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University of Minnesota Extension
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Growing safe food

Our Good Agricultural Practices (GAPs) Education Program works with Minnesota’s produce farmers to develop and implement on-farm food safety plans.

Who needs a written food safety plan?

Food safety is a good idea and good for your business. At this time, most Minnesota growers do not need to have their farm and produce GAP audited unless their customers require it. These are typically:

  • Distributors
  • Grocery stores
  • Schools
  • Restaurants

If you need to have an audit, the first thing you need is a written food safety plan. The plan templates and log sheets listed below are designed to help you pass a GAP audit. 

Even if you are directly marketing your produce and don’t need an audit, having a food safety plan and following good hygiene and sanitation practices can benefit your operation. It will assure your customers that you are proactively reducing the risk of microbial contamination on your produce. 

GAPS as guidance, not regulation

Get started by adapting the standard operating procedures and log sheet templates for your farm. The material provided here is guidance, not regulation, and should be applied as appropriate and feasible to your fruit and vegetable operations. Your plan should fit your farm. 

Working with Extension

Our on-farm Good Agricultural Practices (GAPs) Education Program provides trainings, site visits, templates and technical guidance for Minnesota’s produce farmers to help you develop and implement on-farm food safety plans and prepare for GAPs audits.

Farm food safety planning

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Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA)

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Food safety practices

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Page survey

© 2026 Regents of the University of Minnesota. All rights reserved. The University of Minnesota is an equal opportunity educator and employer. This work is supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture.