To bring in more professionalism in the process within the resources available
Tamil Nadu Food Safety Commissioner Kumar Jayanth on
Tuesday ordered the Designated Officers (DOs) of Food Safety Wing to
train the staff at noon meal and Anganwadi centres across the State in
safe and hygienic cooking practices.
In a
video-conference, he instructed the DOs of all 32 districts to provide
training on handling different types of food materials, safe cooking
practices and maintaining hygienic conditions, an official who
participated told The Hindu on Wednesday.
The
noon meal scheme at schools was a State Government project. Anganwadi
centres are run by Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS), a
Central Government-sponsored social welfare scheme to tackle
malnutrition and health problems in children and their mothers.
Apart
from cooking, emphasis will also be placed on storage of different food
materials. The objective was to bring in more professionalism in the
process within the resources available to the staff, the official said.
The
training will be conducted at the block-level, where the Block
Development Officer will coordinate the effort with the DOs. Training
for the first batch was likely to commence in a week’s time. The Food
Safety Commissioner has written to all the district administrations
seeking their cooperation.
Even though nearly three
months have elapsed since the Food Safety Commissioner directed all DOs
to test samples from noon meal and Anganwadi centres, no sample had been
taken in Coimbatore so far, sources said.
Mr.
Jayanth had issued a circular on July 19 in the wake of more than 20
children dying after taking the mid-day meal at a school in Bihar on
July 16. It was found that food was contaminated as a result of the
cooking oil having been placed in a container formerly used to store
pesticides. While initially the process was held-up in Coimbatore due to
the microbiologist post at the Government Food Analysis Laboratory here
lying vacant, it was yet to take off even though the post was filled, a
few weeks ago. The process of lifting samples and testing them was
likely to be taken up after the training programme for the cooks
conclude, an official said.
Coimbatore had one of
the six Government food analysis laboratories in Tamil Nadu that are
approved under the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006. The others are
in Chennai, Salem, Thanjavur, Tirunelveli and Madurai.
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