Thursday, October 28, 2010

County Inspectors Shut Down Public Health Menace

Making sure you don't get ptomaine at the county fair:

Jeff Cogen, the top elected official in Multnomah County, Ore. tried to turn lemons into lemonade, by apologizing Thursday for the shutting down of a lemonade stand by county health inspectors at a Portland arts fair last week.

"A lemonade stand is a classic iconic American kid thing to do," the county Chairman said. "I don't want to be in the business of shutting that down."

Cogen told CBS affiliate KOIN that he called Julie Murphy's mom and "shared with her my feeling that it really wasn't the county's business to be stopping 7-year-olds from selling lemonade."

...Maria Fife, Julie's mom, said her daughter wanted to open a lemonade stand after seeing a cartoon character open one. She was selling Kool-Aid lemonade for 50 cents a cup when an inspector approached and asked for her license - which costs $120 - at the fair. The other vendors reportedly rallied around Julie, and her "business" started booming.

According to KOIN, two inspectors then threatened Julie with a $500 fine, and she left in tears.

While the county inspectors were doing their job, Cogen said, the rules are meant for professional food service operators.

"This isn't something we need to be using our limited resources to crack down on," he said.

Hey, rules are rules, and you gotta follow them even if it means giving a little girl a lesson in what happens when you try to start your own business.