Groundhog Day: Will there be an E. coli Pennington 3 without additional money?

Posted: March 23rd, 2010 - 7:41am by Doug Powell

bill.murray.groundhog.day_.jpg

Professor Hugh Pennington is apparently unstuck in time, like Bill Murray in Groundhog Day.

In November 1996, over 400 fell ill and 21 were killed in Scotland by E. coli O157:H7 found in deli meats produced by family butchers John Barr & Son. The Butcher of Scotland, who had been in business for 28 years and who was previously awarded the title of Scottish Butcher of the Year, was using the same knives to handle raw and cooked meat. That's a food safety no-no.

In a 1997 inquiry, Prof. Pennington recommended, among other things, the physical separation, within premises and butcher shops, of raw and cooked meat products using separate counters, equipment and staff.

In 2008, Prof. Pennington heard in a new inquiry how John Tudor and Son, the Butcher of Wales, used the same machine to vacuum package both raw and cooked meats, leading to an E. coli O157:H7 outbreak beginning in Sept. 2005, which sickened some150 children in 44 schools in southern Wales and killed five-year-old Mason Jones.

This morning, a consumer watchdog said food hygiene services in Wales need an extra £2.5m a year to help prevent a repeat of a fatal 2005 E. coli outbreak.

I’m not sure extra money is going to change anything. If someone wants to clearly skirt with food safety, as butcher William Tudor did, bad things will happen. And the local councils were already turning a blind eye to Tudor’s most egregious actions.

The Butcher of Wales was shown to have:

• encouraged staff suffering from stomach bugs and diarrhea to continue preparing meat for school dinners;
• known of cross-contamination between raw and cooked meats, but did nothing to prevent it;
• used the same packing in which raw meat had been delivered to subsequently store cooked product;
• operated a processing facility that contained a filthy meat slicer, cluttered and dirty chopping areas, and meat more than two years out of date piled in a freezer;
• a cleaning schedule at the factory that one expert called "a joke;"
• falsified crucial health and safety documents and lied about receiving hygiene awards; and,
• supplied schools with meat that was green, smelly and undercooked.

Professor Chris Griffith, head of the food research and consultancy unit at the University of Wales Institute, Cardiff, told the inquiry the culture at the premises was “dominated by saving money.”

So who allowed Tudor to operate under such conditions?

Government inspectors.

Prof. Pennington heard that Tudor and Son was visited several times in the months leading up to the Sept. 2005 outbreak, that inspectors knew there was only one vac-pac machine being used for both cooked and raw meats but, despite Pennington's 1997 recommendation, inspectors decided the business did not pose "an imminent risk" to human health.

"There was a failure in the series of inspections to identify poor hygiene and working practices and a failure to take action."

The inspectors also took on "face value" explanations offered by Tudor and his staff for various food safety failures.

Among the recommendations in the report issued this morning is that,

The Food Standards Agency should issue clear guidance to inspectors that the use of the same equipment to process raw and ready-to-eat foods is totally unacceptable.

Does anyone need extra money to clearly state food safety basics?

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Comments

Bejuwala says:

Saving money is no excuse. (Are they balking at the cost of soap and cleaners?) Time and again, in various industries, it's been demonstrated that laxity and disregard for safety end up costing more in the long run. You can work safely and efficiently at the same time. This is about pure laziness, recalcitrance, and corruption. The gov't inspectors should be sacked along with those directly responsible for violations.

Posted on March 23rd, 2010 - 12:54pm

Anonymous says:

You are correct. No one should really need extra money to carry out basic food hygiene practices but the only problem is here in Wales we have a lack of Environmental Health Officers. The ones we have got are not much good either. The Butcher at the centre of this Outbreak in Wales should be prosecuted for the death of Mason. He knowingly was supplying the vunerable with contaminated meats and playing with their lives. Environmental Health Staff should also be held accountable for their job is to protect the Public and they clearly failed.

Posted on March 24th, 2010 - 4:15pm

Beeber says:

"Does anyone need extra money to clearly state food safety basics?"

The spin put on this by this blog post is pretty sensationalist to say the least.

The issue is NOT money to ensure food safety basics, it's money to ensure there's enough qualified inspectors to do the job properly. Environmental Health in the UK is a second rate service because it's enforced by cash strapped councils who

a) are looking at even more savage cuts due to the recession and

b) are run at high level by people who don't know about or even care about Food Safety in the first place

It's a Cinderella service that no one thinks about until something goes horribly wrong.

The profession for Environmental Health is dying on its arse because it's rubbish pay, rubbish conditions and therefore no one wants to join it or stay in it. As a result people are leaving in droves and the skills of decent enforcement and inspection are getting lost.

And say what you like about the importance of HACCP, its application in the UK is virtually non-existent.

So all the talk of money is to ring fence it and try to counteract years of neglect to ensure councils can recruit and retain qualified staff and make sure standards are maintained and enforced. And implement HACCP.

No offence Doug, but I think you should keep to the facts instead of putting in opinions on something you clearly have no first hand on knowledge of from over there in the good 'ol US of A.

Posted on March 26th, 2010 - 4:53am

Julie says:

My son was a victim of the ecoli 0157 outbreak in South Wales 2005 and is still suffering from the physical and emotional aspects of ecoli. I feel very stongly that the butcher who was responsible for the outbreak which lead to the death of Mason Jones should have been punished far more serverly than he was, his sentence was a joke and an insult. Having said that i also feel that myself and the other families were very badly let down by the Environmental Health Inspecters, it was their job to protect my child and they failed miserably to do their job correctly. There will always be people out there who will cut corners and ignore correct procedures. Ecoli 0157 is a horrible and deadly bug and to those people who think that it is just a bit of a tummy bug, i hope and pray that it never comes knocking on your door because in reality it destroys the body from the inside out. R.I.P. Mason, you will never ever be forgotten.

Posted on May 4th, 2010 - 4:12pm

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