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Eat'n Park borrows NASA tactic to help reduce food adulteration, fraudEat'n Park borrows NASA tactic to help reduce food adulteration, fraud

Alan Liddle, Senior Data & Events Editor

November 1, 2012

3 Min Read
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Running restaurants may not require a degree in rocket science, but at least one department at the 75-unit Eat’n Park family-dining chain is taking a NASA-like approach to its work.

Bill Moore, director of safety and security for Homestead, Pa.-based Eat’n Park Hospitality Group, said his team borrowed a playbook page from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration as part of a three-pronged strategy to reduce incidences of food adulteration by foreign objects, such as glass, and fraudulent claims about such problems.

“Whenever NASA has a shuttle go down, or any airliner goes down, investigators find all the missing pieces and catalog every screw that was in that shuttle or airplane,” Moore explained “We’re saying, ‘Okay, let’s look at every piece of glass [or china] we have in our facility, let’s look at every piece of wood that can come off and let’s look at every screw that might fall into a drink. Let’s make sure we know [in advance] what can happen and where something can come from.”

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One of the other two major components of Eat’n Park’s adulterated-food-reduction strategy involved the chain’s replacement of some types of glassware with attractive, shatter-resistant plastic products to reduce the amount of possible adulterant source materials in its restaurants, Moore said. The other, he noted, related to the chain’s use of security camera video footage to confirm that diners claiming to have suffered from adulterated food reacted in a likely manner.

Moore did not provide details about the annual number of consumer claims for compensation tied to verified or alleged incidences of foreign objects in food, but offered that when you operate nearly 80 restaurants, “It can add up.”

Speaking of Eat’n Park’s multi-piece defense strategy, he said, “Those three areas have really helped us reduce our claims, as far as foreign objects found in food are concerned.”

In addition to cataloging dishware and some building materials and equipment pieces used in Eat’n Park restaurants, Moore’s group studied how each type of dishware reacted when dropped on a hard surface from a height of three feet. That undertaking by Michael Galterio, the chain’s food code specialist, documented such things as the distance pieces flew when specific dishware shattered.

Moore said data from the distance analysis were incorporated into a chart now used as part of the food-safety curriculum presented to about 500 managers and other key employees annually. The key underlying training messages to come from that analysis, he said: “When you break a dish, you just can’t clean up the dish. You have to clean up the area [and] go 10 to 12 feet out; food that is uncovered [in the vicinity] has to be thrown away.“

The pieces left over from the breakage research were stored in labeled bins in a plastic box at headquarters so that they can easily be retrieved for comparison with objects guests report finding in their food, Moore said.

“It gives you a place to start an investigation,” he said of the ability to make such comparisons. “You can say, ‘This piece did come from our restaurant or this piece did not, so maybe we need to go back to the [food] manufacturer.’”

In instances when an object submitted by a consumer does not match one of Eat’n Park’s cataloged materials, nor does it match materials found at the manufacturer’s plant, the possibility of fraud must be considered, Moore indicated. And Eat’n Park has nailed some individuals in the act of trying to defraud the chain.

“We have caught a couple of people putting stuff in food through the use of our video security cameras,” Moore said. But as telling as what the camera footage has shown at times, is what has not been seen in video of other customers who claim to have found foreign objects in their food and even to have broken a tooth yet “didn’t even flinch” during the purported ordeal, he said.

Contact Alan J. Liddle at [email protected].
Follow him on Twitter at: @AJ_NRN

About the Author

Alan Liddle

Senior Data & Events Editor

Alan is Senior Data & Events Editor for The Restaurant & Food Group within Informa Connect, including Nation’s Restaurant News, Restaurant Hospitality, Food Management and Supermarket News. He joined NRN in 1984, covering the Pacific Northwest, and later added chief photographer duties, initiated NRN’s regular technology coverage, was on the development team for NRN.com and generated content for NRN’s early podcasting initiative, Podcast Central, beginning in 2006. Alan is senior researcher and data analyst for NRN and Supermarket News market data products, including Top 200 and SN75, and helps develop and present educational programs for conferences and webinars. A graduate of California State University at Fullerton and a former daily and weekly newspaper reporter, he resides in Salinas, Calif.

 

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