According to the official blog for the Public Health department of Seattle and King County, a Chipotle in the city’s South Lake Union neighborhood had been flagged for so-called “red” violations on three consecutive inspections.
A red violation involves the sort of behavior that inspectors believes is most likely to contribute to the spread of food-borne illnesses, like contaminated food or poor temperature control. When these violations are found, the restaurant is made to remedy the situation immediately.
Officials explain that none of the three red violations at this Chipotle were serious enough to shutter the restaurant on their own.
“However, because this location showed repeated violations, the health department closed the restaurant,” reads the blog post. “Public Health food program staff are working with Chipotle to correct these problems, and the restaurant will be allowed to re-open pending an inspection.”
The department says it has one, unconfirmed report of a person who may have become ill from eating at this particular location, but no connection has been proven at this point.
In the weeks since the E. coli outbreak, inspectors have ramped up their efforts to monitor Chipotle stores. Since then, a total of nine locations have been flagged for red violations, but only the one restaurant has been flagged so frequently that it merited being closed.
Yesterday, Chipotle founder and co-CEO Steve Ells apologized for all the illnesses linked to his restaurants.
“I have to say I’m sorry for the people that got sick. They’re having a tough time,” said Ells. “I feel terrible about that, and we’re doing a lot to rectify this and make sure it doesn’t happen again.”
by Chris Morran via Consumerist