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MANITOBA: Province's food inspection lags: auditor
14.jan.12
Winnipeg Free Press
Larry Kusch
The province is falling behind on food inspections at a time when it's about to assume responsibility for inspecting all of Winnipeg's restaurants.
In a report this week, Manitoba's auditor general, Carol Bellringer, said at the rate the government is carrying out inspections, it would take 21/2 years for it to examine every restaurant -- and 2.8 years to visit every food processor.
The province's goal is to visit each establishment once a year. For the year ended June 30, 2010, Health Department staff inspected just 49 per cent of Winnipeg eating establishments and food retailers under their jurisdiction. In rural areas, the inspection rate was as low as 30 per cent annually.
Since 1972, the city and province have shared restaurant-inspection duties in Manitoba's capital, with city staff keeping an eye on eateries within the city's old boundaries and the province inspecting the suburbs. It's also been long noted that city inspectors come calling on restaurants much more frequently than provincial ones.
On April 1, though, the province takes charge of all restaurant and food-processing inspections in Manitoba. At least one Winnipeg city councillor is nervous about that development.
"From the standpoint of a consumer, it's safer to eat in a restaurant in downtown Winnipeg than it is outside of downtown Winnipeg," Transcona Coun. Russ Wyatt said Friday.
"They're completely out of line with the national average in terms of the amount of inspectors per capita," he said of the province.
The city claims its inspectors visit restaurants and retailers an average of twice a year.
Peter Parys, in charge of inspections for the provincial Health Department, said 18 city inspectors will move under provincial control in April. He promised the province would maintain "the same level of service" in areas of the city formerly under civic control.
The city sets the frequency of health inspections according to business type and whether it's had any past violations. That same risk-based system is followed in many other Canadian jurisdictions. But the province, till now, has given equal weight to all food processors and restaurants under its jurisdiction, inspecting them one by one.
Bellringer has recommended Manitoba adopt the risk-based model, and provincial officials say they're working to implement this approach. However, they couldn't say this week when the new system would be implemented.
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