Wednesday, May 22, 2013
The City of St. Peters conducts unannounced inspections on food service establishments several times a year.
The St. Peters Health Department regularly inspects food service establishments throughout the city including restaurants, caterers, schools, food stands, day cares, bakeries, and frozen treat stands. Unannounced inspections include an evaluation of how food is received and stores, temperatures used to cook, hold and reheat foods, according to the department's web page. The establishments begin with a score of 100 and points are deducted based on the severity of problems observed. A follow up inspection is conducted within 10 days to verify that critical violations have been corrected. Below, see the second part of the inspection scores for restaurants in the St. Peters area in January 2013. You may be interested in these related …
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
Thanks to agreements with St. Charles County and the federal government, the city could resurface a portion of Williott Road and Mid Rivers Mall Drive for $108,000.
St. Peters could complete two million-dollar road resurfacing projects next summer for just $108,000. Russ Batzel, Transportation and Development Services Group Manager, presented plans to the Board of Aldermen during the May 9 meeting for two major road projects. The plans call for the city to resurface a portion of Mid Rivers Mall Drive and most of Willott Road in the summer of 2014. The projects, which would take place at the same time, carry a $2.4 million price tag. However, thanks to proposed deals with the federal government and St. Charles County, St. Peters would contribute just $108,000 to the projects. "We gotta put some skin in the game," Batzel said after Ward 2 Aldermen Jerry Hollingsworth joked about the small contribution…
St. Peters inspects restaurants several times a year. This is part three of the list of inspections completed in January 2013.
St. Peters Health Department regularly inspects food service establishments throughout the city including restaurants, caterers, schools, food stands, day cares, bakeries, and frozen treat stands. Unannounced inspections include an evaluation of how food is received and stores, temperatures used to cook, hold and reheat foods, according to the department's web page. The establishments begin with a score of 100 and points are deducted based on the severity of problems observed. A follow up inspection is conducted within 10 days to verify that critical violations have been corrected. Below, see the second part of the inspection scores for restaurants in the St. Peters area in January 2013. You may be interested in these related stories: …
Monday, May 13, 2013
Patch is teaming up with the Missouri Department of Transportation this week to get all of your traffic and road questions answered.
Patch wants to help find the answers to all your questions about traffic, road construction and more. That's why this week, we are teaming up with the Missouri Department of Transportation (MoDOT). In the latest edition of "Ask the Patch Pro," MoDOT Community Relations Coordinator Linda Wilson Horn will answer readers' questions in the comment section of the Patch sites on Friday, May 17 between noon and 4 p.m. Get your questions ready and check back with Patch and MoDOT on Friday morning! Take a look at some of our previous Patch Pro posts:
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Check out the most recent food inspection reports from restaurants all over St. Charles County.
St. Charles County Department of Community Health and the Environment regularly inspects food service establishments throughout St. Charles County, except for within limits of St. Peters. The establishments begin with a score of 100 and points are deducted based on the severity of problems observed. According to the department's website, a low score does not mean the restaurant was unsafe on the day of the inspection. Below, find links to stories featuring inspections of restaurants throughout the county. To look up other scores, visit the health department's Food Inspection page. St. Peters Health Department regularly inspects food service establishments throughout the city including restaurants, caterers, schools, food stands, day …
Saturday, May 4, 2013
Check out the most recent food inspection reports from St. Charles County Health Department from January and February, 2013.
St. Charles County Department of Community Health and the Environment regularly inspects food service establishments throughout St. Charles County, except for within limits of St. Peters. The establishments begin with a score of 100 and points are deducted based on the severity of problems observed. According to the department's website, a low score does not mean the restaurant was unsafe on the day of the inspection. "A place could have just one deficiency that garners a relatively 'high' score out of 100, but that the problem is so critical, it forces immediate action – while another may have two or three non-critical deficiencies that would give that provider a lower total score," said Bolnick. Below, find inspection scores for local …
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
A desire to get a longer-lasting steal body has St. Peters lawmakers considering purchasing a new trash truck that is $4,868 over budget.
St. Peters knows what it wants from its trash trucks: Thick steel. Bids went out in January to replace a 13-year-old truck and the city received seven different bids from five vendors. Health and Environmental Services Manager Dave Kuppler requested the board approve Armor Equipment's $244,868 bid—a bid he called the the lowest qualifiying bid even though it was $4,868 over budget. Alderman Jerry Hollingsworth, Ward 2, asked Kuppler why he wasn't recommending an alternate bid from Downing Sales and Services, Inc. that came in under budget at $235,250. "How is one $9,000 more expensive and why is that better?" Hollingsworth asked about the two bids. Kuppler said city has tried the model truck in the Downing bid, but has found the truck …
St. Peters inspects restaurants several times a year. This is part three of the list of inspections completed in December 2012.
St. Peters Health Department regularly inspects food service establishments throughout the city including restaurants, caterers, schools, food stands, day cares, bakeries, and frozen treat stands. Unannounced inspections include an evaluation of how food is received and stores, temperatures used to cook, hold and reheat foods, according to the department's web page. The establishments begin with a score of 100 and points are deducted based on the severity of problems observed. A follow up inspection is conducted within 10 days to verify that critical violations have been corrected. Below, see the second part of the inspection scores for restaurants in the St. Peters area in December 2012. You may be interested in these related stories:
The St. Peters Planning and Zoning Commission will meet at 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday. On the agenda is a public hearing regarding a new communications tower that could be built near Jungermann Road.
May starts Wednesday and the St. Peters Planning and Zoning Commission will waste no time conducting its monthly meeting. The commission will meet at 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday night for its regular monthly meeting. The agenda features its usual array of home occupation permit requests, site plans and public hearings. One item on the agenda that could draw attention is a public hearing for a special use permit for a communications tower. St. Charles Tower, Inc. wants to build a tower on the east side of Jungermann Road, north of Willott Road in the area of Anthony's Produce. The other public hearing on the agenda is a request from Above All Development, LLC for an amended Planned Urban Development on the south side of Route 364, west of …
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
The board agreed to approve a one-year extension for the completion of improvement projects at the Mid Rivers Plaza.
A Suemandy Community Improvement District (CID) was back in front of the St. Peters Board of Aldermen asking for another extension. G.J. Grewe, Inc., the owners of the Mid Rivers Plaza shopping center that includes Big Lots and Toys "R" Us, received approval for CID in November 2008. The original CID required the improvements to be finished by Dec. 1, 2011, but that didn't happen. The owners asked for an extension in September 2011 and were given until December 2013 to finish the project. On Thursday at the board work session, the Suemandy CID asked for more time to complete the projects. Since the improvements started, G.J. Grewe, Inc. has spent $1,621,432 on a variety of improvements. According to documents presented to the board, $941,…
richard grisham
5:36 pm on Monday, May 13, 2013
why is the road fix on 109 in front of the high school so rough. will it be fixed rich grisham 37 rockwood forrest ridge 63025   more ›