Unsafe Food Handling and Unsanitary Kitchen Conditions
Summary
The facility failed to ensure food was prepared, distributed, and served in accordance with professional standards of practice and that the kitchen environment was sanitary. During the kitchen observation, the entrance area had old dried splashes of food/liquid on the walls, a current wet puddle on the floor, and an ice machine that was broken and off. The resident refrigerator in the kitchen contained more than 30 facility-prepared pudding and applesauce cups that were labeled with expiration dates of 03/12/2026, 03/15/2026, and 03/16/2026, and staff stated those items should have been discarded before the expiration date and should not have been stored with resident foods brought in from outside sources. The kitchen also had multiple sanitation concerns. The juice machine dispenser nozzle had masking tape over some buttons that was soiled, discolored, and worn, and staff stated they did not know when it had last been cleaned. The dishwasher area had a thick layer of dust and food particles on top, black caked buildup around the pipes and on the floor and walls below it, a hole in the wall where piping came through, and peeling paint behind the dishwasher. The stove top burners had heavy grime and food buildup, the backsplash had splashes and food particles, and the grease traps had multiple layers of buildup. Shelves above the food preparation tables were dusty with grease, and under the food prep counters there was dust, grime, food particles, trash, and an upside-down mouse box with an imprint in the dust. Staff M and Staff T stated the area below the dishwasher was not sanitary, and staff could not produce records showing routine or deep cleaning was being completed as expected. During food preparation and service, Staff FF handled food and equipment without proper hand hygiene or glove changes. Staff FF removed gloves, opened a refrigerator, went to the dry storage area, then flipped a hamburger patty and handled a roast beef thermometer without washing hands or donning new gloves. Staff FF also handled a thermometer probe and a Tator Tot with bare hands, then washed hands and placed the same soiled Tator Tot back on the baking sheet. Staff FF later used ungloved hands to break up melting ice from the broken ice machine and placed that ice on resident drinks and ice cream. The same ice was observed melting on top of resident juice and milk lids and on ice cream cups, and those items were served to residents in the dining room. Staff M and Staff DD stated the ice machine had been turned off and was not to be used, but no sign had been placed on it at the time of the observation.
Penalty
Resources
Below are regulatory guidelines relevant to this citation:
Trusted data from CMS and state health departments
Every citation, penalty and Plan of Correction is sourced from public CMS records (latest release June 24, 2026) and official state health department websites — never guesswork.
Trusted by long-term care providers and associations.



