Canberra

  • Posted: February 22nd, 2012 - 5:43pm by Doug Powell

    Canberra continues to take babysteps toward restaurant inspection disclosure by setting up a name-and-shame website after new food safety legislation was passed by the Legislative Assembly yesterday.

    Under the new laws, which were supported by all three parties, businesses will have to display their registration certificates, and a closure notice if the government issues them with a prohibition order.

    Eateries will also be required to have a trained food safety officer on site to ensure businesses are meeting hygiene regulations.

    The new laws come 12 months after an investigation by The Canberra Times revealed restaurants that had breached food safety laws would not be named publicly on the grounds it might jeopardise their commercial viability.

    The protection was offered despite ACT Health issuing dozens of warnings to ACT businesses urging them to clean their unhygienic kitchens and banning businesses from selling meals on seven occasions because of fears customers might be poisoned.

    Chief Minister Katy Gallagher said the passage of the food amendment bill yesterday was ''a pivotal step forward in improving food safety and regulatory transparency''.

    ''Unfortunately over the past year gaps in the knowledge of the people who work in the industry have been discovered,'' Ms Gallagher said.

    Ms Gallagher said food businesses would be given 18 months to train and implement their food safety supervisors.

    She added that a dedicated food safety directorate had been formed at the Health Protection Service to improve the management of food safety in the ACT.

    Greens MLA Amanda Bresnan said the next step to improving food hygiene in the ACT was to implement a system similar to the Scores on Doors scheme in NSW, where businesses display a food safety rating in their windows.

     

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  • Posted: February 14th, 2012 - 8:07am by Doug Powell

    The Canberra Times reports three food stalls at the National Multicultural Festival breached food safety regulations, resulting in health authorities having to destroy ''potentially contaminated'' foods.

    A team of seven public health officers were sent to the weekend's festival in a crackdown on food stalls that saw roughly 100 inspections over Friday and Saturday.

    The Health Protection Service treats the festival as a ''high risk event'' for food safety, and regularly sends officers to make sure the festival's huge range of food stalls comply with health standards.

    The breaches found at this year's multicultural festival were focused on food storage, temperature control and hand washing, an ACT Health spokeswoman told The Canberra Times.

    Authorities were forced to destroy food from a number of stalls, and immediately resolved a number of hygiene breaches.

    Canberra Multicultural Community Forum chairman Sam Wong said he hadn't heard any concerns from stallholders about the food safety crackdown.

    ''I only praise the work of the health protection service, and we are happy to work with them and also work with the community to make things right. We are happy to listen to any concerns of any sort from all parts of the festival, not just the food.”

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  • Posted: January 24th, 2012 - 10:08pm by Doug Powell

    Maybe a legal jolt will prod Australians out of food safety complacency, but that’s especially challenging in a politico town like the national capital, Canberra.

    ABC News reports 10 people are taking legal action against a Canberra bakery after allegedly contracting food poisoning.

    Silo Bakery at Kingston was forced to shut for three days in December after ACT Health detected salmonella in mayonnaise used in a chicken roll.

    It is believed raw egg in the mayonnaise was to blame for the salmonella outbreak which allegedly affected more than a dozen people.

    Gerard Rees from Slater and Gordon in Canberra says some of those who were affected are seeking compensation for pain and suffering induced by the allegedly spoiled sandwiches.

    "For five or six of the individuals I understand it ended up in hospital and a couple for relatively lengthy periods of time, weeks rather than days. So obviously people who were seriously affected would be entitled to far greater compensation for general damages or pain and suffering. Those who were off work as a result would be entitled to receive compensation for the time off that they had and if they had medical expenses they're entitled to compensation for the medical expenses they're paid as a direct result of the poisoning.

    "What'll happen is we're investigating a claim in negligence. The claim will allege that Silo bakery was negligent in the way it stored and prepared the food. There is an ACT Health investigation underway as well that is looking into this. What we will do is look at each case individually."

    At least 22 people were sickened with salmonella in Dec. at the Canberra bakery. In the aftermath of the outbreak, Silo co-owner Leanne Gray said officials have advised buying commercial mayonnaise or using pasteurized eggs. Her response: “That's the foulest thing you've ever seen, so I said no, I won't.''

    A table of raw-egg related outbreaks in Australia is available at http://bites.ksu.edu/raw-egg-related-outbreaks-australia.

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  • Posted: January 6th, 2012 - 2:45am by Doug Powell

    The killer mushroom story from Canberra, Australia is taking on new levels of weirdness.

    Today, the ACT's chief health officer confirmed the bistro where a deadly mushroom dish was cooked on New Year's Eve would remain closed and would need to be inspected before it was allowed to reopen.

    The Chinese restaurant, located in the Harmonie German Club in Narranbundah, had been due to reopen after the Christmas break on Wednesday night, just hours before management learnt of the tragic mistake, in which two people died and two others were taken to hospital after eating the dish laced with death cap mushrooms.

    Canberra health authorities last night confirmed the meal was prepared in a restaurant kitchen.

    Acting ACT Chief Health Officer Dr Andrew Pengilly said that, while the bistro had closed voluntarily, ACT Health had asked for it to remain shut until an inspection could be carried out.

    Last night, a sign on the door of the restaurant, which is run by an independent operator within the club, said the chef "made a deadly mistake."

    The sign said that it was informing the community with the "greatest regret" that chef Liu Jun and kitchen hand Tsou Hsiang "made a deadly mistake and ate some mushroom (death caps) that they mistook for Chinese straw mushrooms".
    It was unclear who had posted the note, but Harmonie German Club secretary Susan Davidson confirmed it had not come from the club nor the independent operator of the restaurant.

    Mr Liu, 38, who made the meal at the bistro, and Ms Tsou, 52, died from liver failure in Sydney's Royal Prince Alfred Hospital while waiting for transplants.
    Mystery surrounds another man, 51, who remains in the hospital in a stable condition with death cap poisoning.

    ACT Health initially said this man was part of the same group, but ACT police said this was not the case.

    Friends of the chef, who had spent several years working in Australia, said he was obsessed with fresh food. He was also working to send money home to his Chinese wife and two children, a seven-year-old boy and a girl, 11.

    "The mushrooms were brought into the club for a private meal, cooked after bistro hours, by the chef for him and his co-workers. It was not a meal on the bistro menu and was not a meal that was offered to, or available to, the public," it added.

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  • Posted: January 5th, 2012 - 5:01am by Doug Powell

    Health authorities in Canberra say the meal which contained death cap mushrooms that killed two people was prepared in a commercial kitchen.

    The ACT Health Directorate says the food was for a private meal and no food containing the poisonous mushrooms was given to any member of the public.

    A 52-year-old woman died and a 38-year-old woman died in hospital in Sydney yesterday after eating the meal.

    A 51-year-old man remains in a critical but stable condition.

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  • Posted: January 3rd, 2012 - 7:06pm by Doug Powell

    Two people have died in a Sydney hospital after eating death cap mushrooms.

    A third person is still being treated at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, a spokeswoman says.

    Four people became ill after eating the poisonous mushrooms at a New Year's Eve party in Canberra but one was discharged from hospital on Tuesday.

    A 52-year-old woman and a 38-year-old man were among those being treated at RPA.

    It is believed the four people had may have mistaken the poisonous mushrooms for mushrooms used in Chinese cooking.

    The mushrooms are usually found in Canberra in autumn, near oak trees, but recent summer rain has spurred the growth of the mushrooms.

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  • Posted: January 3rd, 2012 - 7:06pm by Doug Powell

    Two people have died in a Sydney hospital after eating death cap mushrooms.

    A third person is still being treated at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, a spokeswoman says.

    Four people became ill after eating the poisonous mushrooms at a New Year's Eve party in Canberra but one was discharged from hospital on Tuesday.

    A 52-year-old woman and a 38-year-old man were among those being treated at RPA.

    It is believed the four people had may have mistaken the poisonous mushrooms for mushrooms used in Chinese cooking.

    The mushrooms are usually found in Canberra in autumn, near oak trees, but recent summer rain has spurred the growth of the mushrooms.

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  • Posted: January 2nd, 2012 - 2:15am by Doug Powell

    Two people that were taken to a Canberra hospital after eating poisonous mushrooms on the weekend remain in a critical condition and are now en route to a Sydney facility for treatment.

    A third person who was with them was being treated at Canberra Hospital.

    The trio, who cannot be named, went to Calvary Hospital on New Year's Day after becoming ill from eating death cap mushrooms, a spokesman for ACT Health said.

    A spokesman for Calvary Hospital said admissions involving mushroom poisoning were rare.

    ACT Health said death cap mushrooms are usually found in Canberra in autumn, near oak trees, but recent summer rain has encouraged growth of the mushrooms.

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  • Posted: December 29th, 2011 - 12:02am by Doug Powell

    An Australian town was hit with its second E. coli outbreak in three years on Friday, forcing residents and businesses to boil their water for five days over the holidays after a lightning strike struck the town's chlorination plant.

    Residents of Braidwood, near Canberra, are demanding an explanation from their local council.

    The latest contamination has highlighted the town's drinking water crisis, with a new treatment plant for the town now 18 months overdue. Palerang Council allocated almost $3 million to build a new plant in 2010 but have since gotten into a contractual dispute which has cost it $400,000.

    Frank and Shaunea Exon were both hit with severe cases of diarrhea in 2008, while Mrs Exon was pregnant, after a similar outbreak of E. coli shut down the town's water supply for 20 days.

    ''I don't understand it,'' Mrs Exon said. ''We're paying some of the highest rates in the country, higher than Sydney and Canberra, so they can build this new water treatment plant and they still can't seem to get it right. To not have access to basic services in this day and age, especially at Christmas, is a bit ridiculous.''

    The new TorPeas restaurant was caught off guard by the outbreak after just opening their doors nine weeks ago.

    Owner Jane Norris said her main street business was one of the only eateries open on Christmas Day and she had 80 people booked in for lunch.

    ''We got the notification two days before Christmas and we freaked out a little because we had so much seafood on the menu that we couldn't wash with town water,'' she said.

    ''We spent an hour every day boiling water, decanting it and keeping it in the cooler room and bought extra bottles of hand sanitizer.

    ''The whole situation was made worse on Friday because we had a two-hour blackout, so it was like cooking in the restaurant in the dark with just a few torches.''

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  • Posted: December 21st, 2011 - 10:51pm by Doug Powell

    egg.farm_.jpg

     Australia still has an egg problem.

    Two weeks after raw egg in mayonnaise made at least 22 people sick with salmonella after eating at the Silo bakery in Canberra, owners Leanne Gray and Graham Hudson say they have stopped making mayonnaise for counter sandwiches, but still make mayonnaise for dishes where it can be kept in the fridge. Silo has also changed its egg supplier.

    This will not prevent salmonella.

    And without generalizing, Australia still has an egg problem.

    Last week, four of the affected people were considering taking legal action, to claim expenses, loss of wages, and pain and suffering. State practice group leader for Slater and Gordon Gerard Rees was awaiting instructions from the four and for the final report from ACT Health, before determining whether a claim of negligence could be taken, on the basis that Silo knew or ought to have known of the likely salmonella outcome from eating raw egg.

    ''Silo is a very good cafe, as a general position it is a very popular cafe,'' Rees said. ''This is the first time I've heard of a complaint of any kind involving them, so it's not something against Silo - it's just something that has occurred ... If someone goes into a restaurant or cafe they're entitled to have food that's of an accepted standard and if they do suffer injury as a result, they're entitled to make a claim.'' Slater and Gordon would run the case on a no-win, no-fee basis.

    It isn’t something that just occurred. It’s salmonella, it’s in raw eggs.

    Hundreds of people have been sickened in Australia in the past five years from consuming undercooked eggs or dishes containing raw eggs.

    A couple of new reports from Food Standards Australia New Zealand also raise the egg issue.
    Microbiological surveys of raw egg-based products in Sydney and Western Australia cafes found no salmonella, but did find many instances of poor temperature and hygiene.

    In Sydney, a total 107 samples of raw egg products were collected from 46 premises:

    - 13 samples were classified unsatisfactory due to high standard plate counts and/or moderate levels of Bacillus cereus
    - one sample of Caesar dressing was classified potentially hazardous due to a high level of B. cereus (31,000 cfu/g)
    - Salmonella was not detected in any samples tested.

    Information on food handling, product preparation, cleaning and sanitation and egg quality was obtained from 44 premises via on-site observation and questionnaire. The results show that:

    - 10% of sauces were stored at ambient temperatures.
    - 71% of samples had a temperature greater than 5°C (and less than 60°C)—constant movement of product in and out of refrigeration may be responsible for an elevated product temperature.
    - 74% of products sampled were not date coded and 41% of products did not have a known shelf life policy at the time of inspection
    - most premises who separated eggs did so by hand; four used gloved hands and 24 used bare hands. Six premises separated eggs using the shells. In general hand washing after handling eggs was not considered as important as washing hands after handling raw chicken or meat.
    - 23% of premises had cracked or dirty eggs in storage and there seemed to be a distinct lack of knowledge about the quality of the egg, the risks associated with using cracked and dirty eggs, and the egg supplier.
    - Only 52% of the food businesses stored whole eggs under 5°C.

    Most businesses surveyed required improvement in:

    - temperature control of raw egg products during and in between use
    - date coding of raw egg products
    - egg separation technique during processing to prevent cross contamination.

    Chef Christian Hauberg told the Canberra Times that when a restaurant with the reputation of Silo is named as the source of a salmonella outbreak, Canberra's restaurateurs take a keen interest.

    ''It sent shivers up my spine, to be honest. It's the worst nightmare that people get sick from your food. But unfortunately with food-borne illnesses, you've got no idea if the product is contaminated when it comes in - you can't tell by looking at it.''

    Hauberg, from Pulp Kitchen, uses caged eggs in mayonnaise because he believes it reduces the risk of salmonella. ''I assume they're safer,'' he says, partly because free-range eggs might not be collected and refrigerated as quickly. He uses free-range eggs in cooked dishes.

    Australian National University professor of infectious diseases and microbiology Peter Collignon says sanitizing the shell would presumably substantially lower the risk, since most contamination comes from the outside of the egg, but it wouldn't deal with cases where salmonella is inside. There is no way of telling whether a chicken is carrying salmonella, and not enough data to indicate whether caged, free-range or organic chickens are more or less likely to have it, he says, advising not to eat raw or runny-yolk eggs. When he eats mayonnaise, it comes in a jar from the supermarket. When he fries an egg, he flips it to cook both sides. He believes restaurants should warn people when food is made from raw eggs.

    ''Any egg, whether it's commercial or free range, can be an issue. 'My view is whatever egg I get from whatever source, it's too hard to know, so I cook it.''

    Like lots of foodborne illness, the risk may be low, but if it can be easily prevented, why not. And as the professor says, consumers really have no way of knowing.

    Silo co-owner Leanne Gray says officials have since advised buying commercial mayonnaise or using pasteurized eggs. Her response: “That's the foulest thing you've ever seen, so I said no, I won't.''

    Bring on the lawyers.

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