Van Tran defended unsanitary food before Janet Nguyen voted against restaurant ratings

(Picture Courtesy of Getty Images)

We recently broke the story that Nguyen voted against proposed restaurant grading systems without telling anyone that her husband and her chief of staff own a restaurant that has received major County health violations.  It turns out that Assemblyman Van Tran was covering up for unsanitary food conditions at Vietnamese food establishments in Orange County long before Supervisor Janet Nguyen.

Tran wrote Assembly Bill 2214, which required “the California Department of Health Services to conduct a study to determine methods that allow certain Asian delicacies to meet existing food safety standards relating to retail sale at traditional Asian ceremonies and cultural events,” according to a newsletter published by Tran.

In truth, this bill was all about covering up for Vietnamese food establishments that to meet existing food safety standard – mostly because they allow their food to fester at the wrong temperatures, making “them a breeding ground for dangerous bacteria,” according to NPR.

So what can happen when these bacteria grow in Vietnamese food?  An online news site reported that “Four hundred seventy children were hospitalized due to the food poisoning after eating spoiled cakes,” this month, in Ho Chi Minh City.

The same site reported that “a total of 5,000 cases of food poisoning were reported by Vietnam’s Food Hygiene and Safety Agency in the first six months of 2008, including 43 deaths, 15 more than in the same period last year.”

Another news site reported this year that “of the 414 food shops and restaurants inspected in a city survey this month, 232 were found to be in violation of food safety regulations.”

The same site reported that “Many of the violators had been using food from unknown sources and were cooking in unsanitary conditions. Salespeople often did not use gloves or masks, the city said.”

And another site reported that “The Ministry of Trade and Industry has reported that only 52.6 per cent of the collective kitchens in industrial zones examined recently met food safety and hygiene standards.”

An Australian news site reported that “in the last three years there had been two food poisoning incidents in Australia, affecting more than 400 people, which were linked to contaminated bakery products. “In March last year more than 300 people allegedly suffered symptoms of food poisoning after eating pork or chicken rolls from a Sydney bakery.”

Clearly unsanitary conditions at food establishments are common in Vietnam – and those same practices are now here in the U.S.  But Assemblyman Van Tran and Supervisor Janet Nguyen are protecting these establishments instead of insisting that they obey our food safety laws.  That is wrong – and their own people are paying the price.  It is a matter of time before a major food poisoning episode happens in California…and then Tran and Nguyen will have to answer for their political decisions.

The County of Orange has reported the closures of several Vietnamese supermarkets in the past 60 days, including A Dong Supermarket in Westminster and Nguoi Viet Supermarket in Garden Grove.  Each has had literally dozens of violations, many of them completely disgusting.  Be sure to check out Santa Ana’s Ngoc Bich Restaurant’s violations too.

By the way, the study Tran commissioned is nowhere to be found.  I spent an hour trying to find it online.  It does not appear to exist.  What happened to it, I don’t know…but there IS a solution to the moon cake problem.  People have been using radiation to make food safe in Europe for years.

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"Admin" is just editors Vern Nelson, Greg Diamond, or Ryan Cantor sharing something that they mostly didn't write themselves, but think you should see. Before December 2010, "Admin" may have been former blog owner Art Pedroza.