Watch what you eat. No, we are not policing your muffin-tops. Yes, we are worried about your health.
For, at least 90 per cent of small
and big eateries, street grub vendors, and retail stores and
transporters involved in the food business in Jharkhand do not have the
mandatory registration/licence to operate.
Worse, the food
controller is clueless about the exact number of illegal outlets that
may have mushroomed across the state in more than a decade. So, while
the government naps on necessary crackdown, you may want to seek a food
safety permit from the restaurant you next visit for lunch or dinner.
Under provisions
of the Food Safety and Standards Act (2006), any
company/vendor/hawker/
However, earlier
this year, the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) —
the Centre’s nodal agency for quality control and monitoring — extended
the deadline by a year. Still, the response has been tepid.
According to
figures made available by the state food directorate, only 2,000-odd
business entities from across the state had sought their permits.
Directorate sources also conceded that no new applications were pending
for clearance.
Food controller
T.P. Burnwal could not say how many eateries were operating illegally
across Jharkhand. Capital Ranchi roughly has 5,000 hotels, restaurants,
dhabas and street food joints. Not more than 10 per cent are registered,
sources claimed.
“How can the exact
number of food traders be known if they don’t register or seek licences
from us?” Burnwal said. “Since December 2012, a little over 2,000
businesses have either sought licence or got themselves registered. I
admit it is a sorry figure and of grave concern, but we are helpless.
Respective district administrations have to step up quality control,” he
added.
The fee for
acquiring licence/registration is paltry and depends on turnover. For
vendors, cart owners, food manufacturers, retail outlet owners,
transporters, et al, whose annual income is less than Rs 12 lakh, the
registration fee is just Rs 100.
The licence for
small traders (turnover Rs 12-25 lakh) comes for Rs 2,000, while big
traders pay Rs 3,000. Manufacturers (turnover Rs 25 lakh and above) have
to shell out Rs 5,000. Giant companies, which manufacture and also
maintain food depot/stocks under the same brand name, are required to
pay Rs 7,500.
If fee is not an obstacle, what is stopping grub businesses from seeking permits to operate?
“It could be lack
of awareness or sheer unwillingness because our special camps have
received poor response in the past,” Burnwal said. He added that he
would issue notices to district food inspectors next month.
The catch is
Jharkhand has only six food inspectors instead of 24, one each for every
district. Though 194 medical officers were asked to double up as food
inspectors in April to cushion manpower crunch, few took their job
seriously.
Incidentally, a
famous eatery in Ranchi, Rasiklal, was slapped a fine of Rs 5 lakh by
the district administration for substandard mithai and snacks during Diwali.
But then, crackdowns like these are token acts restricted to special occasions.
Capitol Group, one
of the prominent hospitality establishments in the capital and among
the few permit-holders, blamed the government’s inefficiency and the “chalta hai” attitude of people for the looming health risk.
Burnwal denied
allegations. “On December 2, I have summoned my officials for a meeting.
We may use the cane (to streamline things),” he said.
Will you stop eating outside?
|
Nov 23, 2013
Feast, but at your own risk - Most grub corners in state have no licence
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