Unsanitary kitchen conditions, plumbing-related water backup, and improper nourishment refrigerator storage
Summary
The kitchen was observed to be maintained in an unsanitary condition during an initial tour with the Assistant Dietary Manager. Food prep areas had crumbs and other food debris, shelves under the steam table were dirty with dust, food crumbs, and stains, food transport carts were dirty, the back of the oven had heavy dust and old food debris, a second food prep table had old food debris and stains, the broiler behind the tray line had dirt buildup, a bulk sugar container was contaminated with oats, the oven doors had heavy buildup of food debris and grease stains, clean pitchers were inverted on a dirty surface near the two-compartment sink, the walk-in freezer and refrigerator floors were sticky and dirty, another food transport cart was dirty, an 18-quart salt container was dusty and dirty on the exterior, and the top of the commercial dishwasher had heavy buildup of food debris. The Dietary Manager stated forms had been created for kitchen cleaning tasks, but staff in-services had not yet been completed, and the facility policy required food preparation areas to be maintained in a clean and sanitary condition. The kitchen also had backed up water on the floor related to plumbing problems. Surveyors observed pooled water around a drain spout in the dishwasher area, and in the beverage area the flooring had black soot and accumulated dirt with heavy water backing up from a broken sewer line causing the floor on the left side of the beverage/coffee station to become wet. The Director of Maintenance stated he was aware of the broken sewer drain causing flooding in the beverage area, that water was being vacuumed manually until the sewer line or main drain line could be replaced, and that a work order had been submitted and estimates obtained, but he had not been informed of the broken drain line in the dishwashing area. In the nourishment room, a small refrigerator measured 60 degrees Fahrenheit and contained partially consumed butter and cream cheese with no open date, along with fruit cups, puddings, yogurt, and thickened apple juice; sampled yogurt measured 52.7 degrees Fahrenheit and apple juice 44.8 degrees Fahrenheit. The unit clerk had documented a refrigerator temperature of 39 degrees Fahrenheit earlier that morning, but could not explain the change, and the Dietary Manager stated the temperature could not have changed from 39 degrees Fahrenheit to 60 degrees Fahrenheit in 10 minutes. The facility policy required cold foods to be maintained at 41 degrees Fahrenheit or below and foods to be wrapped or stored in covered containers, labeled and dated.
Penalty
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