2.1 Profile of Local Authority
The Census 2021 survey reveals that the council area’s population increased by 4% from around 365,200 in 2011 to 379,600 in 2021 – equivalent to adding an additional town like Bridport. This is lower than the overall increase for England (6.6%), where the population grew by nearly 3.5 million to 56,489,800.
It also shows an increase of 24.8% in people aged 65 years (and over) and 33% of those aged 90 and over, while there has been a decrease of 2.8% in people aged 15 to 64 years and a 3.2% decrease in children under 15 years.
The total area is approximately 250,000 hectares consisting of 95 miles of coast which is a designated UNESCO World Heritage site, the only one in England. Over half the area is designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and 7% is designated Sites of Scientific Special Interest.
The area is predominantly rural and semi-rural with the larger towns being Dorchester, Weymouth, and Wimborne. About 22,000 businesses are registered in the county, 86% being micro firms in the areas of manufacturing, health, retail, education, and hospitality. Tourism and agriculture are also significant industries.
2.2 Organisational Structure
The food safety service is part of the Food, Safety and Port Health team which in turn is part of the Public Health and Prevention directorate. The service is managed by the Food, Safety and Port Health Service Manager.
Service structures were formalised in February 2021, and all staff are now on Dorset Council terms and conditions.
There are two teams managed by Team Leaders (reporting to the Service Manager) comprising Environmental Health Officers and Senior Technical Officers. The teams cover West and East areas, and each Team Leader has a lead role for interventions in that geographical area.
In 2021, respective predecessor councils’ out of hours services for environmental health emergencies were merged to provide cover for the full Dorset Council area. The Place Management Board decided in 2023/2024 to trial removing the service for a year with associated review to evaluate the impact.
Following the trial the service was removed and replaced with the Head of Service/Service Managers/Team Leaders working on a ‘best endeavours’ basis to respond to any partner agency requiring our service. Such situations will typically be emergency situations requiring a multi-agency response.
2.3 Scope of Food Service
The scope of the work covers food safety, occupational health and safety, port health, public health, and communicable disease functions of environmental health. Both Team Leader’s fulfil the Lead Food Officer role for the service as required by the Food Standards Agency. There is a separate trading standards team within Public Health and Prevention who undertake official food standards controls with regards to trading standards.
Five port health officers are authorised to provide a port health service, during 2022/23 one of the Senior TSO attended The Association of Port Health Authorities: An Introduction to Ship Sanitation Certificates and the International Health Regulations 2005 training course and attended the practical ship inspection course.
The Team Leader (West Team) is the lead Port Health Officer and manages an internal training programme to ensure that there is sufficient resilience for the provision of Port Health services.
The council uses the services of accredited external laboratories for food safety analysis work:
Microbiological examination is carried out by The UK Health Security Agency, Food, Water and Environmental Microbiology Laboratory, Porton, Hants.
The council has a Service Level Agreement with UKHSA FWE labs, which is agreed annually.
Chemical and other analytical work is carried out by Hampshire Scientific Services, Consulting Scientists & Public Analysts, Southsea, Hants and would be arranged when required.
Official controls carried on by this authority are currently being monitored by the Food Standards Agency (FSA) against the Food Law Code of Practice. In addition, the FSA have the power to audit official controls being carried out by the service at any time.
During 24/25 the FSPH team were audited by the FSA. The audit was a focused audit to assess the delivery of official controls in relation to the traceability of shellfish (live bivalve molluscs and gastropods) harvested in England. The audit took place on 16 and 17 July 2025. The auditors requested several documents before the audit and during the audit. Interviews were held with key members of staff, and a ‘reality check’ visit was conducted.
The audit report was received on the 28 January 2025 and was largely positive. There were 2 recommendations.
One was regarded service planning and as a result additional details have been included in the service plan under the ‘Demand on the Food Service’ section.
The second recommendation regraded officer authorisation, training and competency. Work on this has started and will be taking place over 2025/2026 with the Team Leaders completing a competency matrix for each of their team based on the FSA’s Competency Framework. A gap analysis will then be undertaken and used to create a team training plan. We will produce a policy which clearly links officer competency to their authorisation.
During 2024/2025 the Trading Standards Team and Licensing Team transferred all their electronic data and systems into the IDOX cloud-based system, which environmental health functions have been using for over 7 years. This caused significant disruption to the work of the FSPH team due to a downtime period of over 6 weeks whilst the information was transferred into the IDOX system.
During this period, the team implemented temporary measures to manage service requests, accidents, infectious disease notifications, accident reports, sampling, routine inspections, new food business registrations and report on the Food Hygiene Rating Scheme. #
2.4 Demand on the Food Service
There are 5381 registered food businesses within the Dorset Council area as of the 31 March 2025. The majority are restaurants, caterers, hotels, guest houses and B&Bs, many being seasonal because of the demands of the tourist industry. We also have several specialist producers carrying out complex processes. Food premises are subject to inspection and are risk rated using categories from A to E.
A breakdown of these is shown below.
Profile of food businesses
Profile of food businesses |
|
Premises rated A |
1 |
Premises rated B |
51 |
Premises rated C |
383 |
Premises rated D |
2178 |
Premises rated E |
2662 |
Premises rated F |
110 |
Complex food production
Approved Premises - 66 made up of: |
Cold Stores |
5 |
Processing Plants - Dairy |
19 premises including: Large dairies / small dairies both carrying out pasteurisation in line and batch including selling via vending machines Small and large soft and hard unpasteurised and pasteurised cheese producers Premises who cut and rewrap dairy products. Premises making yoghurt including sheep and goats milk yoghurt Premises making Ice cream Premises carrying out milk pasteurisation and sales via churn/vending machines. Also premises Kefir, Butter and Cream Soft cheese production with pasteurised milk. Small scale. Mozzarella, scamorza, ricotta, giuncatta |
Processing plant – shellfish and fish |
12 premises including Premises carrying out shellfish purification Premises shucking scallops Premises carrying out fish processing Shellfish dispatch centres Smoking and curing fish Canning of fish |
Repacking/rewrapping - dairy |
3 premises |
Meat preparation/processing plants |
12 premises including: Premises producing Charcuterie Premises producing Jerky Premises smoking meat Premises producing dehydrated meat products Premises producing gammon, bacon, sausages and burgers Premises producing cook / chill meals for service to schools |
Egg Packing stations |
14 premises |
Mollusc processing |
1 premises |
The above table illustrates a substantial number of complex processes and specialist producers for which the FSPH team have regulatory responsibility. Maintaining expertise for all these processes across all officers is very challenging. Our approach therefore needs to ensure that we have the necessary expertise within service. For example, advice for officers about shellfish is provided by a specific lead officer. One of the team leaders has a food processing background providing expertise, advice and support to other officers particularly in the areas of smoking fish and meats and canning.
We take advantage of training on complex food processes including charcuterie production, drying and smoking. On occasion businesses are willing to enable other officers in addition to the inspecting officer to observe the processes providing valuable training for those who require it.
Based on the total number of food registered premises in Dorset on 31 March 2025, which was 5,381 against the total food FTE, which was 11, this equates to a total of 490 premises per 1 FTE. This is considered to be high especially when there are the 66 complex premises many of which are rated B and thus require an annual inspection.
Only 6.26 of the 11 food FTE are competent and experienced to carry out inspections of approved and complex premises. With regards to shellfish this is reduce to 3 FTE.
In addition to planned interventions officers must also inspect new businesses. In 24/25 a total of 611 new registrations were received. The trend locally and nationally has been towards increasing numbers of newly registered businesses each year.
We received 217 food complaints last year some of which required extensive investigation.
Over 20 procedures require regular review by the Team Leaders. This includes management of a detailed Shellfish Registration Procedure and linked process, and a Local Action Plan (LAP), which explains actions required in the case of any shellfish incidents.
To enable effective regulation of the local shellfish industry and complex, specialist producers' we are required to ensure officers' competency is maintained through specialist training. This inevitably places considerable pressure on the training budget. We ensure that officer training is as focused and efficient as possible.
There are currently two classified shellfish bed; one has only very recently been classified (in April 2025). The team undertakes the official sampling of the classified beds and is a member of the Southern Shellfish Liaison Group to provide consistency in the approach to regulating shellfish production in the south of England. This work informs the National Shellfish Group, of which we are also a member.
Port Health work is undertaken by the authority. Royal Fleet Auxiliary (RFA) ships are often in the port, along with a cable laying ship and bunkering vessels; animal feed and cement are products commonly delivered to the port. The number of cruise ships visiting the port annually continues to increase with 60 vessels having visited or due to visit in 2025. Portland Port is not a Designated Port of Entry and currently no food is exported; however orange juice is imported but is not classed as High-Risk food, nor a product of animal origin.
Dorset Port Health Authority is designated as an approved port for issuing Ship Sanitation Exemption Control Certificates (SSCEC) and Ships Sanitation Control Certificates (SSCC) under the International Health Regulations 2005.
In 2024-2025 the Port Health activity was:
Port Health Activity |
Number |
Ship Sanitation Inspections |
18 |
Ship Water Samples |
39 |
Maritime Declarations of Health |
0 |
There have been no significant issues where English may not be the first language at food businesses, but a translator service is offered if officers have concerns.
The seasonal aspect of many businesses means there is more demand on the team from April to October. There are also several medium and large-scale events and festivals which take place most of which have a food element. The main events which are now established and place a demand on the service are:
- Camp Bestival – pre-event SAG attendance, pre-event site safety inspection, inspection of traders as appropriate.
- Dorset County Show – over two days, liaison with organisers, inspection of traders as appropriate
- Purbeck Valley Folk Festival - pre-event SAG attendance, pre-event site safety inspection, inspection of traders as appropriate
- Weymouth Seafood Festival - liaison with organisers, inspection of traders as appropriate
- Large number of small to medium festivals and food events – SAG, pre-event letter and guidance, inspections of traders as necessary
Priorities for 25/26
- Complete the food inspection program – which this year consists of 1283 premises.
- Continue to triage new premises so that the higher risk ones receive timely inspections.
- Continue to administer the Food Hygiene Rating System
- Continue the Alternative Enforcement Strategy (AES) for E premises to address the backlog.
- Introduce an advice service as part of a plan to increase income and support new businesses.
- Trial the use of the IDOX application for carrying out food inspections.
- Respond as a team to the FSA consultation on proposed changes to the Food Law Code of Practice.
- Review any affected procedures when the revised FSA Food Law Code of Practice is published.
Team working
Dorset Council is embracing hybrid working, and the Food, Safety and Port Health team collaborated in June 2021 to put in place a team Charter to consider how this would work. Officers can utilise homeworking, alongside inspections, visits, and the office to support the team members with balancing work and homelife, whilst providing a service to our customers during core hours.
The team can be contacted during normal opening hours through the main council telephone number 01305 251010
Significant matters for 2025/2026
Programmed Inspection plan
As mentioned above the FSA expect us to now work to the Food Law Code of Practice. Below is the programmed inspection plan for 2024/25
Risk Categories |
Number |
A |
1 |
B |
48 |
C |
190 |
D |
1011 |
Overdue |
33 |
Total |
1283 |
We will monitor the programme closely and complete the FSA 2 temperature checks across the year.
2.5 Regulation Policy
There is an overarching Enforcement Policy for Dorset Council and one for Regulatory Services. Enforcement action takes into consideration this policy, relevant Food Law Code of Practice and the Better Regulation Delivery Office Regulator’s code 2014. The service adopts a graduated approach to enforcement which is clear, consistent, open, proportional, fair and based on the principles of risk.