Posted on 05/07/2014 9:05:54 AM PDT by onemiddleamerican
After the employee cafeteria at the Washington Post's office downtown was closed by health inspectors yesterday, Washington City Paper and Jim Romenesko reported on a memo that Jeff Cox, the paper's director of operations and administrative services, sent the staff. That didn't sit so well with Post editorial writer Charles Lane, who just sent an email to newsroom staffers about the publication of Cox's memo:
For us, the closure of the cafeteria due to cleanliness issues is a minor inconvenience, a bit of an institutional embarrassment, a modest health issue and, of course, fodder for the usual newsroom snark.
For the cheerful, hard-working father of four who wakes up every day before dawn to make our coffee and spread out our salad bar, however, it is a serious matter, entailing loss of income, reputational damage, additional expenses, etc. even though its entirely unclear how much this decent, honest man, or the employees who assist him, are actually at fault, or how much harm anyone actually suffered.
So it would be nice if he did not also have to contend with being mentioned, and indeed implicitly mocked, by name, in the press, before hes even had a chance to remedy the situation and submit to follow-up inspection.
http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/blogs/citydesk/2014/05/06/washington-post-cafeteria-shut-down-after-evidence-of-some-mice-activity/
Alas, someone who received Jeff Coxs email thought it would be cute to spread this bit of internal trivia to the City Paper and others, and couldnt resist the impulse.
If I were the cafeteria operator, I might be exploring my legal options (defamation, breach of privacy, etc.) right now. I suppose thats just one of the unfortunate possible side effects that the leaker didnt consider.
Sincerely,
Charles Lane
Should Lane send another email out about this post, be sure to look for it here. In the meantime, you can read the report from the D.C. Department of Health's inspection of the Post's cafeteria below. We've redacted information about the cafeteria operator, though it's now a matter of public record, out of deference to Lane.
Among other health violations, evidence of rats, rat droppings in employee cafeteria.
What, WaPo reporters don't have employee restrooms?
Ah, it’s the old “we’ll decide what’s news to you”...coming, of course, from folks to whom the operation of a flashlight is beyond relativity.
Remember when we actually respected journalists?
Aw, poor little kitchen workers feelings got hurt because they ignored rat droppings. I know that Health Departments are overly zealous and stupid but if they closed the lunchroom, they had a major problem.
That would be the responsibility of building maintenance to hire a rodent control company to get rid of them......
I read the inspection report. They had some food items (chipotle mayo, chicken breasts, other I can’t recall offhand) above safe temp/not stored properly , moldy fridge...
Pretty blatant disregard for customer’s safety.
Maybe the cafeteria manager doesn’t like WaPo reporters, either.
;-)
Charles Lane is invariably the LEAST pleasant participant in the Fox All-Star Panel.
Maybe it’s the rat poop in his pannini.
rat droppings in employee cafeteria.
That would be the responsibility of building maintenance to hire a rodent control company to get rid of them......
But that would also have put the majority of the reports in jeopardy.
Doesn’t D.C. have some insane “humane” ordinance that bans rat poison and requires “alternate methods”? (i.e. capture alive, then transport and release in Virginia someplace)
“What is this?”
“A caper.”
“This is a rat turd.”
“it’s a caper.”
“Okay, if it’s a caper, you eat it.”
“...”
Thanks, Invasion of the Body Snatchers.
For a business full of ‘rats, it’s not unusual to have ‘rat droppings everywhere.....
It's a .............
GMTA!!!!...................
Editor at the Washington Post
Charles Lane
So nice they have compassion for themselves... and only themselves...
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