Dirty Dining in St. Louis.

How Clean is Your Favorite St. Louis Restaurant?

John  Ford
Dirty Dining in St. Louis.
Neighborhood: St. Louis
St. Louis, MO 63101
United States of America
A new report from The "Center for Science in the Public Interest" is highlighting the biggest health concerns for diners across America and in St. Louis.

A consumer advocacy group just released the findings of a report (pdf) that studied the health of restaurants across 20 cities in America. The "Center for Science in the Public Interest" took a different approach to restaurant inspections and the cleanliness of kitchens. Instead of just looking for the "dirtiest" restaurants and the cities with the worst health inspection records, the CSPI decided to look at how inspectors do their jobs in different cities and the major health hazards at eateries across the nation, including St. Louis.

St. Louis's restaurant grades.

Restaurants in St. Louis and were included in the CSPI study and the findings have been released in their report. The City of St. Louis inspects food establishments two to three times annually, with eleven inspectors visiting twenty three hundred food establishments. In St. Louis health violations are translated into letter grades ranging from A to C, then posted at the restaurant and online. There were a significant number of violations in St. Louis due to food contact surfaces. 27 of the 30 inspection reports requested for the CSPI survey were provided. Among the violations St. Louis restaurants were cited for included an unclean meat slicer and food items on the floor of the walk-in-cooler and uncovered at the time of inspection.

Although the report lists the violations, it does not list the restaurants that received the violations. Included in the St. Louis study were fast food, mid-priced and higher-end eateries including Charlie Gitto's, Tony's, TGI Friday's, Niche, Red Moon, Sonic Drie-in and Starbucks. The reports are available online at the City of St. Louis Depart of Health website.

Health inspectors should clean up their national act.

The CSPI is calling for a more uniform inspection system across the U.S. is one of the major recommendations coming from the CSPI. Because different cites may have diverse methods for inspecting and grading restaurants, more lenient inspectors or a enough inspection personnel, it's tough to know which municipalities actually have the cleanest or dirtiest dining. The Center for Science in the Public Interest is calling for more communities across the nation to consider moving their inspection system to mimic restaurant-grading system in Los Angeles County. L.A. restaurants are required to post a letter grade in their front window showing their health inspection "grade." Diners are greeted with the restaurants' report card as they walk in the door of an establishment with an A, B or C grade. Because of the public display of the grading system, restaurateurs either proudly display their report or hang their head in shame. Either way, they have to display it. The result: foodborne illnesses are down 20 percent in LA.

The dirt on the worst restaurant dangers.

The CSPI report also turned up the dirt on the biggest major dining health hazards in the cities studied. According to the findings the big five are, food kept at unsafe temperatures, improper hand washing and cooking contaminated food surfaces and food from unsafe sources. Of lesser concern were the presence of sick restaurant workers, bare-hand contact with raw food and rodents and insects. What! How could rats and roaches fall further off the health radar than improper hand washing? It seems that although rodents and insects are disgusting, the unseen dangers lurking at a restaurant like bacteria on food surfaces and poor food storage are bigger dangers.

Published by John Ford

John is a Florida native with a background in Broadcasting, Print & New Media. An expert in Broadcast Talent & Creative Services with stints at ABC & as VP/New Media at Sabo Media. A respected writer for Par...  View profile

To comment, please sign in to your Yahoo! account, or sign up for a new account.