4.12.404 SIGNIFICANCE OR GRAVITY OF A VIOLATION
(1) The department in determining the amount of
a civil penalty will consider the significance and gravity of a violation as
required by 80-9-303, MCA. Examples of
significance and gravity factors that may increase or decrease a penalty
follow; they are neither inclusive or necessarily additive in substance, order
presented, or number:
(a) a history of inspections with no violations
may decrease a penalty. No inspection
history and no record of violations may have a neutral effect on the penalty
amount. A history of violations or
failure to correct past violations may increase the penalty;
(b) a penalty may be decreased when a person
agrees to correct a violation and follows through on an agreed upon schedule;
(c) the presence of multiple violations at an
inspection may increase a penalty;
(d) a person's cooperation during an inspection
or investigation may decrease a penalty.
Otherwise, this factor will have a neutral effect on penalty
determination;
(e) widespread scope of a violation may increase
a penalty. Examples of considerations
in determining scope include geographic distribution of the violation, number
of persons or animals affected, the number of products involved, and the amount
or number of lots involved;
(f) a person's timely and voluntary settlement of
damages may decrease a penalty. This
factor will be considered when written documentation of settlement is received
in the department from the charged person and the person suffering damage;
(g) a penalty may be increased upon
demonstration that a person benefited economically from the violation;
(h) violations that result in harm to animals
may be cause for increasing a penalty;
(i) violations that result in or have the
potential to result in illegal residues in food, commodities or food-producing
animals may increase the penalty amount;
(j) label violations that result in the actual
or potential failure of a commercial feed to perform according to claims may
increase a penalty. Examples of such
label violations include deficiency in any ingredient or composition of
ingredients represented by the label, misleading, incomplete or incorrect label
directions, or misbranding;
(k) a violation that
results in condemnation or destruction due to adulteration or other inability
to utilize a feed for its intended purpose may be cause for increasing a
penalty; and
(l) the amount of
deviation as a result of official analytical results from an official sample
beyond the action level as compared to the guaranteed claim may increase or
decrease the penalty, respective to the amount of the deviation.
(i) This subsection will
be applied effective July 1, 2002.
History: Sec. 80-9-103 and 80-9-303, MCA; IMP, Sec. 80-9-303, MCA; NEW, 2000 MAR p. 3333, Eff. 12/8/00; AMD, 2002 MAR p. 778, Eff. 3/15/02.