By Dan Petrella/CU-CitizenAccess -- Despite promises over the past four years to post restaurant inspection reports online, the Champaign-Urbana Public Health District will miss another self-imposed deadline to do so.
Because of ongoing “computer glitches,” district officials said they would fail to post the restaurant inspection reports online in January. They set that goal earlier this year in an interview with CU-CitizenAccess.org for a story on restaurants that failed inspections and after promising since 2008 to make the information more easily available to the dining public.
Meanwhile, inspectors gave seven restaurants failing marks last month. Several of those restaurants had failed previous inspections.
Story: 8 restaurants fail October health inspections
Story: New records show more restaurant inspection failures
Story: Champaign County restaurants fail inspections but public never told
WILL radio story: Eatery inspection reports are tough to get
Follow-up story: County Board of Health delays publication of inspection reports
The new goal is for the restaurant inspection website to be up and running sometime this spring, said Julie Pryde, the district’s public health administrator. North Carolina-based Garrison Enterprises is the site building for the district.
“I know that’s not very definite, but that’s just about how definite they’re being with us,” Pryde said.
The district’s inspectors currently fill out their reports in digital form, and the idea is for the reports to be accessible and searchable online as soon they’re completed, she said. But there are technical problems that need to be ironed out to make that possible, she added.
“Every time we move to something electronic, I expect that we’re going to have glitches,” Pryde said.
The health district currently doesn’t publicize the results of the 1,300 inspections in conducts each year in any way. Other area health departments publish scores online or require eating establishments to post a letter grade. Since September, CU-CitizenAccess has been posting the district’s reports on restaurants that failed inspections.
Food-service facilities, including restaurants, cafeterias and grocery stores, are routinely inspected because unsanitary conditions can lead to food-borne illnesses such as salmonella, E. coli and Hepatitis A. Symptoms of food-borne illnesses – which can resemble the intestinal flu – include abdominal cramps, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, fever and dehydration, according to the National Institutes of Health.
Earlier this year, CU-CitizenAccess reported that one in 10 restaurants in the county had failed an inspection during a recent four-year period.
Afterward, the Champaign County Board of Health discussed the possibility of requiring restaurants to post scores or complete inspection reports. But the board decided to wait to see what recommendations come out of a national food-safety conference that will be held in Indianapolis in April.
Meanwhile, area restaurants continue to fail inspections without the public’s knowledge.
As a public service, CU-CitizenAccess obtains inspection reports on a monthly basis through the Illinois Freedom of Information Act and adds restaurants that have failed to an interactive map. (To view the map, click on the link in the sidebar.)
In November, Woori Jib, a Korean restaurant on the University of Illinois campus, failed for the third time this year, according to inspection records. The restaurant, 710 S. Sixth St., has failed a total of five times in the past three years.
During its Nov. 2 inspection, Woori Jib scored 22 out of 100, according to a health district report. Inspectors found “tofu, ground beef, cooked and cut eggs and imitation crab” outside of refrigerators at potentially unsafe temperatures, among other violations.
Last month, two other Champaign restaurants failed for the second time this year: Firehaus, 708 S. Sixth St., and Cravings, 603 S. Wright St. The failures were the fourth for each restaurant since 2009.
In all, seven restaurants failed in November, according to a review inspection records. Restaurants fail inspections when they score below 36 on a 100-point scale. (See the complete list of November failures below.)
Firehaus and Chinatown Buffet, 713 Marketview Drive, Champaign, both had their health permits temporarily suspended after receiving negative scores during their November inspections.
Inspectors can suspend a restaurant’s permit if it receives a negative score, if it fails a mandatory reinspection after failing a routine inspection, or if they find violations that pose an immediate public-health risk.
Among the violations found at Chinatown Buffet on Nov. 1 were sushi on the buffet at 20 degrees above the proper temperature, moldy lemons in a reach-in cooler, and mouse droppings in a dry-storage room. The restaurant was allowed to reopen two days later after correcting the problems and scoring 86 on its reinspection.
Firehaus had its permit suspended Nov. 3 for problems including bathroom sinks without hot water, “chicken wings being cooled on counters at room temperature,” and flies throughout the restaurant, according to an inspection report. Its permit was reinstated the next day after the issues were addressed.
November inspection failures
Click on the name of a restaurant to view its inspection report. For a complete listing of restaurants that have failed inspections since April 2007, see the map in the sidebar.
| Facility Name | Address | Inspection Date | Inspection Type | Score (out of 100) |
| Chinatown Buffet | 713 Marketview Drive, Champaign | 11/1/2011 | Routine | -23 |
| Woori Jib | 710 S. Sixth St., Champaign | 11/2/2011 | Routine | 22 |
| Firehaus | 708 S. Sixth St., Champaign | 11/3/2011 | Routine | -6 |
| El Progresso Tienda y Carniceria | 510 N. Cunningham Ave., Urbana | 11/14/2011 | Routine | 4 |
| Dos Reales | 1407 N. Prospect Ave., Champaign | 11/15/2011 | Routine | 8 |
| Chopstix | 202 E. Green St., Champaign | 11/16/2011 | Routine | 27 |
| Cravings | 603 S. Wright St., Champaign | 11/16/2011 | Routine | 28 |
Champaign-Urbana Public Health District Eduardo Ramos Restaurant Inspections Urbana poverty Jobs single mom public funds Public Records Ramos Champaign County University of Illinois City of Champaign FOIA justice Yolanda Davis Cherry Orchard homeless Safe Haven housing health care 5th & Hill champaign snap Ameren Eastern Illinois Food Bank low income education Rantoul Illinois food Bernard Ramos
News-Gazette: Frances Nelson to move to local control
Friday, May 18, 2012 - 15:56
Latitude News: As jobs go overseas, foreign jobs come here - just not enough
Friday, May 18, 2012 - 15:45
Low income students up more than 50 percent in Champaign County schools
Friday, April 27, 2012 - 18:20
Owner to seek rezoning of property east of Cherry Orchard
Tuesday, April 10, 2012 - 09:46
Health officials temporarily shutter 2 restaurants, fail 7 others during February inspections
Wednesday, March 28, 2012 - 14:00
Bridging the religious divide: Teaching across faiths
Tuesday, March 27, 2012 - 16:21
Bridging the religious divide: Ministering to the poor at home and abroad
Tuesday, March 27, 2012 - 13:52
Bridging the religious divide: Different faiths set difference aside, work together
Tuesday, March 27, 2012 - 13:30
Hearing continued for Cherry Orchard landlord
Saturday, March 24, 2012 - 12:53
Court date set for Cherry Orchard landlord
Tuesday, March 13, 2012 - 12:56
Bilingual teachers in demand under new state law
0 comment(s) |
3,251 view(s)
Latitude News: As jobs go overseas, foreign jobs come here - just not enough
0 comment(s) |
158 view(s)
Cash crunch again threatens local Boys and Girls Club
0 comment(s) |
2,341 view(s)
Health care reform bridges prescription gap left by Medicare
1 comment(s) |
2,381 view(s)
Neighbors threaten lawsuit in campaign against toxic site
0 comment(s) |
4,074 view(s)
Q + A: Dr. David Adcock, director of Urbana Adult Education
0 comment(s) |
2,586 view(s)
News-Gazette: Frances Nelson to move to local control
0 comment(s) |
251 view(s)
Safe Haven residents seek other options
0 comment(s) |
2,482 view(s)
State commission to recommend solutions to decrease extreme poverty
0 comment(s) |
2,530 view(s)
Lack of refuge from winter may leave homeless out in cold
0 comment(s) |
2,103 view(s)
¨ Copyright 2011 CU-CitizenAccess.