Inspector

  • Posted: November 23rd, 2010 - 12:44pm by Doug Powell

    Will Brits have a ‘stiff upper lip’ about this food safety crap?

    The Independent reports that the butcher at the centre of a fatal E.coli outbreak which claimed the life of a five-year-old boy sold rotten meat for years before the tragedy, an inquest heard today.

    Mason Jones, of Deri, near Bargoed, lost his life to the deadly food poisoning bug which struck 44 schools in the South Wales valleys.

    The outbreak, in September 2005, had become the second biggest to hit the UK by the time it ran its course.

    Mason's mother Sharon Mills sobbed repeatedly today at the inquest into his death in Newport.

    The coroner's court also got an insight into chronically lax hygiene practices at the butcher business which triggered the outbreak.

    John Tudor and Son, based at Bridgend Industrial Estate, supplied meat to dozens of schools and residential homes for the elderly.

    Company boss and owner William John Tudor, 58, of Cowbridge, South Wales, was jailed for one year at Cardiff Crown Court in September 2007.

    Tudor admitted six counts of placing unsafe food on the market and one of failing to protect food against the risk of contamination.

    The inquest today heard he habitually lied to the authorities about his practices and falsified records - two months at a time.

    His underhand practices were so habitual he literally used to pass off mutton as lamb to his customers.

    Detective Superintendent Paul Burke headed a criminal inquiry after the firm was pinpointed as the source of the outbreak.

    He said staff at the firm were interviewed about hygiene standards during the inquiry.

    "A number of people told me in interview about meat that was smelling or poor and when brought to Mr Tudor's attention they were told to put it in the faggots," he said.

    "When meat was turning yellow they were told to 'mince it up' and put it in the faggots."

    The idea being that because faggots were spicy they would hide the taste of the meat.

    He added: "Mutton was literally passed off as lamb."

    The firm would buy frozen New Zealand mutton and sell it on to customers as Welsh lamb.

    False batch numbers linking it to a legitimate farm in Abergavenny were used to hide its origin.

    He said that according to staff at the firm, disregard for hygiene rules had gone on for years.

    It was not known whether any of the affected schools ever received the faggots or mutton.

    Equally, it was not possible to tell whether the factory had caused other E. coli or food poisoning outbreaks in the past.

    He said Tudor was well aware of safe hygiene practice because he had successfully sat a grade three hygiene diploma in 2002.

    But some staff members were found to have never attended even basic hygiene courses, despite the need to do so.

    It was also found his factory's only vacuum packing machine was "not fit for purpose" and was used for both raw and cooked meats.

    A "dirty old brush and container of water" was used to clean the machine between different users; often it was not cleaned at all.

    Cooked and raw meats were stored together and decomposing meat was discovered in a fridge section at the factory.

    Meat seized from the operation was found to contain an identical E. coli O157 strain as the one that killed Mason.

    The same strain was found at a Welsh farm where the meat originated and an abattoir where Tudor bought the meat.

    Mr Burke stressed that a certain percentage of healthy cattle carry the strain of E.coli without harm to them.

    But the fact it could prove deadly to people, particularly children and elderly, underlined why basic hygiene was necessary.
     

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  • Posted: September 5th, 2010 - 2:35pm by Doug Powell

    Philip Brasher of the Des Moines Register reports that the salmonella-in-Wright and Hillandale-eggs outbreak that has sickened at least 1,470 in the U.S. left officials at Costco Wholesale Corp. scratching their heads. How had inspectors for Costco, who looked over the northeast Iowa farm where the chain bought eggs, not noticed the rodent holes in the henhouses?

    Craig Wilson, who oversees food safety for Costco, said, "There are a lot of guys going, 'Hey, wait a minute. They're finding stuff and our guys were there and they didn't see it.' "

    Critics – and I was one of them -- say many food-safety audits are designed to tell companies paying for them what they want to hear. The defunct Peanut Corp. of America had a glowing food safety audit from an outside firm before a 2008 salmonella outbreak in peanut butter that killed nine people and sickened more than 700.

    U.S. Department of Agriculture inspectors also missed the problems at Hillandale as well as at Wright County Egg, a producer that recalled 380 million eggs and supplied Hillandale with hens and feed.

    The USDA employees, whose main job is to grade eggs on their condition and catch defects, don't check henhouses or look into farms' salmonella-prevention programs, a job the USDA leaves to the Food and Drug Administration.

    The USDA employees do inspect conditions in packing facilities for companies that request and pay for the service. The packing facilities at Hillandale in West Union and at four more farms operated by Wright County Egg had all been audited by the USDA in 2009 or this year and received stellar marks - grades of 97 to 99 percent.

    Several customers of R.W. Sauder Inc., an egg producer in Pennsylvania, have told the company they plan to add salmonella-prevention measures to their egg specifications, said Paul Sauder, the firm's president. Those buyers include a large supermarket chain and food service company, whom Sauder declined to name.

    Buyers "had the perception that as long as the eggs were USDA-inspected, all eggs were equal. There is renewed awareness now," he said.

    Salmonella in eggs is not new.

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  • Posted: May 21st, 2010 - 5:13pm by Doug Powell

    Consumers, when dining at a food establishment, or opening some food at home, and discovering a foreign object, or something gross, or a cockroach, do not turn the evidence over to the restaurant or the retailer. Call the local health unit. Otherwise, the proof may be gone (at least take a picture with your cell phone, but they can be photoshoped too easily).

    Huang Xiaogang and friends were having their meal at a restaurant in Caidian of Wuhan province recently in China.

    Huang found a black creature in the bowl of mushrooms and picked it up with his chopsticks.

    To his surprise that tiny black thing was a dead cockroach and complained to the restaurant manager, reports the Daily Chilli.

    The manager said that the insect had been "sterilised in high temperature" and was not dirty anymore.

    Assuring Huang that the insect would not cause any harm to their health, he picked it up and swallowed it.

    The manager later told health officers that he was afraid that the customers would demand high compensation that is why he swallowed the cockroach to destroy evidence.

    He then waived off Huang's bill of 570 Yuan.

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  • Posted: February 17th, 2010 - 12:16pm by Rob Mancini

    Author: 
    Rob Mancini
     
     
    The Restaurant and Catering Association (RCA) has welcomed a new food safety rating system for Brisbane businesses.
    The Brisbane City Council will use information from its regular audits to rate the city's 6,000 eateries by the end of the year.
    Those with less than two stars will be made to fix problems.
    It will not be compulsory for businesses to display their rating but Lord Mayor Campbell Newman says public pressure will force dodgy outlets to lift their game.
    "We want to provide some transparency for the public so they know what they're getting," he said.
     
    Restaurant disclosure gets people talking about food safety, be it a letter grade, smiley face, or stars, people will notice. Same thing happens when Burton Cummings performs, people notice (it’s a Winnipeg thing). Restaurant inspections are merely a snap shot in time and what goes on when the inspector leaves is your best guess.  Running a restaurant is not easy and the last thing a restaurant operator wants to have is a horrible inspection rating. Disclosing information to the public may compel operators to work with health inspectors and develop a relationship to achieve one common goal- less barfing.
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  • Posted: January 29th, 2010 - 11:00pm by Doug Powell

    Four years ago, Brae Surgeoner and Ben Chapman wrote in the Wisconsin State Journal that health inspectors should oversee any commercial potluck or community function to make sure that everyone follows the rules.

    Umpires and inspectors alike are not there to control the game, just to ensure it is being played right.

    The Patriot-News in Pennsylvania reports
    that even though the state capital cafeteria was closed because it was such a dump, legislators, led by Sen. Elder Vogel, R-Beaver, got around to introducing legislation to bring what he calls common sense into the state's food safety laws.

    His bill, Senate Bill 828, would allow nonprofit groups, including church groups, Boy Scouts and youth sports teams, to sell homemade baked goods provided they put the consumer on notice that the food was made in an unlicensed, uninspected kitchen.

    The Rev. Michael Greb, the pastor at St. Cecilia's in Rochester, said he was pleased that something was being done "to take out the controversy over eating dessert" at future Friday fish fries, a fundraising tradition that the 3,000-member parish has held for decades to help keep its doors open.

    Greb said he understands the food safety inspectors' concern, but "these are our own people making these desserts out of their love for community. They weren't out to hurt anybody. ... The [desserts] people bring in notoriously are clean and good, and to imply anything other than that is just ridiculous."

    I’ll be ridiculous. Faith aside – and the vast majority of food transactions are based on faith – as a parishoner I would have no idea of the sanitation, handwashing or food safety of the good folks preparing the food. I would want someone – or the threat of someone – to oversee food prep for commercial sale.

    The Wyoming Tribune Eagle reports that the Governor's Food Safety Council voted Wednesday to oppose any efforts to loosen regs on local sales.

    Rep. Sue Wallis, R-Recluse, said, "The bottom line is I think I should be able to buy good wholesome food from my neighbor without the government interfering."

    People know their neighbors and know what they are buying, she said. It also was absurd to regulate non-hazardous breads, jams and pies sold at bake sales and charitable events, she said.

    "You're 19 times more likely to get sick from mass-produced-and-processed food," she added. "I think I have a constitutional right to buy what I want and to feed my family fresh, healthy food."


    There is no basis for that statement.

    And as Chapman and Surgeoner wrote, Food safety isn't a game, but having the health umpires around to make sure things are running smoothly isn't a bad thing.

     

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