Mayor Michael R.
Bloomberg
and
Deputy Senate
Majority Leader
Jeff Klein
announced on
Saturday,
January
31st, that
New York City
is updating its
restaurant
inspection
system to
improve
sanitary
conditions
and give
consumers more
information.
Under the new
model, the
Health
Department will
increase
inspections for
less sanitary
restaurants and
require all
establishments
to conspicuously
post letter
grades – a
measure
championed by
Senator Klein to
keep the public
better informed
about inspection
results. The new
system will be
phased in over
the next two
years. This
approach will
concentrate city
resources on the
restaurants that
pose the
greatest risk to
public health
and place no
additional
burden on
establishments
that maintain
sanitary
conditions. Dr.
Thomas R.
Frieden,
New York City
Health
Commissioner,
and State
Assemblyman
Steve Cymbrowitz
joined Mayor
Bloomberg and
Senator Klein at
the
New York
Marriott
at the
Brooklyn Bridge
for today's
announcement.
"We know New
York City's
restaurants are
the best in the
world and we
want them to
also be the
cleanest," said
Mayor Bloomberg.
"This new system
will encourage
the less
sanitary
restaurants to
clean up – and
won't punish the
good guys. As
sanitation
improves, so
will business.
The more
residents and
tourists can
trust the food
they buy in
New York City
restaurants,
the more likely
they are to
patronize them."
"Today's
announcement is
a great step
forward toward
improving the
overall public
health of all
New York City
residents,"
said Senator
Jeff Klein
(D-Bronx/Westchester).
"As someone who
has spent years
advocating for a
more consumer
friendly system,
I am thrilled
that
New York City
diners
will finally
have easy access
to the latest
inspection
results of their
favorite
restaurants.
Having a letter
grade posted for
all diners to
see will provide
a real incentive
for restaurants
with a 'C'
hanging in the
doorway to clean
up their act."
Senator Klein
will again
introduce
legislation in
the 2009
Legislative
Session to
require local
departments of
health
state-wide to
implement a
letter grading
system. "Whether
New Yorkers are
dining out for a
routine meal or
to celebrate a
special
occasion, their
only
reservations
should be to
book a table. I
applaud the
Mayor and the
Health
Department's
outstanding
efforts to
improve the well
being of all New
Yorkers," said
Senator Klein.
Food-related
illness is a
source of
growing public
concern in New
York City.
Complaints about
food-borne
illness have
increased in
recent years,
and rodent
infestations are
a common problem
in restaurants.
The
Health
Department
reports
signs of rodents
in 25 percent of
the
establishments
inspected.
Food poisoning
causes missed
work and school,
emergency room
visits,
hospitalizations,
and even deaths.
In fact, based
on national
estimates, more
than 11,000 New
Yorkers are
treated in
emergency
departments
each year for
restaurant-related
food related
illnesses, and
thousands of
people are
hospitalized as
a result. The
cost of these
hospitalizations
and
emergency room
visits is
more than $130
million
annually.
"By requiring
restaurants to
publicly post
grades, the
new food safety
initiative
will help
consumers make
more informed
choices about
where to eat,
while increasing
restaurant
operators'
motivation to
stay clean,"
said Dr. Frieden.
"New York City
will have safer
restaurants and
fewer cases of
food poisoning."
Senator Klein
has been
releasing
regular reports,
Enough to Make
you Sick, on the
sanitary
conditions of
supermarkets and
New York City
restaurants
since 2000.
Senator Klein's
2008 report
studied a subset
of New York
City's 20,000
restaurants with
the 100 worst
inspection
reports, with
violation point
scores ranging
from 69 to 600 –
far exceeding
the 28 points
that prompt
re-inspection.
Of the bottom
100 restaurants,
87 percent had
at least one
category of pest
cited in their
most recent
inspection.
Research from
other
jurisdictions
suggests that
public posting
of inspection
findings has the
following
outcomes:
Business
improves at
restaurants with
higher grades.
When sanitation
grades are
conspicuously
posted at food
service
establishments,
customers use
the information
to seek out
establishments
with higher
grades. Among
Los Angeles
restaurants,
improvements in
grades are
associated with
increased sales.
Restaurants
improve their
sanitary
standards. When
Los Angeles
County started
posting grades
in 1987, only 40
percent of its
food service
establishments
received "A"
grades. By 2006,
83percent were
meeting that
standard.
Fewer people get
sick. Although
the association
is not proven,
Los Angeles
has recorded a
20 percent
decline in
hospitalizations
for food-borne
illnesses since
it started
posting sanitary
grades in food
service
establishments.
The new model
will also bring
New York City
closer to the
FDA
recommended
schedule of at
least three full
inspections
every year for
full service
restaurants. At
present, most
New York City
restaurants
receive only
one.