Rodent

  • Posted: March 1st, 2012 - 3:16am by Doug Powell

     The Toronto Star reports two restaurants were shut down last week and face charges from Toronto Public Health for rodent infestation and poor sanitation.

    South China Restaurant on Mount Pleasant Rd. near Davisville Ave. and Sushi Hana near Yonge and Wellesley Sts. failed to pass inspections on Feb. 21 and Feb. 23, respectively.

    Jim Chan, manager of the food safety program at Public Health, said mice were found in both restaurants. Public Health has laid charges against both restaurants for rodent infestation. Sushi Hana, which has since reopened, also has a charge pending for sanitation issues. Chan said the infractions were serious enough to take them to court.

    “Usually for a minor violation, the inspector will just issue a ticket,” he said.

    Other infractions against South China Restaurant were failure to protect food from contamination, improper storage of solid waste and failure to clean bathroom fixtures.

    Failure to protect food from contamination was also found at Sushi Hana. At least one employee was allegedly not washing hands before preparing food.

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  • Posted: October 21st, 2011 - 12:16am by Doug Powell

    Pusateri’s, proudly billed as Toronto’s most expensive grocer -- on its shelves are the best quality fruits, vegetables, meats, imported canned goods and a range of prepared food – has been closed by Toronto Public Health due to poor sanitation and pest infestation.

    “It is up to the operator to improve their services and arrange a reinspection with the Public Health Inspector,” Toronto Public Health spokeswoman Rishma Govani confirmed to the Star by email Thursday afternoon.

    Pusateri’s general manager John Mastroianni, however, said the store was closed for “general maintenance.”

    “It’s not rodents,” Mastroianni said, repeatedly insisting that the issue was equipment related and “general maintenance.”

    Govani said specifically that the closure was due to poor sanitation and pest infestation.

    The inspection arose as a result of a public complaint, she said adding the pest infestation included rats as well as cockroaches.

    When confronted again with the confirmation from Toronto Public Health that the store was in fact closed due to poor sanitation and pests, Mastroianni admitted cockroaches had been found in the store.

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  • Posted: May 16th, 2011 - 2:23pm by Doug Powell

    Maram Shami of Alfanoose Middle Eastern Cafe, told DNAinfo unscrupulous companies are taking advantage of New York City’s point system to prey on restaurant owners by promising to teach them how to properly clean and avoid future violations.

    Shami said she and her husband, co-owner Mouhamad Shami, 55, shelled out $5,000 for a special training on how to clean the restaurant before the most recent inspection, only to incur more violations than the one before.

    Shami said the poor grades are likely to drive her and her husband out of business, after customers stopped coming by after their most recent grade.

    That’s just one of 10 downtown dining joints that racked up numerous violations recently.

    Of the 10 restaurants that have poor grades looming, Mike's Papaya at 88 Reade Street was the worst offender by far, with 106 violation points — or about a "C" grade under the city's letter grading system. The hot dog joint was cited for violations including contaminated food, cold food not properly refrigerated, evidence of mice and lack of soap in the bathroom.

    Many restaurant owners either declined to comment or were not immediately available for interview.

    Other owners called the health inspection process unfair, and complained the number violations levied against them is unjustified.
     

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  • Posted: February 2nd, 2011 - 7:53am by Doug Powell

    A New Mexico company was ordered to destroy $171,000 worth of red chile after federal authorities say it was contaminated by rodent droppings and urine, insect larvae and roaches, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office.

    Deputy U.S. marshals seized 25 tons of Mexican-imported chile from the Duran and Sons warehouse in Derry, N.M. on Dec. 13, 2010. The imported pods are alleged to have contaminated 50 tons of New Mexican red chile that was also kept in the warehouse.

    The company was ordered Monday by U.S. District Judge M. Christina Armijo to pay for destroying the produce under the supervision of the Food and Drug Administration, by no later than March 17.

    Inspectors in November allegedly found rodent nests and evidence that mice had gnawed, defecated and urinated on the chile pods, ground chile and crushed chile after they had been shipped to the Duran & Sons Chile Products warehouse, about eight miles north of Hatch.

    Apart from the chile, however, Duran's warehouse was also allegedly home to "a live cat, live birds, apparent bird nesting, bird droppings, rodent nesting, rodent excreta pellets, animal feces, animal urine, lice and dead insects and insect larvae and moth-like insects," according to court documents.

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  • Posted: November 22nd, 2010 - 12:27pm by Doug Powell

    Inspections of some Colorado school cafeterias in the last two years have turned up evidence of everything from rodents to fecal matter -- issues that are considered "critical violations," according to local health departments.

    Tom Butts of the Tri- County Health Department, told CBS4 school cafeterias, "in general they are some of our better operated facilities. They have lots of people watching them."

    But that scrutiny doesn't guarantee cleanliness.

    At Denver's South High School, a 2009 city inspection of the cafeteria revealed "evidence of rodents ... in the facility. Rodent droppings are found in the dry storage along the walls on the floor."

    South High School principal Steve Wera told CBS4 the problems have been addressed, adding, "We've made the appropriate changes. We can do better, we need to do better at this so I made sure we did."

    Wera said since those problems were discovered the school brought in a new lunchroom manager and made other staff changes.

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  • Posted: February 17th, 2010 - 5:56am by Doug Powell

    A bakery owner in Adelaide faces a fine of up to $100,000 after being accused of continuing to sell food despite allegations of having rodents and a potentially deadly bacteria in his kitchen.

    Tranh Minh Tran, of Kilburn, yesterday appeared in court charged with failing to comply with 19 conditions of the Australian and New Zealand Food Standard Code at his Woodville bakery.

    The Port Adelaide Magistrates Court heard Tran is also facing charges of aggravated assault and carrying an offensive weapon amid allegations he threatened a Department of Health employee at his bakery last month.

    The job of food inspector can really suck sometimes.

    Adelaide Now reports that in court documents, the Port Adelaide Enfield Council alleges it immediately issued Tran with an order prohibiting him from continuing to sell food, but it was ignored.

    It also alleges the inspectors also found rodent droppings and raw chicken stored at unsafe temperatures. Tran is accused of ignoring demands to employ a pest control company to rid the bakery of the rodents.

    The council also alleges Tran was officially warned four times to clean his kitchen and comply with the food code, but failed to do so.

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  • Posted: January 26th, 2010 - 11:12pm by Doug Powell

    Tell someone. Call someone. Kill it.

    Ignore it?

    Wrong.

    Pennsylvania lawmakers wanted to know the answer, and are prepared to legislate one if necessary after their cafeteria was shut down due to rodent problems.

    As reported by the Patriot-News,

    It might have been the most relevant question at Monday's inquiry into the mouse infestation and other health problems that temporarily closed the state Capitol cafeteria:

    Why didn't cafeteria employees do something?

    There was no direct answer.

    The closest came from Bruce Walton, vice president for operations for Aramark, Inc., which runs the cafeteria.

    He said "leadership changes" have been made, and Aramark is trying to create an "environment of care" in which Capitol cafeteria employees take a proactive approach to quality matters.

    Yet the answer to that question -- whatever it is -- might prove central to the decision of whether Pennsylvania gets a tougher restaurant law.


     

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  • Posted: December 30th, 2009 - 8:59pm by Doug Powell

    A top French restaurant in Belfast has apologized after a rodent was spotted running amok on the premises.

    A complaint was lodged with Belfast City Council’s public health department yesterday after a group of diners claimed they spotted a rat in the restaurant on Monday night.
    Timothy Kirkpatrick said,

    “At one stage the rat sat on top of a woman’s handbag for a good 10 to 20 seconds. I couldn’t believe it, I don’t think anyone could.”

    Mr Kirkpatrick said he was very disappointed in the way the restaurant handled the situation.

    “The staff tried to catch it and continued to serve food,” he added. “It was quite unbelievable, to be honest.

    “They didn’t apologize or offer to waive the cheque or anything. At the time I didn’t mind, but the more I think about it now it is just ridiculous.”

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  • Posted: December 25th, 2009 - 8:54pm by Doug Powell

    Cora Pizza, (the One Stop Pizza Shop), apparently a favorite of University of Toronto students, was shut down Dec. 21/09 by Toronto Public Health due to a rodent infestation and to prevent gross unsanitary conditions.

    Among the findings were a bucket that was used for pizza sauce showing obvious "signs of contamination with dirt and mold” and "dead rats and rat droppings in the kitchen."

    blogTO reported that previous inspections in March and June of this year found a long list of infractions, including failure to:

    * ensure food is not contaminated/adulterated;

    * use proper procedure(s) to ensure food safety;

    * provide hand washing supplies; and,

    * provide adequate pest control.

    The Toronto Star reported that  this week's discovery of rodents at a Spadina Ave. pizza shop and a bakery outlet at a subway station has put the spotlight on Toronto's restaurant inspection program.

    The pass-fail card system, in which a red card closes the eatery until problems are corrected, was set back by last summer's 39-day civic workers' strike and the fight against the H1N1 flu pandemic.

    Inspectors have since been working hard to catch up.

    Nearly every week in Toronto, an establishment is closed down temporarily for food safety infractions. There were 41 closures this year and 46 in 2008.

    Those statistics indicate the city, which has some 16,000 restaurants, food stores and bakeries, is staying on top of the serious cases, said associate medical officer of health Dr. Howard Shapiro, who notes they inspect "probably a few hundred places a day."

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  • Posted: January 28th, 2009 - 12:59pm by Doug Powell

    A Loblaw’s Supermarket in Toronto, Canada, is closed following a customer complaint regarding a mouse inside the store.

    Toronto Public Health (TPH) officials closed the store last night, and already Dinesafe, a website designed to disclose inspection results for food premises in the Toronto area, has updated its most recent inspection findings to include infractions discovered last night, such as:

    •    failure to ensure food is not contaminated/adulterated;
    •    failure to prevent rodent infestation; and,
    •    failure to maintain hazardous food(s) at 4C (40F).

    According to Dinesafe, the Dupont St. Loblaw’s has passed the last ten TPH inspections, dating back to April 2007.  But are restaurant inspections a good indicator of the quality of an establishment? Or simply a brief snapshot of a food premise at one point in time? And are web-based disclosure systems like Dinesafe the most effective way to communicate inspection results to consumers?

    News reports like the ones in the Toronto Sun or Globe and Mail, websites like Dinesafe, and blogs like this or blogTO, get the information out there to consumers. What I am interested in is which of these methods is the most effective.

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