As Charlotte’s bustling nightlife district sees a surge in street-side cuisine, Mecklenburg County Public Health raises concern over the growing number of food vendors operating without a permit, especially in the Uptown and South End neighborhoods. These vendors, selling their fares under the cloak of night between 8 p.m. and 2 a.m., skirt the necessary health inspections that keep the public safe from potential foodborne illnesses, as reported by the Mecklenburg County recently.
The county’s Food and Facilities Sanitation Program oversees more than 4,400 food service entities, performing upwards of 13,000 inspections annually to maintain a standard of cleanliness and safety across restaurants, food trucks, and stands legally sanctioned to serve the public, health officials are struggling to curb the tide of unpermitted vendors despite the acknowledgment of the risks they pose, because the display of a food safety scorecard, a marker of having passed these inspections, is integral to ensuring consumers that establishments adhere to minimum food safety protocols.
Chrystal Swinger, Director of Environmental Health, stressed the severity of the issue in the report, advising residents to be vigilant: “We encourage all residents to look for the food safety scorecard before ordering to ensure that the establishment has been inspected and minimum food safety standards are met,” she said, as “unpermitted food vendors pose a serious health risk of foodborne illness, which can be severe and even fatal”. The Mecklenburg County’s effort to eliminate these illicit operations is ongoing, but the success leans heavily on the cooperation of the community to eschew support for these vendors…