Fines

  • Posted: March 5th, 2012 - 2:55pm by Ben Chapman

    Author: 
    Ben Chapman

    My parents are big gardeners. When I was growing up, every spring I was dragged out to garden centers and plant nurseries while they picked out roses, bushes and other stuff. I'm not sure what else I wanted to do (maybe play road hockey or video games) but I didn't want to be there.

    Being a chubby, food-loving adolescent, I might have liked it better if the garden centers had food.

    Tamar View Nurseries Ltd of Carkeel (that's in the U.K.) has a canteen, but according the Plymouth Herald, their food handling isn't the greatest and has cost them £21,000 in fines.

    The case concerned eight offences discovered by Cornwall Council Public Health and Protection officers during routine inspections of the site. The owner was later interviewed under caution and questioned about health and safety offences in relation to LPG gas storage, working at height and food safety matters which included issues of cleanliness in the kitchen and cross-contamination of stored foods. The company’s food safety management system was also found not to be being operated correctly.

    The prosecution said that the company had put the safety of public and its own staff at risk, due to breaches of health and safety and food safety law. But the court heard that the company had now fully taken on board its responsibility under food and health and safety law and had engaged a health and safety consultant to assist them in ensuring that the appropriate standards were maintained from now on. It had also appointed a new chef to oversee the improvement in standards in the kitchen.

    The company also pointed out that until this time it had a very good record in relation to both food safety and health and safety and that no one had actually been injured or been made ill.

    That they know of.

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  • Posted: February 21st, 2011 - 1:22pm by Doug Powell

    More than $200,000 worth of fines have been handed out to eateries caught breaching food safety laws in 2007 and 2009.

    The Courier-Mail says court documents show in the past six months nine restaurants were found guilty in a magistrates court for the breaches.

    Company Wheylite Australia Pty Ltd received the heaviest penalty, fined $50,000 after being found guilty of nine breaches relating to unsafe food practices and a vermin infestation during an inspection in October 2007. A conviction was recorded.

    A&C Business Development Pty Ltd, which held the food licence for Ryutaro Japanese Restaurant at Sunnybank, was fined $29,000 for 29 breaches relating to cockroaches and poor food storage in June 2009. No conviction was recorded.

    Hedz No.4 Pty Ltd, which held the food business licence for the Everton Park Hotel, was fined $25,000 for 13 breaches, including cockroaches in the venue between March and May 2009. No conviction was recorded.

    Erinwell Pty Ltd, which owned the food business licence for Oasis Juice Bar in the CBD, was fined $20,000 after a Band-Aid was found in a carrot juice in June 2009. No conviction was recorded against the venue.

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