Yellow placards go missing in first six months of new system

You are currently viewing Yellow placards go missing in first six months of new systemClaire Everett
Empire Chinese Restaurant's satisfactory compliance placard, 410 E. Green St., Champaign, April 25, 2014. The restaurant failed its health inspection on March 25 with an adjusted score of 21 and five critical violations but was allowed to correct enough to earn a green placard.

Nearly two dozen restaurants in Champaign-Urbana have failed health inspections during the past three months. But most customers would not know that, despite new requirements that restaurants post results of their inspections.

Under a new notification system that began Jan. 1, restaurants and food establishments in Champaign-Urbana are required to post a color-coded placard based on health inspection results.

Health inspectors from the Champaign-Urbana Public Health District issue the placards after completing their inspections.

If a restaurant fails an inspection, meaning it receives a score of 35 or lower out of 100, it is supposed to post a yellow placard in a prominent location. If a restaurant’s score is below zero, it also fails, receiving a red placard to display and closing until violations are corrected. If a restaurant scores above 35, it passes and gets a green placard.

But health inspectors are not requiring failed restaurants to post yellow placards. Instead, restaurants that fail health inspections are allowed to correct enough violations during the inspection to raise their adjusted score to passing.

Prior to Jan. 1, inspectors would not have typically allowed this. Instead, they would conduct a re-inspection within 30 days.

Jim Roberts, environmental health director for the Champaign-Urbana Public Health District, said that through June 30, restaurants that fail inspections with an adjusted score of 0-35 will get a green placard upon making corrections in the restaurant inspector’s presence.

Kurtz, who lost re-election in March for his county seat, owned a Blimpie submarine sandwich shop for 11 years, according to his campaign website.

Despite multiple calls and emails, Kurtz could not be reached for comment on this story.

Adjusted scores are based on a 100-point system with various points deducted for critical violations, non-critical violations and repeat violations.  Scores can fall below 0.

“I would call it a period of notification and education,” Roberts said. “Notification that this yellow placard is what could have happened here, and what will happen in the future.”

In the past, if a restaurant fails an inspection, it is re-inspected within 30 days.

Roberts said the grace period was also an opportunity to educate businesses about the foodborne illness risk factors listed on the placard and how to make short- and long-term changes to avoid violations.

From January through March, there were 19 restaurants in the 0-35 adjusted score range – 16 of them would have received a yellow placard since they are located within Champaign and Urbana.  Two of the failing restaurants are located in Rantoul. A third is located in Tolono.

Instead, those 19 restaurants got a chance to make corrections as the restaurant inspector was there, with 16 receiving green placards.

Despite the lenience for failing restaurants, those that score below zero on their inspections are still automatically shut down and are required to post red placards visible to customers while closed.

In the three months of the new program, two restaurants were closed and 18 others failed. (See related story.)

Firehaus, 708 S. Sixth St., Champaign, had to post a red placard during its three-day closure, which began on March 19. The restaurant had 11 critical violations and 26 non-critical violations.

“I would hope that with the posting, restaurants would be more diligent in controlling risk factor violations,” Roberts said.

 

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