| Chinese restaurant in Greenwich handed record fine for hygiene breaches |
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24/01/2012 02:19 (127 Day 18:22 minutes ago) | |||||
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The FINANCIAL -- A Chinese restaurant in Greenwich has been handed a record fine of £54,000 and its owners have been banned from running restaurants in the future after it failed to clean up its act, according to Caterer and Hotelkeeper.
The Peninsula restaurant, 85 Bugsbys Way, SE10 pleaded guilty in Woolwich Crown Court to 18 breaches of food hygiene and was fined £54,000 - believed to be one of the biggest fines ever handed out in England for such an offence. It was also ordered to pay £2,600 costs.
No paper towels at hand basins meant it was difficult for kitchen staff to maintain good standards of personal hygiene.The restaurant was allowed to reopen eight days after that inspection once the kitchen was cleaned and the original mouse inspection treated, in accordance with food laws.The Court heard that the restaurant's owner, Crestdane, was fined £13,500 in February 2010 after similar conditions were found at the premises. Because of this previous conviction, Judge Byers prohibited Crestdane from running a food business in the future.
Action the council took to help the business clean up its act in the past included providing advice in person to managers, sending warning letters to the company and serving legal notices. This time officers were forced to close the premises due to the very serious conditions found.
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