Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

SAFER FOOD VENDORS

Health inspection­s improving at airport eateries

- By Patricia Sabatini

The food vendors at Pittsburgh Internatio­nal Airport — once a hotbed of food safety violations — have been cleaning up.

A review by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette of inspection reports for 28 restaurant­s at the airport found that together they piled up 82 critical violations over the past two years. They also accumulate­d 156 lesser infraction­s.

While far from perfect, the results were much improved from the 270 critical and 230 non-critical violations found over two years at 19 food vendors when the news paper checked four years ago.

That worked out to an average of 14 critical violations per restaurant back then vs. an average of three per restaurant in the latest review. Critical violations are the most serious types of problems that put people at the most risk for getting sick.

Officials at the Allegheny County Health Department believe that one reason restaurant­s at the airport might be doing better is because the department has been more willing in recent years to crack down on violators.

“We would like to think our

food safety program is much more efficient now,” deputy director Jim Kelly said.

The department has been assessing more fines and posting more consumer alerts against repeat offenders countywide instead of allowing some violations to go uncorrecte­d, he said. As a result, Mr. Kelly suspects operators are paying closer attention to the rules.

He said another factor in the improvemen­t may have been publicity four years ago surroundin­g both the newspaper’s review of inspection reports and an analysis by the Airport Group that found restaurant­s at the Pittsburgh terminal were considerab­ly dirtier than at similarly-sized airports nationwide. The policy group, based in New York City, has not done a follow-up study.

“Maybe there was some awareness that they needed to do better,” Mr. Kelly said.

While the latest analysis showed airport eateries were performing better on their inspection­s, there still was room for improvemen­t.

Villa Italian Kitchen — a quick-service restaurant specializi­ng in pizza, pasta and salads located in the main area of the airside terminal known as the center core — was hit with the most critical violations over the two-year period. It received 13.

Some of the problems included holding food at unsafe temperatur­es, employees handling cooked pasta and peppers with their bare hands, and lack of a worker on duty who was certified in safe food handling practices, which has been a county requiremen­t since 1993.

The restaurant also accumulate­d the most non-critical violations, 14, for less serious problems such as using paper cups for portioning flour instead of a scoop with a handle, and leaving a purse on a prep table used to make pizza dough.

The operator of the facility could not be reached for comment.

Allegheny County records show that Villa Italian Kitchen was inspected five times over the past two years. Restaurant­s in the county generally are inspected once per year, but inspectors may visit more often if problems persist.

Two Subway locations — situated in concourses A and B — tied for the second highest number of serious violations at five. Problems included a blocked handwashin­g sink, holding food at unsafe temperatur­es, and lack of a food safety manager.

The owner of the facilities, Mike Patel, noted that the issues had been fixed. He said his leases had expired and he expected to close both locations next month.

“They don’t want Subway at the airport anymore,” he said.

In the past four years, turnover among food vendors at the airport has been considerab­le. Among the 19 outlets reviewed in 2013, 11 are no longer there — including names like Charley’s Steakery, Quiznos subs, Nature’s Kitchen and Sbarro.

A McDonald’s outlet located in the center core stood out for having the most violations in the newspaper’s analysis four years ago, with 32 critical and 41 non-critical infraction­s tallied during nine inspection­s over a two-year period.

The fast-food icon is still in the same location, but recently changed ownership. Only one inspection report is on file under new management, which shows four critical and zero non-critical violations.

Inspection reports for food facilities in the county are available online at www.achd.net.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States