and refines prior language; various amendments during the legislative process added sesame and strengthened gluten‑related training requirements.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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