The Mercury News

ON YELP’S MENU: HEALTH SCORES

Website adds inspection informatio­n for 350,000 restaurant­s

- By Jessica Yadegaran jyadegaran@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

You’re scrolling through Yelp, deciding where to grab dinner. You glance at the star rating, skim a few reviews — “OMG, best ramen ever!” — and perhaps check if you need a reservatio­n.

Starting today, you’ll spot a new and critical piece of informatio­n on Bay Area restaurant pages: Results of the county health department’s most recent inspection, complete with food safety violations, right there below the restaurant’s price range and hours.

Restaurant inspection informatio­n has always been available to the public, but it’s often buried on a government website or hung on a placard at the restaurant itself. Even county apps, such as California Food Inspector, are subject to error.

In 2013, San Franciscob­ased Yelp rolled out health scores for parts of California, including Marin and San Francisco. Now the review site has added health scores to more than 20,000 restaurant pages throughout the rest of the state, including eateries in the East Bay and South Bay. Health inspection grades will also roll out today in New York, Texas, Chicago and Washington, D.C.

As the initial phase of today’s national rollout, Yelp will feature 350,000 restaurant­s — 39 percent of the website’s total restaurant listings — with health scores. By the end of the year, that number will grow to cover restaurant­s in 42 states.

Beginning today, Yelp visitors will see a health score, computed by thirdparty HD Scores, and a one-line summary of violations at the very moment they’re weighing restaurant options online. Of course, it won’t be as detailed as the full report you’ll find on a county website, but it will be a lot easier to digest.

“We feel Yelp exists to empower and protect consumers,” says Luther Lowe, Yelp’s senior vice president of public policy. “The government already has a system in place, but that data should live on a platform that makes much more sense. In many ways, this is the analog version of their data.”

Lowe says the company’s LIVES program (Local Inspector Value Entry Specificat­ion) was inspired by a 1990s Los Angeles restaurant industry study, which found that displaying restaurant-hygiene grades resulted in a 13 percent reduction in food-borne illness hospitaliz­ations.

“Every year, 6,000 Americans are still dying as a result of food-borne illness, and the majority of those are from restaurant

incidents,” he says. “We hope our program will cause both the restaurant industry and public-policy makers to constantly think about the frequency of inspection­s and how userfriend­ly their data is, and give citizens a seat at the table.”

This may make a difference, especially if you’re accustomed to going by Yelp star ratings alone. Take Andy’s Sushi in Walnut Creek. The Japanesein­spired restaurant maintains

its 4-star rating despite a June 20 shutdown by Contra Costa County food safety inspectors for vermin infestatio­n.

Saaghi, a Persian restaurant in San Jose, has received a red placard and been shut down five times in the last two years for live and dead cockroache­s found on its walls and floors and inside a pepper shaker, but still has a 3.5 rating on Yelp.

Several California counties have made their health

inspection records more readily available online, as well as easier to understand. Alameda and Santa Clara counties use colorcoded health inspection placards with green indicating a “pass,” yellow for a “conditiona­l pass” and red for a “failed inspection.” Contra Costa and Santa Clara counties also have free mobile apps with the informatio­n.

“We like the idea of our data being more available,” says Rochelle Gaddi, consumer protection director at the Santa Clara County environmen­tal health department. “In this day of social media, we want as many people as possible to see the important work we do.”

Gaddi encourages consumers to check the county website and SCC Dine Out app for up-to-the minute informatio­n on restaurant­s, since follow-up inspection­s are typically done within one to three days of closures and conditiona­l passes, she says.

And when the results are positive, restaurate­urs shine.

“Historical­ly, customers have always just trusted a place, but we’ve always taken our score very seriously,” says San Francisco restaurate­ur Tyler MacNiven, whose 4-star rating for West of Pecos is backed by a 90/100 health score. “Having our score on Yelp has given us an opportunit­y to be proud of how hard we work on not only our front-of-the-house experience, but also our back of the house. There’s so much we do to ensure everything is safe.”

What does a county inspector look for? It varies by county. Here’s a glimpse into Contra Costa County, which uses a color-coded placarding system to report results, according to Marilyn Underwood, the county’s director of environmen­tal health:

Routine inspection­s are unannounce­d and based on federal guidelines of major risks of food-borne illness, including crossconta­mination, proper cooking and holding temperatur­es, employee health and safety.

The number of annual visits depends on a restaurant’s risk level. Food facilities that do a lot of food prep, as well as cooling and holding food at temperatur­e, are considered a Risk 3 and are inspected three times a year. Chain restaurant­s that receive most of their food frozen and just cook it are considered Risk 2 and inspected twice a year. Restaurant­s that don’t do a lot of cooking are Risk 1 and inspected once a year.

If the inspector finds two or more major violations, the restaurant is given a yellow placard and reinspecte­d within 10 days. Vermin infestatio­ns, where vermin are found in a food storage or preparatio­n area, are almost always cause for closure.

Look up a restaurant and learn more about the county’s placarding program at cchealth.org.

 ?? LIPO CHING — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Patrons enter Saaghi in San Jose on Saturday. The restaurant was temporaril­y shut down July 5 for health code violations. Yelp has begun posting health scores of eateries nationwide.
LIPO CHING — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Patrons enter Saaghi in San Jose on Saturday. The restaurant was temporaril­y shut down July 5 for health code violations. Yelp has begun posting health scores of eateries nationwide.
 ?? ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? A county health department sign posted at Andy’s Sushi in Walnut Creek notes a recent closure due to a violation.
ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER A county health department sign posted at Andy’s Sushi in Walnut Creek notes a recent closure due to a violation.

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