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Home / Northern Advocate

Takeaway owners fined $1200 after changing grade from D to B

Northern Advocate
25 Apr, 2019 08:00 PM3 mins to read

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Whangārei District Council's environmental health officers had issued a D grade grading certificate to a local food business operator, due to serious food hygiene concerns.

Whangārei District Council's environmental health officers had issued a D grade grading certificate to a local food business operator, due to serious food hygiene concerns.

Whangārei takeaway owners have been fined $1200 after failing to display a current food grading certificate and changing a grading certificate from a D to a B grade.

Whangārei District Council's Environmental Health Officers had issued a D grade certificate to Tui Takeaway and Chinese Food, in Maunu, due to serious food hygiene concerns.

During a follow-up visit council officers realised the operator had tampered with the certificate, by placing a B grade symbol over the D grade symbol.

The owners declined to comment when approached by the Northern Advocate.

"Our case was that the offenders wanted to avoid customer reaction to a D grade, and that this was a blatant attempt to mislead potential customers," WDC health and bylaws manager Reiner Mussle said.

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"The falsified certificate was confiscated and the operator was issued with a new D grade certificate, with instruction that this had to be placed in full public view. Following a complaint and subsequent visits, it was found that the operator was not displaying any certificate."

Mussle said the bylaw required the certificate to be displayed to enable the public to make an informed decision where to buy food.

After finding the first certificate had been altered and the new, correct one was not on display, the council's view was the actions were deliberate and intended to mislead the public.

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"Actions like this have the potential to damage the integrity of the system which exists to keep people safe. In a first for Whangārei District Council, the operator was prosecuted under the Local Government Act for breaching the bylaw," Mussle said.

The two owners appeared in Whangārei District Court, pleaded guilty and were fined $600 each for their part in this matter, including court costs.

"Council is satisfied that this conviction will serve as a warning to all council registered food business operators to display their most recent grading certificate, not to alter certificates, and to be aware that council will prosecute when there are breaches," Mussle said.

Whangārei District Council's Food Business Grading Bylaw 2016 requires all eligible food businesses, registered with the council, to be issued with a food hygiene grade following their audit or inspection.

This bylaw also requires restaurants and takeaways to display their current grading certificate at the entrance to the premises or place it where it is readily visible. It is an offence under the bylaw not to display a current grading certificate or where it cannot be readily seen by a member of the public.

Food hygiene practices are graded:

A - Excellent

B - Good

C - Adequate

D - Poor

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Most of the certificates issued by the council are for A or B grades. For a premises to achieve a D grade, substantial food hygiene and/or handling concerns will exist and officers will continue to work closely with the operators to achieve better compliance and reduce potential risk to the public.

More information on the Food Premises Grading Bylaw page.

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