A ServSafe MN Perspective On Delivery Apps- Part 1

Delivery app and Servsafe

You can use your Smartphone to find restaurants near your location, pursue menus, read customer reviews and easily make reservations. With modern software, there are even apps available that will allow you to order meals delivered directly to your door. This week, we’ve decided to explore Smartphone delivery apps and whether or not they fall under ServSafe MN guidelines.

Delivery app and Servsafe MN
Image credit: pixabay.com

Who Monitors the ServSafe MN Procedures of Delivery App Drivers?

One of the concerns that we have when it comes to using a food delivery app is what precautions are being taken to ensure that your food will be handled in a safe manner. Let’s look at the three types of delivery apps that exist:

  • Major restaurant chain apps
  • Apps that order from restaurants that deliver
  • Third-party courier apps

In the case of the first two options on our list, your delivery drivers will be employees of the restaurant that prepares the food. The site ServSafe MN Manager can train the drivers in proper safe food handling procedures. In the case of third-party apps, customers place their order with the third-party, not the restaurant that prepares the food. In this scenario, the delivery app is the customer of the restaurant. There seems to be a gray area as to whether the delivery app is required to have received any ServSafe MN food-safety training.

Many food courier services are outside the jurisdiction of your local health department. Your meal has been paid. The third-party app driver is simply picking it up at the restaurant and bringing to your door. Our understanding is that they do not need to be food safety certified, and are not responsible for the quality of the food that arrives at your door. It is unclear at this time if there will be any adjustments to the food code to make sure that food couriers are abiding by food safety regulation.

Protecting Food Safety While Using Delivery Apps

In speaking with a few restaurant owners, we have found some that have expressed concerns with the growing popularity of food delivery apps. Their major issue with these apps is the fact that the delivery drivers do not represent them or their business. This means that they may be putting the quality of their product in the hands of a courier. A delivery app that may not have the restaurants best interests in mind. If a guest receives a cold dinner or a carton of sandwiches that appears to have barely survived a rugby match, their displeasure may not be with delivery service, but with the restaurant itself.

We’d like to know how you feel about delivery apps. Do you prefer to order directly from the source? or Do you feel that third-party food couriers are just as reliable?

ServSafe MN Training and the New GMO Labeling Bill

GMO Effect on Servsave MN

GMO- Lableing Effect on ServSafe MN Training
How will new GMO -Labeling Law Effect ServSafe MN Training?

Recently, the President signed a bill that calls for the labeling of all products that contain genetically modified ingredients. This is a hotly debated topic among consumers, produce suppliers and food industry professionals, and we feel that it’s an important issue and worthy of at least some discussion.

ServSafe MN Training and GMO Labeling

As current ServSafe MN training and Minnesota Food Code regulations stand, there is nothing that is mandated in regards to using GMO-modified ingredients in the local food service industry. As far as food safety and food-borne illnesses are concerned, the state does not feel that GMO’s pose any significant health risk.

There is, however, a growing trend among consumers to purchase food items that are certified organic or clearly labeled as non-GMO. This current bill appears to provide transparency as to where the ingredients in prepared items come from and will allow the consumers to make their purchasing decisions based on whether a product is GMO free or not.

GMO-Labeling Effects on the Food-Service Industry and ServSafe MN Training

This new bill forces us to consider how new regulations will impact local businesses.
Quite honestly, we do not have enough information at this time to fully address the long-term effects of this bill. The United States Department of Agriculture has stated that it may take up to two years for them to put any regulations in place.

While we know that these rules will play a role in how food is packaged on our grocery shelves, it may also have repercussions for our restaurants and smaller businesses. Most food-service managers will tell you that proteins and fresh produce often come from different suppliers depending upon availability. A lot of these ingredients are shipped in bulk and many times are only labeled with their farm or place of origin. In these cases, it is our view that the suppliers themselves will be responsible for clearly labeling these ingredients before they reach your facility. If you produce any item packaged for sale using ingredients previously labeled as genetically modified, you will probably be required to label your product accordingly.

One sector of the industry that does not seem to have been addressed in the early stages of this process is the restaurant industry. At this point we cannot tell you whether restaurants will have to include any form of disclaimer on their menus. If this does become the case, you can rest assured that Safe Food Training will cover it in an upcoming blog.