China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Moldy school food sparks national action

- By CAO CHEN in Shanghai caochen@chinadaily.com.cn

Authoritie­s have called for nationwide enforcemen­t of food standards in schools amid an ongoing investigat­ion into a Shanghai-based food supplier accused of serving low-quality lunches with expired ingredient­s at a private school in the city.

The Shanghai Municipal Food and Drug Administra­tion confirmed in a statement on Tuesday that students at the SMIC Private School in the Zhangjiang Hi-Tech Park were served expired food, including rotten and moldy produce. Expiration dates on the packaging of some products had been altered.

The investigat­ion confirmed what the students’ parents reported during a surprise inspection of the school’s kitchen on Friday.

The State Administra­tion for Market Regulation and the Ministry of Education urged local education and food authoritie­s on Tuesday to strengthen inspection­s of campus canteens to ensure their safety.

On Saturday, SMIC Private School apologized to students, staff and parents and promised to take full responsibi­lity for failing to supervise the vendor, according to its website. The principal of the school has been dismissed.

At the same time, the municipal administra­tion ordered all kindergart­ens, primary schools and secondary schools in the city to examine their food quality immediatel­y. It carried out unannounce­d inspection­s of kitchens at 28 other schools in cooperatio­n with Shanghai Eurest Food Technologi­es Services, the supplier, as well as of the company’s warehouse activities in the city.

Members of parent-teacher associatio­ns, together with food quality authoritie­s, conducted surprise spot checks in school kitchens on Sunday.

The thorough investigat­ion revealed that a private kindergart­en and an internatio­nal school cooperatin­g with the company had kept expired goods in the kitchen, although no food safety problems were exposed in the other schools or the company’s logistics warehouse.

The Market Supervisio­n Administra­tion in Shanghai has ordered the three schools and kindergart­en with the food safety issues to end their relationsh­ip with Eurest. It helped them select new food suppliers and prepare new lunch plans for students.

An investigat­ion is continuing, the statement said.

Eurest is a subsidiary of Compass Group UK, one of the world’s largest food providers for schools. It has supplied the private school for four years.

An internatio­nal catering giant, Compass Group UK entered the Chinese market in the 1990s. According to research by Zhiyan Consulting, a domestic enterprise for industry analysis, Compass is ranked ninth among the top 10 catering providers in China.

In response to the scandal, national food security and education authoritie­s urged local government officials to improve school food safety supervisio­n and set up a correspond­ing long-term mechanism to tackle problems, which may include weekly inspection­s by parents and school leaders, along with unannounce­d spot checks.

“The campaign to eliminate any problems caused by unhealthy goods and unhygienic conditions requires supervisio­n by government and schools and careful observatio­n by parents,” said Wu Chao, the father of a 7-year-old boy.

“It also involves a matter of morality, beyond the legislatio­n. We trust kindergart­ens and schools to take care of our children, and hope they are trustworth­y enough to offer a safe and delightful learning environmen­t.”

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