d4v3 wrote:The problem with the grade system is that you don't know if a certain grade is a result of many minor violations or one or two major violations. Also if a restaurant receives a "C" because they have one major infraction and one minor infraction, but all they need to fix is the minor infraction to get a "B", then they will concentrate on fixing the minor violation rather than the serious one that poses a greater health risk. Moreover, many restaurants get written up for things that are beyond their reasonable control like the type of walls and floors they have. For instance, brick walls are considered a minor violation because they are harder to clean. In Chicago, violations are classified as critical, serious or minor. All critical infractions must be fixed at the time of the inspection or the restaurant is shut down. This gives the inspectors a chance to educate the owners on how to fix the serious problems and avoid future violations, while giving them time to fix the minor problems that don't pose a great health risk (like bright lighting in the dish washing area). Personally, I think the Chicago system works pretty well. The big problem is that there are not enough inspectors to keep up with the scheduled inspections.
How the infractions are classified is a different issue. We're not talking about whether Chicago's classification of infractions as "critical, serious or minor" is inferior. What is deemed inferior by some, myself included, is the lack of publicity of the classification and the understanding by the public of what the classification means. So, let's say, for the sake of argument, you assign "A" for no violations, "B" for minor violations, "C" for for serious violations and "D" or "F" is for critical violations, and in each storefront window, you post a placard publicizing the current rating. In that case, I don't think Chicago would need to necessarily change the way they inspect restaurants, except, as you say, to hire more inspectors.
Now, some people may be more nervous about eating at a "B" restaurant, and others may shrug their shoulders. But either way, it balances out, I believe, and it gives the restaurant owner an incentive to improve.