3-710. Powers and duties; preemption


A. The department may acquire and distribute to persons interested useful
information relative to the preparation for market, handling, purchasing, transportation,
storage and marketing of eggs and egg products, including the demonstration of how to
classify eggs and egg products in accordance with the uniform standards and grades
prescribed pursuant to this chapter.


B. The department may issue in booklet form copies of this article containing
complete descriptive terms as to shell, aircell, white, yolk and germ, and may make
changes in definitions of terms and grades as they are made and promulgated by the United
States department of agriculture.


C. Upon request of the United States government, and others, the director may
negotiate and sign cooperative agreements to do inspection and grading services and
charge and receive payment for the reasonable cost thereof. The funds received for such
services shall be deposited, pursuant to sections 35-146 and 35-147, in the state egg
inspection fund.


D. When the production of papers, books and records relating to any matter under
investigation is deemed advisable, the director may apply to the superior court in any
county for an order requiring the production of the papers, books and records. If the
court is satisfied that the papers, books and records are pertinent to the matter under
investigation, their production shall be ordered.


E. A complaint filed with the department charging a noncompliance with or violation
of any provision of this article shall be in writing and signed by the complainant.


F. The supervisor and inspectors shall enforce the provisions of this article in
conformity with rules adopted by the director. The refusal of an officer authorized under
this article to carry out the orders and directions of the director in the enforcement of
this article or prosecutions thereunder is neglect of duty. The director shall make and
enforce such rules as he deems necessary to carry out the provisions of this article.


G. An inspector may enter and inspect any place or conveyance within the state over
which he has supervision where eggs are produced, candled, incubated, stored, packed,
delivered for shipment, loaded, shipped, transported or sold, and may inspect all
invoices, eggs and the cases and containers thereof and equipment found in the places or
conveyances, and may take for inspection representative samples of the invoices, eggs and
cases or containers for the purpose of determining whether or not any provision of this
article has been violated.


H. An inspector may, while enforcing the provisions of this article, seize and hold
as evidence an advertisement, sign, placard, invoice, case or container of eggs or egg
products or all or any part of any pack, load, lot consignment or shipment of eggs or egg
products packed, stored, delivered for shipment, loaded, shipped, transported or sold in
violation of any provisions of this article.


I. The department may prescribe minimum standards for egg processing plants and
sanitary standards for the processing of shell eggs. The department shall establish these
standards by rule. Chemicals used in egg processing plants, sanitizers used in egg
processing, egg soaps, egg oil and other substances used in processing shell eggs are
subject to the approval of the director.


J. The director shall adopt rules for poultry husbandry and the production of eggs
sold in this state. This subsection does not apply to egg producers operating or
controlling the operation of one or more egg ranches each having fewer than twenty
thousand egg-laying hens producing eggs.


K. Consistency of poultry husbandry practices for the production of eggs is a
statewide matter. The regulation of poultry husbandry practices related to the production
of eggs is not subject to further regulation by a county, city, town or other political
subdivision of this state.