Festivals

  • Posted: April 23rd, 2012 - 3:49pm by Ben Chapman

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    Ben Chapman

    I like rock and roll. I like ribs. Rock 'n Ribs in Campbell Springfield, MO seems like a pretty great place to get your fingers sticky and listen to cover bands play songs from Sticky Fingers. Spring signifies the start of festival season, when tourism dollars pump into towns; the local kids will drink underage; and, hopefully no one gets sick from foodborne illness.

    Festivals and temporary events have had their share of outbreaks in the past (Taste of Chicago in 2007, Folklorama in 2010 and numerous fundraisers and community dinners). Often there are folks at booths who are not full-time food handlers, dealing with lineups, makeshift heat sources and poor access to handwashing facilities.

    These events need to have someone who is paying attention, inviting the health inspectors in to point out potential issues and have lots of portable restrooms/handwashing stations available for vendors and patrons.

    As I told the venerable Portable Restroom Operator, the type of festival I want to go to as a patron is a place that doesn't need to be regulated. They welcome inspectors as a second set of eyes but they should already have the mindset of 'making 700 people sick would be bad for our festival'.

    Rock 'n Ribs sounds like they are paying attention.

    In Ozarks First, Mike Brother of the Springfield-Greene County Health Department was cited as saying,  "We're asking them to police themselves to work with the people doing the sampling to keep proper hygiene wash their hands and wear gloves."

    "These kind of events these sampling events we can't bring an inspector out to inspect all 50 or 60 or 100 of the booths out here giving samples," said Brothers.

    Jim McLeod of Southwest Rotary says they've been in the competition for 12 years and always make sure they're handing out safe food.
    "Every time we get into the food we'll wear gloves when we touch it we got the restaurant inspector out here just like anywhere else and we're doing the same thing as restaurants," said McLeod.

    Long live rock and roll. And ribs.
     

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  • Posted: July 30th, 2008 - 1:52pm by Ben Chapman

    It's fair and festival season.  For the past 25 years, the last weekend of July has marked the Hillside Festival, a weekend-long outdoors concert at Guelph Lake.  I've never been.  I've had lots of friends attend and have often felt like I've missed out on hearing some great bands.  Part of the reason is that I'm not a huge camping fan; it always seems to rain when I camp.  And then I whine to whomever I'm camping with.

    Prior to an ultimate frisbee game on Monday night, I was warming up with a friend who attended this year's installment of Hillside.  As we jogged she told me all about the weekend: The bands were great, but the best part of the weekend was the food.  She described a set-up where many local restaurants have temporary booths and were serving up selections of their normal menus to the hungry concert-goers. 

    This conversation made me think about last year's Salmonella outbreak linked to the Taste of Chicago.  Temporary kitchens can be problematic for the staff who work in them when it comes to controlling food safety risks.  Equipment may not be readily available, line-ups add to the time pressure, spaces can be cramped and handwashing sinks might be hard to access (or even find).

    Coupling my conversation with a link that Doug came across about fair food safety in Wisconsin led to today's infosheet, which can be downloaded here.

    After the infosheet was created, Doug sent on another link about a Shigella outbreak in Oregon -- which has been linked to visiting the Oregon County fair.  Depending on the information that follows in the upcoming days, maybe next week's infosheet with focus on that outbreak.

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