Chipotle, which is grappling with its third food safety incident
this year, has closed all its 43 restaurants located in and around
Seattle and Portland because of the E. coli O26 outbreak.
Eight Chipotle restaurants have been tied to the outbreak. The
company on Tuesday said it is deep cleaning and fully sanitizing the
temporarily shuttered restaurants and replacing all food in them.
Chipotle is also testing the food in its Washington and Oregon
restaurants and distribution centers, and it has hired two food
safety consulting firms to assess and improve its food safety
standards.
A company spokesman declined to say whether news of the outbreak has
hurt sales at the popular burrito chain.
A dozen of the 35 confirmed cases involving Chipotle were in Oregon
and the remainder were in Washington state, state officials said.
Two additional confirmed E. coli cases in Washington came from
people who said they had not eaten at Chipotle before falling ill,
officials said.
The current outbreak has resulted in 12 hospitalizations so far but
no deaths, the state officials said.
The number of cases is expected to rise as more diners learn of the
outbreak.
As of Monday afternoon, Washington health officials were
interviewing an additional 25 people who became ill, said Dr. Kathy
Lofy, the state's top medical officer.
Investigators are searching for the source of the contamination and
suspect it involves fresh produce. Still, it may be difficult to
pinpoint the culprit since many of Chipotle's dishes include similar
ingredients, said Dr. Jeff Duchin, health officer for public health
for Seattle and King County.
Health officials have urged anyone who ate at Chipotle as early as
Oct. 1 and suffered vomiting and bloody diarrhea to see their
healthcare provider.
[to top of second column] |
A woman sued Chipotle in federal court in Washington on Monday,
saying she was infected with E. coli after eating at one of the
chain's restaurants in Vancouver on or about Oct. 21. She tested
positive for the strain of E. coli linked to the outbreak and is
seeking $75,000 in damages.
A Chipotle representative declined to comment, saying the company
does not discuss pending legal actions.
If health officials are unable to find the single ingredient that is
the source of the outbreak it puts the legal burden completely on
Chipotle, said Bill Marler, a Seattle food safety lawyer. Marler has
sued Chipotle multiple times. Those cases involve a 2009 E. coli
O157:H7 outbreak in Colorado, a 2015 salmonella outbreak in
Minnesota and a 2015 norovirus outbreak in California.
E. coli O26 tends to produce milder illness than E. coli O157:H7,
which can cause kidney failure and death.
Chipotle's shares closed down 0.1 percent at $623.16 on Tuesday.
They touched their lowest level since July on Monday due to fears
the food-borne illness could steer diners away from the company's
more than 1,900 restaurants across the United States.
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Editing by Tom Brown
and Leslie Adler)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|