Myth Busted: Boston Food Trucks and Food Carts Are Safer Than Restaurants
Miami— In Miami, street food is just as safe as food from a restaurant. A newstudyfrom the Institute for Justice reviewed thousands of food safety inspection reports from 2008 through July 2012 and found that Miami’s food trucks did better than restaurants. Food trucks and carts averaged only half as many violations as brick-and-mortar restaurants per inspection. Food trucks and carts are subject to the same health codes and inspection regime as restaurants.
WATCH A SHORT VIDEO ABOUT THE REPORT
“Miamians love food trucks, but the city essentially bans food trucks from operating, except for special events,” explained Angela C. Erickson, author ofStreet Eats, Safe Eatsand research analyst for the Institute for Justice. “The idea that street food is unsafe is a myth, and Miami’s ban on food trucks does not improve public health; it only stifles entrepreneurship and prevents Miamians from deciding where they want to eat lunch.”
The newly released report is part of IJ’s National Street Vending Initiative. The study compares food truck, food cart and restaurant health inspection scores in seven major cities: Boston, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Louisville, Miami, Seattle and Washington, D.C.
“In six of the seven cities, mobile vendors performed better than restaurants during inspections. In the seventh, Seattle mobile vendors performed just as well as restaurants,” said Erickson. “The health departments in these cities use the same food-safety criteria for mobile vendors as they do for brick-and-mortar restaurants. The recipe for clean and safe food trucks and carts is simple: inspections.”