From The Stew, the Chicago Tribune's food blog:
Renee Enna, The Stew, July 10, 2008 wrote:The [Whole Foods] store, at 1000 W. North Ave, was closed Wednesday by the Chicago Department of Public Health after inspectors found mouse feces throughout the premises, including more than 100 droppings in one walk-in cooler alone, according to the department. Also found was a dead mouse on a glueboard trap.
Wednesday's visit was a follow-up to an inspection on June 27, when inspectors ordered management to eliminate the infestation and warned that there would be a re-inspection, according to Tim Hadac, the department's spokesman.
On Wednesday, inspectors found "no compliance," which automatically raises the violation from “serious” to “critical,” which prompted the closing, Hadac said.
I'm not unrealistic about how hard it is to prevent incidents like this in the food industry but what concerns me is the part about this being a follow up to a previous inspection and that the city found "no compliance" on their second visit. For all the preachiness that WF has been known for over the past few years (especially as it pertains to foie gras, lobsters, etc.), it seems pretty incongruous that this type of basic housekeeping seems to have been ignored.
Does Whole Foods respect animals that yield food more than their customers? Incidents like this certainly make it appear so.
Mice, supermarkets and food safety=R=
By protecting others, you save yourself. If you only think of yourself, you'll only destroy yourself. --Kambei Shimada
Every human interaction is an opportunity for disappointment --RS
There's a horse loose in a hospital --JM
That don't impress me much --Shania Twain