Jan 31, 2013

Street vendors whip up a recipe for success

Street food joints cater to a majority of people in the city and if these outlets are removed the cost that one has to bear and the effort that one has to put in scouting for affordable food would be huge. Photo: K. Ramesh Babu
Street food joints cater to a majority of people in the city and if these outlets are removed the cost that one has to bear and the effort that one has to put in scouting for affordable food would be huge. 
Street food joints cater to a majority of people in the city and if these outlets are removed, the cost that one has to bear and the effort that one has to put in scouting for affordable food would be huge.
Most family outings in the city usually end up on a rendezvous with roadside stalls either for a ‘chat-pata chaat’ or a quick delicious snack. Indeed, the city is famous for its culinary dishes and street food vendors play a major role in the city’s eco-system.
In spite of this role of catering to many people on a daily basis, the street food vendors are the most neglected lot in the city, Anne Dahmen, coordinator for Sustainable Hyderabad Project (SHP) observes. Anne, a German research scholar, has been working on the problems and issues faced by the street vendors in Hyderabad since 2009.
Street vendors have a very peculiar condition in the city, Anne points out. “Street food joints cater to a majority of people in the city and if these outlets are removed, the cost that one has to bear and the effort that one has to put in scouting for affordable food would be huge,” she points out.
Unlike restaurants, where people go to eat, street food vendors identify a place where there is an unfulfilled demand and open their stall, hence these entrepreneurs are very important for the city, she explains.

Suspect quality

Some people are suspicious of the quality of food that these food vendors provide, while others, particularly government officials, view them nothing less than a nuisance in the public space. This, Anne says, is because of lack of legal sanction for this profession.
“From the moment a person starts a street food counter he has to face many troubles and one of the most important problems he faces is lack of knowledge about the policy provisions available for them along with the legal issues they have to follow,” she says.
On one hand, street food vendors face the threat of eviction on a daily basis because of a lack of legal recognition to their profession. On the other, vendors are also not aware of following legal requirements like Food Safety and Standards Act 2006, she explains.
“When compared to smaller hotels and restaurants, street food is safer as the customers can see the process of food preparation. With proper training, street food can be a source of sustenance for many families in the city,” she says.
As a pilot project, SHP, in collaboration with Dr. Reddy’s Foundation, trained four street vendors from four categories of street food – Chaat, ‘mirchi’ based snacks, Chinese fast food and ‘tiffins’. They in turn trained about 80 vendors in their own categories.
According to M. Vijay Kumar, one of the initial four food vendors who were trained under the ‘Aarogya’ scheme, his sales have gone up by an average of Rs. 800 to Rs. 1,000 per day after he implemented the training lessons.
“There are about 18,000 street food vendors in the city and if these results can be replicated for all these vendors, the economic benefit accruing to these many families will be phenomenal,” Anne explains.
To achieve this objective, there is a need to change the way street food vending is viewed among the people, she says. “Currently officials view the issue more as a regulatory problem, whereas to improve the sector there is a need for them to make the process more participatory,” she adds.

Last date for food safety licence: February 4

The Food Safety Wing has set a deadline for food sellers and manufacturers to obtain licences before February 4. There are around 10,000 business establishments in the district.
Designated officer of the Tamil Nadu Food Safety and Drug Administration, Dr M S Sampathkumar said to implement the rules laid down by the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006, officials are involved in registering and licensing food manufacturers.

Rally to sensitise traders to need to register under food safety Act

carrying forward:Students taking out a rally in the city on Wednesday.— Photo:M.Moorthy.
Carrying forward:Students taking out a rally in the city on Wednesday


Even as the February 4 deadline for food business units to register themselves under the Food Safety and Standards Act 2006 is fast approaching, the district administration organised a rally in the city on Wednesday to sensitise traders to the need to register under the Act immediately.
All food business operators with a turnover of Rs.12 lakh should obtain licence from the designated officer and those with turnover of below Rs.12 lakh should register themselves with the respective food safety officer as per the provisions of the Act.
Licence
Apart from hotels and restaurants, roadside eateries, grocers and departmental stores selling food products, and meat stalls would have to register or obtain licence depending on the turnover.
However, many traders in the district were yet to register themselves under the Act.
Collector Jayashree Muralidharan who flagged off the rally by students pointed out that the stay obtained by traders in this connection has been lifted and hence it was essential for them to register or obtain licences before February 4.
Failure to do so would attract penal action.
The rally was taken out through the city’s commercial areas from the Gandhi market via the Big Bazaar Street, NSB Road and Nandhikovil Street before culminating at Chathram Bus Stand.
V.P.Thandapani, Corporation Commissioner, and A.Ramakrishnan, designated officer for the district, TN Food Safety and Drug Administration (Food Wing), participated in the rally.

Food Safety AppellateTribunal mooted

Bhubaneswar, Jan 30: The State Government has put enforcement of food safety standards under single authority of Food Safety Commissioner and is mulling to set up a Food Safety Appellate Tribunal in the State. The legal and executive issues relating to the matter came up for discussion at a high level meeting here Tuesday.
Previously, the food standards were being enforced by several authorities. Now, the Commissioner will be assisted by Food Safety and other designated officers. The Government also proposes to have accredited and referral laboratories soon to intensify implementation of food safety standards in the State. It has also been proposed to declare the Additional District Magistrates as Adjudicating Officers.
Presently, Director of Public Health has been designated as Food Safety Commissioner. The existing Food Inspectors have been designated as Food Safety Officers. Twelve new posts have been created. It was decided in the meeting that there will be 38 Food Safety Officers in the State. While 30 of them will be posted at each district, the rest eight officers will be posted in urban local bodies (ULBs).
Meanwhile, Food Safety & Standards Authority of India has also started functioning as a regulatory body under Ministry of Health & Family Welfare. The implementation of the Standards will be governed as per the Food Safety and Standard (FSS) Act-2006, which envisages developing an effective enforcement machinery to ensure safety in sale and consumption of food.
The new Act has integrated eight different Acts and Government Orders (GOs) like Prevention of Food Adulation Act-1954, Fruit Products Order-1958, Meat Food Products Order-1973, Vegetable Oil Products (Control) Order-1947, Edible Oil Packaging (Regulation) Order-1988, Solvent Extracted Oil and Edible Flour (Control) Order-1967, Milk and Milk Products Order-1992 and other GOs relating to food under Essential Commodities Act-1955.
According to B K Panda, Food Safety Commissioner-cum-Director of Public Health, the business units, which have licence under Food Adulteration Act, will have to now renew their licence under FSS Act at the district level. The Additional District Medical Officers (Public Health) of the respective districts have been designated for the purpose.
All food dealing business units with an annual turnover of more than Rs 12 lakh will have to avail licence while shops with turnover less than that will have to be registered. No shop can carry on food business without valid licence or registration. The concerned department has been told to facilitate the process of the registration by making provisions at Common Service Centres.
It was also decided in the meeting that the State-Level Steering Committee will be constituted under the chairmanship of the Chief Secretary and the District Committees will be constituted under the respective Collectors. At the district level, the District Medical Officer will function as the Member-Conveyer.
It was also decided that five Cluster Food Testing Laboratories will be set up in the State. Each cluster will cover 4 to 5 districts. Mobile food testing laboratory will be set up to cover remote areas, large public congregations and disease outbreak areas. The clusters will be developed in urban areas like Berhampur, Cuttack, Puri, Balasore, Rourkela.
While Panchayati Raj institutions (PRIs) will be involved in implementation of the Act with technical support from Primary Health Centres, the collected licence and registration fees will be used for awareness generation and grievance redressal activities.
Multimedia campaigns will be under taken to generate awareness among common masses and stakeholders about the new food law, institutions created for implementation, provisions relating to licensing and registration.
Accredited activists at field level will be trained and engaged in inspecting the food dealing shops on incentive basis. The department has been asked also to develop a pro-active self-compliance machinery, which will check the standards through application of science and technology.