PEAL Countdown: Allergen Management That Protects Your Event—and Your Audit With the Plain English Allergen Labelling (PEAL) deadline approaching in February 2026 and Standard 3.2.2A embedded in audits, allergen management has shifted from “best practice” to “business critical.” Here’s how caterers and event operators can turn new compliance obligations into consistent, profitable, low‑risk operations. 1)
Allergen Risk Is Operational Risk: Nail 3.2.2A and PEAL Active enforcement of Standard 3.2.2A and Plain English Allergen Labelling (PEAL) has moved allergen control from “nice to have” to “board-level risk” for caterers and event operators. Here’s how to translate this regulatory shift into practical, defensible systems that protect guests, revenue and reputation. 1) The
No Verification, No Service: Allergen Compliance That Protects Events Situation type: new compliance obligations and an operational risk trend. With Standard 3.2.2A actively enforced across Australia and PEAL raising the bar on clear, consistent allergen information, caterers and food service operators face heightened scrutiny—and heightened stakes. Inside the Room: When a Brioche Roll Becomes a
PEAL + 3.2.2A: Caterers’ No‑Excuses Playbook to 25 Feb 2026 New compliance obligations are here: FSANZ’s Plain English Allergen Labelling (PEAL) is mandatory for new labels with the transition ending 25 Feb 2026, and Standard 3.2.2A raises the bar on training, supervision and documented controls. Here’s how small catering businesses can turn risk into a
PEAL, 3.2.2A and the Buffet Trap Australia’s PEAL allergen labelling rules and Standard 3.2.2A are now being actively enforced. If you pre-pack items or offer display foods, this is a new compliance obligation with real regulatory, safety, and reputational stakes. Here’s a practical playbook for small caterers and food service operators. 1) What Just Changed—and
Stop the Substitution Spiral: 3.2.2A and PEAL Compliance With Standard 3.2.2A now enforced and PEAL allergen labelling in the stock-in-trade phase across Australia, caterers face tighter oversight. Here’s how to turn this compliance moment into safer service and smoother operations before peak event season. 1) What’s happening—and why it matters This is a regulatory update
The 30-Day Dental IPC Makeover: Win Audits After the Dec 2024 Update New implementation options released in Dec 2024 clarify what “good” looks like for infection prevention and control (IPC) in primary care dental practice. This business story shows how a small clinic closed compliance gaps, built a single source of truth, and turned audit
From Scramble to System: NCC Compliance That Scales Small construction businesses are under pressure: NCC updates, stricter enforcement of the Model Code of Practice: Construction Work, and regulators zeroing in on high‑risk work planning and site amenities. Here’s how one growing builder turned compliance chaos into a repeatable, auditable system—and how you can too. 1)
Audit-Ready Dental IPC: The December 2024 Playbook New implementation options released in December 2024 by the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality clarify exactly what good looks like for infection prevention and control (IPC) in primary care dental practice. Here’s a practical, business-focused story of how one small practice got audit-ready fast—by aligning to Dental
Traceability or Trouble: Align Your Dental IPC Now The Australian Commission’s December 2024 options for implementing the Preventing and Controlling Infections Standard in primary care dental practice are now live. Here’s how small practices can align their infection control manual with the Dental Board of Australia guideline and current national standards—closing the traceability gap without