Shanghai Daily

3 sacked over school food scandal

- Hu Min

THE headmaster of a private school in the Pudong New Area caught in a food scandal has been sacked and the catering service provider investigat­ed, Shanghai’s food and education authoritie­s said yesterday.

Zhu Ronglin, headmaster of Shanghai SMIC Private School, Tang Cuihua, the school’s director of general affairs, and Feng Zhengmei, canteen coordinato­r of the school, were removed from their posts, the school announced in a statement yesterday. The sackings come on the heels of an investigat­ion by local authoritie­s who were tipped off about food quality and a messy kitchen at the school on Friday.

Mildewed vegetables, expired seasoning and semi-processed food products, and fabricatio­n of production dates of semifinish­ed food were found in the school canteen, according to the Shanghai Food and Drug Administra­tion and Shanghai Education Commission.

The inspectors checked the canteens at 29 schools and kindergart­ens and their catering service provider Shanghai Eurest Food Technologi­es Services Co Ltd.

A bottle of seasoning with fake labeling was also found in the canteen of SMIC-Shanda Private Kindergart­en; a bottle of expired flavoring was found in Concordia Internatio­nal School Shanghai and expired bread in the garbage bin outside the kitchen, authoritie­s said. The other schools had no food quality issues.

The three schools and kindergart­en have been ordered to stop catering services from Shanghai Eurest Food Technologi­es Services Co Ltd immediatel­y. The food operator too is under investigat­ion.

Shanghai Eurest, a whollyowne­d subsidiary of the British catering giant Compass, apologized in a statement on Monday. It said it had set up a working team and engaged third party food safety company to conduct a thorough inspection of all projects and vendors.

The Shanghai SMIC Private School also apologized in a statement yesterday, saying a serious review and self-reflection will be conducted in addition to the sacking. It has implemente­d a contingenc­y plan to ensure normal food service is provided to the students and the faculty during the interim, the board said.

Students pay over 100,000 yuan (US$14,400) in fees annually at SMIC.

Authoritie­s said severe punishment will be imposed if illegal acts are found or any interestmo­tivated trade is uncovered during investigat­ion. They have ordered strengthen­ed inspection­s to ensure food safety in schools citywide.

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