Resolve to Protect: Why This Year’s #1 Priority Should Be Food Safety

The new year presents foodservice managers with a wonderful opportunity to reset, refocus, and recommit to what matters most: protecting the health of every student, guest, patient, resident, or customer who dines in their establishment. As a manager or owner, there’s no better time than now to evaluate your food safety culture and strengthen your team’s dedication to safe food handling practices.

Food safety culture goes beyond simply following health codes or passing inspections. It’s the collective attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors that your entire team shares about food safety. When food safety is truly embedded in your establishment’s culture, it becomes automatic. It is not just something employees do because they were told to do so, but because they understand how important it is to everyone: owners, managers, and their fellow employees.

A strong food safety culture protects your customers, safeguards your reputation, reduces liability, and creates a professional environment where employees take pride in their work. A strong food safety culture forces managers to lead by example. I often use the example of handwashing. If managers continually remind employees to wash their hands, but they themselves don’t wash their hands when they first step into the kitchen, they have shown employees that food safety isn’t a priority. They are not leading by example! When managers lead by example and prioritize food safety, the entire team follows suit.

Before you can recommit, you need to honestly assess your current food safety culture. Ask yourself these questions:

  • Do you have established SOPs that address basic food safety operations?
  • Do employees consistently wash their hands at proper times, or do they take shortcuts when they think no one is watching?
  • Are temperature logs completed accurately and on time, or filled in hastily at the end of shifts?
  • When someone identifies a food safety concern, do they feel comfortable speaking up?

Are these the only questions you should ask yourself to ensure you have a food-safe culture?  Certainly not! But the answers to these questions will help to determine whether food safety is prioritized in your operation or merely treated as a box-checking exercise. Remember, this assessment isn’t about finding all the faults of your business. It is about identifying opportunities for growth in your food safety culture and programs.

 


…this assessment isn’t about finding all the faults of your business…it’s about identifying opportunities for growth in your food safety culture and programs


Effective food safety culture starts with clear, measurable goals. I remember back to one of my introductory management classes in college and the adage, if you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it! Consider establishing some benchmarks and targets with deadlines, such as achieving zero critical violations during your next health inspections. Ensuring that 100% of your staff receive some form of food safety training is crucial. Remember, food handler training is always an option and is generally more budget-friendly than the food safety manager certification, which is considered the gold standard.

Whatever goals you establish, write them down and share them with your entire team, not just the management team. Then, revisit them quarterly to track progress. Post visual reminders throughout your kitchen. Integrate food safety discussions into every staff meeting. Consider appointing food safety champions among your team who can help maintain standards and mentor newer employees.

As a manager, you set the tone for food safety culture. Your team watches everything you do. If you skip handwashing, ignore temperature checks, or make excuses for cutting corners during busy periods, your employees will mirror these behaviors regardless of what your training materials say.

Recommit to being the food safety leader your establishment needs. Stay engaged with your food safety program, observe employee behaviors, and provide immediate, constructive, and positive feedback.

At FoodHandler, we are re-committing ourselves to help you maintain and strengthen your food safety program, too! For the last several years, FoodHandler has sponsored quarterly webinars with our food safety experts to help you stay informed. This year, we are upping the ante and bringing you six webinars to help you keep your food safety programs top of mind!  Check out our upcoming SafeBites Food Safety Webinars, all to bring you the most current information about food safety.. Risk Nothing.

READ MORE POSTS

Food Defense—What is Your Game Plan?

We are into the season of Friday Night Lights and for many of you, this is a time when offensive and defensive strategies are discussed and rehashed during Monday morning quarterbacking sessions. Most of you working in foodservices have your “offensive” game under control with menu item and service strategies to ensure customer satisfaction--a big part of your play book. But, how is your “defensive” game? Do you have procedures in place to protect food from intentional contamination? In this blog, we will cover some background on food defense and discuss whether it really is a necessary strategy. In the second posting for this month, action steps for operations to consider will be presented.

Evaluating Food Safety

One of the suggestions I made in the last blog was to assess the food safety culture in your organization by observing the food handling techniques of workers. Let’s explore that some more. You can do an overall assessment or you can hone in on specific areas of the operation, such as production or cleaning practices. Remember, when the environmental health inspector visits your operation, he/she just gets a snapshot of what is going on in your operation on that particular day at that specific time. You are there nearly every day, so you have a much better understanding on what really happens in your operation.

September is Food Safety Education Month: The Culture of Food Safety

Developing a culture of food safety is important for any foodservice operation. You may be wondering--just what is a culture of food safety? Let’s start talking about it by first defining what is meant by culture. When you look culture up in the dictionary, you will see terms such as shared knowledge, beliefs, values, attitudes, and meanings; a way of life; patterns of behavior; learned behavior of a group of people; and transmitted from generation to generation. I think these descriptors provide good insight into the meaning of a culture of food safety. You can also think about where you grew up, and a vision of culture comes. For example, I grew up in rural Oklahoma, graduating in the 1970’s with a class of 24 students. My culture instilled in me an appreciation for rural life, hard work, and independence. As I grow older, I realize I haven’t changed very much from my early years, even though I have completed a PhD, lived a lot of places, and traveled throughout the world!