Saturday, March 22, 2014

New Inspection Rules for City Restaurants Aims to Lower Fines


The City Council and Department of Health have joined forces to introduce new health inspection rules for restaurants.


City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito announced Friday that restaurant owners will now be able to request penalty and grade-free inspections to get advice on how to keep their businesses up to code.


Mark-Viverito said that these changes will reduce restaurant fines by 25 percent.


“Rather than a range in which fines can be levied that was previously quite a wide range, going from $ 200 to $ 2,000 that could be determined at tribunal, there will now be a fixed schedule of fines,” said Health Commissioner Dr. Mary Bassett.


“Letter grading was never intended to be a revenue generator for the city of New York,” Mark-Viverito said. “The rules will provide much-needed fine relief to the city’s restaurants and will show that we can treat restaurants fairly without compromising public safety.”


Currently, 88 percent of city restaurants post an A grade, 10 percent post a B and 2 percent have a C.





NEWS – NY1




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via Great Local News: New York http://ift.tt/1iZiLP1

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