Toronto Chinatown restaurant closed after rat photos surface
The National Post reported Friday that Toronto public health authorities shut down one of Chinatown’s most prominent restaurants after a passerby took a photo of rats on a countertop.
Passerby Vivian Hui said rats were visible through a window of the Dumpling House Restaurant yesterday afternoon, adding,
"I noticed what I thought was a cat on the counter inside Dumpling House but it turned out to be four or five rats piled on top of each other eating from a bowl of flour or something."
She e-mailed her boyfriend, Matt Alexander, who alerted health authorities. He also sent the photo to blogto.com, a popular Toronto city blog.
Toronto Public Health said inspectors went to the restaurant immediately, saw evidence of an infestation, and shut the restaurant down.
A manager who answered the phone at the restaurant said they agreed with health inspectors that the restaurant needed to be shut down, adding,
"I fully agree. If there’s a problem, some indication, we have to take it seriously. We have pest control guys working on the case right now. … ‘We have a very good reputation. That’s why we are taking this very seriously. I think [this shutdown] may affect business for a very short time, but not very much because our cleaning conditions are good."
The manager said he had never seen rats himself in the restaurant, and said any rat problem is not confined to Dumpling House. He said downtown has a rat problem generally, and the city needs to do something about it. Same as New York.
Passerby Vivian Hui said rats were visible through a window of the Dumpling House Restaurant yesterday afternoon, adding, "I noticed what I thought was a cat on the counter inside Dumpling House but it turned out to be four or five rats piled on top of each other eating from a bowl of flour or something."
She e-mailed her boyfriend, Matt Alexander, who alerted health authorities. He also sent the photo to blogto.com, a popular Toronto city blog.
Toronto Public Health said inspectors went to the restaurant immediately, saw evidence of an infestation, and shut the restaurant down.
A manager who answered the phone at the restaurant said they agreed with health inspectors that the restaurant needed to be shut down, adding,
"I fully agree. If there’s a problem, some indication, we have to take it seriously. We have pest control guys working on the case right now. … ‘We have a very good reputation. That’s why we are taking this very seriously. I think [this shutdown] may affect business for a very short time, but not very much because our cleaning conditions are good."
The manager said he had never seen rats himself in the restaurant, and said any rat problem is not confined to Dumpling House. He said downtown has a rat problem generally, and the city needs to do something about it. Same as New York.
Trackbacks (1)
Links to blogs that reference this article
Trackback URL
http://barfblog.foodsafety.ksu.edu/admin/trackback/61048
http://barfblog.foodsafety.ksu.edu/admin/trackback/61048
BarfBlog -
February 20, 2008 11:19 AM
Doug posted the initial story about this eatery last week. The Toronto Star is reporting today that the "Rat-plagued" Dumpling House at 328 Spadina Ave. is now open again. The Star reports that the restaurant was closed over the long...
Post A Comment / Question
Use this form to add a comment to this entry.
Send To A Friend
Use this form to send this entry to a friend via email.






Where rats are a big problem in restaurants, they are also a problem in homes, schools, and other buildings. Rats, birds, and other pests are a health and safety hazard because they carry diseases that can be passed to humans. There are easy, cruelty-free, and environmentally safe methods that anyone can employ to keep these rodents at bay. This restaurant, and anyone else with a rodent infestation problem should look into that.
~Kathleen at Bird-X
I agree that something has to be done to control uninvited animals to prevent any hazard. Beyond doubt Toronto neighborhoods have to face this problem, just as any other big city in the world. However, I think we should not exaggerate the problem. Panic may cause unnecessary measures and even cruelty towards animals.