Clermont Bar Served Customers With Food From Unknown Sources, 13 High Violations
Crafted in Clermont racked up 13 high-severity violations in a single inspection, including food from unapproved sources…
Violation V05 (Handwashing procedures) is a High Priority food safety violation in the Personnel category with 4,280 citations in the past 12 months. CONTAMINATION PATHWAY: Improper handwashing is the single most significant factor in spreading foodborne illness.
Summary generated from Florida DBPR public inspection records and CDC food safety data.
Under Florida's food safety regulations, V05 (Handwashing procedures) is a high priority violation addressing Personnel standards.
Reference: 61C-4.023(3), FDA Food Code 2-301
V05 — Handwashing procedures
Inadequate handwashing by food employees
— Florida Administrative Code 61C-4, FDA Food Code
CONTAMINATION PATHWAY: Improper handwashing is the single most significant factor in spreading foodborne illness. Hands carry 3,200 bacteria per square centimeter. CDC reports proper handwashing reduces diarrheal illness by 30% and respiratory illness by 21%. Inadequate technique leaves Norovirus, E. coli, and Salmonella on hands, directly contaminating food.
CDC Risk Factor Classification: Poor Personal Hygiene - CDC Risk Factor #5
The CDC identifies five major contributing factors to foodborne illness outbreaks: food from unsafe sources, inadequate cooking, improper holding temperatures, contaminated equipment, and poor personal hygiene. Source: CDC Contributing Factors
A 2017 CDC study found that 89% of foodborne norovirus outbreaks in restaurants involved infected food workers who did not properly wash their hands. In one Florida outbreak, 80 wedding guests became ill after kitchen staff failed to wash hands between handling raw chicken and preparing salads.
Employees must wash hands for minimum 20 seconds with soap and warm water: before handling food, after touching raw meat, after using restroom, after sneezing/coughing, after handling garbage, after touching face/hair, when switching tasks. Use proper technique: wet hands, apply soap, scrub 20 seconds including fingertips and between fingers, rinse, dry with single-use towel.
Crafted in Clermont racked up 13 high-severity violations in a single inspection, including food from unapproved sources…
Data Source: This reference is based on official public inspection records from the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) and the FDA Food Code.
Editorial Process: Content generated using AI to synthesize complex regulatory data and CDC food safety research, then reviewed and verified for accuracy by our editorial team.
Disclaimer: Violation descriptions reflect Florida Administrative Code Chapter 61C-4 and the FDA Food Code current at time of publication. Health risk information sourced from CDC, FDA, and peer-reviewed research.
Editor: All content reviewed and verified by Christopher F. Nesbitt, Sr., Nationally Registered EMT & BU-trained Paralegal.
This page is maintained by FloridaFoodSafety.org. How we collect and verify this data.