Yep, the world is coming to an end - but they've added new clips in the
rerun!!!!

What next - a clearance certificate to allow people to do a good deed? Or
perhaps a health certificate before you invite friends over to dinner??????

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/28/AR2006112801
583.html?referrer=email 
 
Freshly Baked Handouts Forbidden in Fairfax
County Says Health Of Homeless Is at Issue

By Jacqueline L. Salmon
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, November 29, 2006; Page A01

The casserole has been canned.

Under a tough new Fairfax County policy, residents can no longer donate food
prepared in their homes or a church kitchen -- be it a tuna casserole,
sandwiches or even a batch of cookies -- unless the kitchen is approved by
the county, health officials said yesterday.

They said the crackdown on home-cooked meals is aimed at preventing food
poisoning among homeless people.

But it is infuriating operators of shelters for the homeless and leaders of
a coalition of churches that provides shelter and meals to homeless people
during the winter. They said the strict standards for food served in the
shelters will make it more difficult to serve healthy, hot meals to homeless
people. The enforcement also, they said, makes little sense.

"We're very aware that a number of homeless people eat out of dumpsters, and
mom's pot roast has got to be healthier than that," said Jim Brigl, chief
executive of Fairfax Area Christian Emergency & Transitional Services. "But
that doesn't meet the code."



County officials estimate that about 2,000 people are homeless in Fairfax.
They are served by a network of shelters that swells to more than three
dozen over the winter. FACETS, a Fairfax nonprofit group, coordinates most
hypothermia shelters, which are set to open Friday in two dozen churches and
other facilities.

The crackdown came after the county Health Department received a complaint
about food being served to the homeless population that was bedding down at
area houses of worship as part of the wintertime hypothermia program that
began last year. Health officials took a closer look at what shelter
residents ate and where the food came from.

Under state and county code, food served to the public must be prepared in a
kitchen that has been inspected and certified by the county Health
Department. Those standards are high: a commercial-grade refrigerator, a
three-compartment sink to wash, rinse and sanitize dishes and a separate
hand-washing sink, among other requirements.

Health officials said they weren't aware that food from unapproved kitchens
was being served in homeless shelters.

"We're dealing with a medically fragile population . . . so they're more
susceptible to food-borne illnesses than the general population," said Tom
Crow, the county Health Department's director of environmental health.
"We're trying to protect those people."

To help the churches prepare, the Health Department is waiving a $60 fee for
certification and is holding additional safe food-handling classes for
church volunteers. It is also giving churches that do not have approved
kitchens a list of other houses of worship with such facilities.

"We're not trying to come across as being a heavy-handed government," Crow
said.

Nonetheless, ministers from several of the two dozen participating churches
said they oppose the crackdown and hope the Health Department backs off.

"We see the reason for being certified. They want to ensure people's health
and safety," said the Rev. Keary Kincannon of Rising Hope United Methodist
Mission Church in the Alexandria portion of Fairfax County, which will open
as a hypothermia shelter for four months starting Friday.

"On the other hand, how much do you have to be a stickler with that?"
Kincannon asked. "What's more important: whether we're open to have somebody
get in out of the cold and get a meal? There's kind of a balance there."

The Rev. Judy Fender of Burke United Methodist Church said 50 volunteers had
been planning to cook beef stew, pork loin and other nutritious meals in the
church kitchen when it hosts the hypothermia shelter Dec. 17 through 23.

But she found out this week that, because the kitchen is not Health
Department-approved, it will have to prepare its food elsewhere.

It will be a logistical nightmare, Fender predicted, and is an insult to
members who have cooked meals for years in the church kitchen without any
problems.

"Why do [they] think that the traditional way of fixing a home-cooked meal
is going to poison people off the street?" Fender asked.

She said she will appeal to a higher authority to get the Health Department
to back off.

"I'm probably going to be in prayer that something is going to give on
this," Fender said.

The crackdown has also hit year-round shelters. They prepare their food in
on-site commercial kitchens, but many also accept donations from people who
bring leftover food, home-baked goodies and other products to their doors.

"It takes the personal element out," said Pam Michell, executive director of
New Hope Housing, which runs three year-round shelters and two wintertime
programs.

"There's something about being able to bring a batch of brownies or being
able to bring a home-cooked casserole to a shelter and feel like you're
doing your part to end homelessness," she said. "That warm, fuzzy touch is
going to go away."

________________________________________________
 
 
Rui Correia
Advocacy, Human Rights, Media and Language Consultant
2 Cutten St,
Horison, Roodepoort,
Johannesburg, South Africa
Tel/ Fax (+27-11) 766-4336
Cell (+27) (0) 83-368-1214

"Quando a verdade é substituída pelo silêncio, o silêncio é uma mentira" -
Yevgeny Yevtushenko
"When truth is replaced by silence, the silence is a lie" - Yevgeny
Yevtushenko

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