The Kansas Department of Corrections acknowledges that its inspectors consistently found dirty kitchens and other food safety violations at several state prisons.
The department does its own inspections, although it follows Kansas Department of Agriculture food safety guidelines.
The Topeka Capital-Journal reports the inspections were conducted between January 2013 and July 2014 at seven of the state’s 10 prisons and a total 19 facilities, such as satellite units.
Inspections weren’t provided for the Topeka, Lansing and Larned juvenile correctional facilities.
Corrections spokesman Jeremy Barclay says the department can take administrative action if a food service provider isn’t meeting the terms of the contract. But he said Aramark, which provides food services at most prisons, has shown it will take whatever steps are needed to fix the problems.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Google Adds Mental Health Tools to Gemini Chatbot After Lawsuit
California Drought, Wildfire Risks Grow as Snow Falls Short
California’s Surplus Lines HO Market’s New Phase Driven by Access, Not Wildfire Risk
DOJ Sues SeaWorld’s Parent Company for Disability Discrimination