A committee of various interests from the U.S. peanut industry have asked a
Georgia peanut crop inspector to pilot a bar code labeling approach designed to
not only serve the needs of the state and federal governments, but also the food
manufacturing industry. The codes allow peanut processors to quickly identify,
receive and inventory peanuts as they arrive at their plants.
In fact, processors helped to initiate the project. In need of a better
tracking system to manage their peanut inventory through the entire supply
chain, they turned to the American Peanut Shellers Association (APSA) and the
American Peanut Council (APC) to look at the problem and help develop solutions.
APSA and APC assembled a committee, co-chaired by Birdsong Peanut Company and
the Golden Peanut Company. Since Georgia is the nation's largest peanut
producer, Georgia Federal State Shipping Point Inspection Service, a private
non-profit organization charged with inspecting and certifying Georgia's peanut
crop, was also a key member of the committee.
The new system, designed by Stratix Corporation of Atlanta, Ga., integrates
Label Matrix bar code labeling software from StrandWare Inc. and four Zebra bar
code printers powered by a dedicated personal computer that prints bar coded
tags on self-adhesive labels and perforated card stock. An IBM AS400 mainframe
assigns lot numbers and handles billing.
"This is the first time a USDA-graded raw agricultural product has moved
through this kind of inventory system," commented Howard Valentine, director of
research and technology for the American Peanut Council. "There's a little more
involved with more quality parameters since peanuts are directly edible
products."
As a peanut inspector, Georgia Federal State typically deploys inspectors to
shelling plants to monitor quality and oversee the labeling of peanuts. Georgia
Federal State prints the tags on a heavy colored paper stock, which are then
attached to burlap bags, large "tote" sacks and seal boxes. Georgia Federal
State uses an offset printing press to produce labels in large batches for each
shelling plant. A typical printing order is 40 lots of 415 tags (over 16,000
tags). Tags are required for burlap bags, nylon mesh tote sacks and boxes that
hold 2270 lbs.
With the new pilot system, Georgia Federal State continues to produce the
labels in batches in response to order requests from shellers, but now each
label is unique with specific information that enables processors to trace a
product history back to the source and to more easily integrate product handling
with their internal systems. In addition to the state and crop year, each 4" x
9" color-coded bar code label now includes a shelling company identifier
provided by the Uniform Code Council (UCC), an item number describing the U.S.
Grade, the APSA Grade, kind of container, the gross and net weight and a
sequential serial number that resets with each new lot. A second "license plate"
bar code on each label has the UCC and a non-resetting sequential number that
ties it back to the first bar code.
"This is the first change that we've made to the process since we began using
the offset printing more than 35 years ago," said Allen Houston, Georgia Federal
State printing supervisor. "We knew printing but we needed to become educated
concerning bar codes. Now we see the value because the bar coded tags provide
much more information."
The installation had its challenges. One of the peculiarities of the way that
peanuts are packaged is that the tote sacks and boxes, require duplicate labels.
The first label is sewn to the outside of the sack or applied to the side of the
box. A second, duplicate label, is affixed to the drawstring or strapping to
ensure that the container is not opened and the contents are secure. The
labeling software was set up to print sequential labels. It had to be configured
to print duplicates of the labels used with the tote sacks and boxes but not for
the other labels for use on the burlap bags.
Stratix, a Strandware Premier Partner, worked to implement the application
along with the software vendor, Strandware by working with Georgia Federal
State. The duplicate printing capability is now standard in all StrandWare
products. Once configured, the new system was able to meet all of the
requirements set by the committee.
According to Valentine, the APSA and APC hope that the bar code system will
be adopted by the other peanut producing states.