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How safe are your favorite restaurants?
September 26, 2004
Dateline NBC
Lea Thompson
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/6083318/
I don't know about you, but, I love going out for a big pancake breakfast
with my family on a weekend morning. And it's fun to drop in for a bite at a
place like Chili's, Outback or Applebee's for some steak or ribs. In the
Thompson house, we all love to eat!
So when we decided to take a look at food handling and
cleanliness at family dining restaurants, I was expecting we'd turn up a
pretty clean bill of health. Instead, I was stunned at what we found.
But I'm getting a little ahead of myself. Let me tell you how we got
started. We are always trying to think of stories that will give our viewers
information they can really use. That is why we did our survey of fast food
places last year. People really responded to it and wanted more. So we
"re-invented the wheel", as they say, and did the same story on family
dining. Once again, we pulled together restaurant inspection reports for a
recent 15 month period -- this time for Denny's, IHOP, Applebees, Waffle
House, Chili's, Bob Evans,T.G.I. Friday's, Ruby Tuesday, Outback and Red
Lobster. It was a massive job for our Dateline staff, writing and calling
all these health departments. Then, it took months to read and decipher
those reports to pull out what inspectors call "critical violations." In
English, those are health violations that can make you sick. Things that
fall in that category are letting food sit out too long, not washing your
hands after going to the bathroom and then serving food, rats and roaches in
the kitchen. You get the idea.
As we were researching, we came across this horrible salmonella poisoning
case that occurred at a Chili's in the Chicago suburbs in the summer of
2003. So producer Jack Cloherty and I went out to Vernon Hills, Ill., to
talk to some of the people who got sick. We met Jen Lussow, a spunky
27-year-old who said she got so sick she thought she was going to die. She
told us how she just curled up in a ball in bed with nausea and diarrhea.
She suffered for days before going to the emergency room because she had
just started a new job and didn't have any health insurance. She was sick
for months, and it never would have happened if she had not had lunch with
some new co-workers at the Chili's. Angela Bond is a bright, young medical
student who got so sick after eating at Chili's she had to drop out of
school. She lost a whole semester of tuition -- because she stopped for
dinner with friends.
What Jen and Angela didn't know is that the water heater had broken down at
that Chili's and there was no hot water to wash the dishes, clean the tables
or even wash hands. The manager knew this, but he kept the place open and
kept serving meals. Later, the local health department said an employee
passed the salmonella on because he or she did not wash his/her hands after
a bowel movement. Then that person touched all kinds of food. The result was
that 300 people were sickened, 150 of them with serious salmonella
poisoning. One of the victims I met, Kim Fields, said the salmonella even
attacked her gall bladder and shut it down for a time. Another victim was a
tough cop named Joe Favia. He and his wife and little boy all got sick. And
he is no ordinary Joe. This Joe is a real hero -- literally. He ran in front
of a train to tackle a teenager who was attempting suicide. He saved that
boy's life, and received a medal from his department. But this tough guy was
laid low for weeks with salmonella. It is really nasty stuff.
When we left Chicago, I knew we had an important story. Why should anyone
get this sick just because they went out to eat. I had a lot of questions:
Why did Chili's stay open with no hot water? What measures do family dining
chains take to make sure people donn't get sick? Why didn't the local health
department protect these folks? On the plane ride home, Jack and I talked
about how to tackle this story.
Back at the office, Maria Afsharian and Yolanda McCutchen were almost
through over 3,000 inspection reports, some easy to read, some almost
impossible. Then we had our computer guru, Andy Lehren, load all the data in
and crunch the numbers. We found a whopping 82 percent of the 1,000
restaurants we looked at had at least one critical violation. I was really
surprised. We had reported a 60 percent critical violation rate for fast
food. Casual and family dining chains come out worse. We also found more
than 100 claims of food borne illness, customers who got sick and thought it
was as a result of food they ate at a certain restaurant.
But back to shooting. We needed a health inspector who knew his stuff to
explain the ins and outs of food safety to us and to you. We found Dave
Jefferson, a very likable guy from the Dallas suburbs. Dave was kind enough
to let us go along as he inspected several restaurants and we enjoyed
following his keen eye. We sat down in a Red Lobster and he filled us in on
a few things. First, he said, there is no way any restaurant should serve
food if it has no hot water. He told us how critical handwashing is, saying
"handwashing is important because toilet paper isn't foolproof." You can't
make it much clearer than that.
Dave also told us it is almost impossible to determine where a food borne
illness comes from unless there are multiple victims from different
families. There were enough people who got sick at the Vernon Hills Chili's
and that helped track down the source of the problem. Dave told us that in
most cases, people become ill from something like undercooked chicken. But
at Chili's, it was a group of workers who could not wash their hands. So,
they just passed the bacteria to whatever they touched.
We also used our hidden cameras on this report. The inspection reports
identified the restaurants with the most critical violations. We then went
there to eat. It was an interesting experience ordering food in a restaurant
that we knew had a bad food safety record. And we saw and photographed some
ugly things. We saw grease and grime in ice bins, filthy bathrooms,
waitresses who didn't wash their hands after cleaning off dirty plates. I
could go on and on.
Finally, we drove over to the National Restaurant Association, which
represents all the big chains. Steve Grover, a former health inspector
himself, told me he believed, in most cases, critical violations are cleaned
up on the spot. But we were able to inform him otherwise. Dateline found
almost half of the critical violations in our survey were repeat violations.
Grover admitted that was a problem, and he told us the Restaurant
Association would continue to push more training for restaurant managers and
employees.
Of course we also talked to all of the chains in our survey, and to make a
long story short, they promised to do better. Chili's said that Vernon Hills
outbreak was an isolated case but it has since implemented new procedures to
try to make sure nothing like that happens again.
So you probably are wondering if I would eat at any of these restaurants
again. Sure. Most restaurant managers work hard to keep things clean, but I
do think this story is a bit of a wake up call for the family chains. Some
tell us they are starting to hire independent inspection companies to do
unannounced going-overs. At least one chain has put its money where its
mouth is by tying managers' salaries to improvements in health safety
inspections.
As I always do, I learned a lot on this story. Now if I see a place with
dirty glasses or utensils, kitchen workers not using gloves, or food sitting
under the heat lamps for too long, I really do turn around and walk out.
That is a good way to force restaurants to clean up. If you don't eat in a
place because it isn't clean pretty soon it will either clean up its act or
it will be out of business. Cleanliness and profit really do go hand in
hand.
And, all of us who worked on this story over the last six months hope that
if you work in a restaurant you will remember just how important your job
is, and how important it is to all of us that you do the job right.
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