Cleanup
of Massachusetts Chipotle complete after norovirus scare
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[March 10, 2016]
By Brian Snyder and Lisa Baertlein
BILLERICA, Mass./LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -
Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc received praise for its handling of potential
norovirus infections at a Boston-area restaurant, as sick employees
stayed home and the burrito chain quickly cleaned the restaurant.
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Shares of Chipotle fell as much as 6.1 percent early, then gained
back some ground after the head of the Billerica, Massachusetts
public health department said the restaurant was cleaned and would
reopen on Thursday. The stock closed down 3.4 percent at $506.63.
The closure of the Chipotle in the Boston suburb was seen as a
partial test of a new food safety system rolled out after a series
of illnesses hit the fresh burrito chain last year.
That workers stayed home in particular was a good sign, said Doug
Powell, publisher of the food safety site barfblog.com. "It is an
indication that the system is working," he said. But customers may
focus only on the sickness, not the company response. For burrito
fans, "It's just - ooh, they're barfing at Chipotle again," Powell
said.
The company response was not a test of new measures to ensure
ingredients are safe and avoid E.coli, he added.
Chipotle food scares last year include two E.coli outbreaks linked
to its restaurants that sickened more than 50 people in 10 states,
as well as separate outbreaks of norovirus, a highly contagious
virus known as the "winter vomiting bug", in Massachusetts and
California that involved more than 350 diners.
Three employees are suspected to have norovirus in Billerica, the
town's Board of Health said. Earlier in the day, local Public Health
Director Richard Berube told reporters that one of the three had
been confirmed to have the virus.
Berube said Chipotle has been "very proactive" and remaining staff
at the burrito restaurant would be screened for norovirus, he added.
Berube, the company and the Massachusetts Department of Public
Health all said no customers were known to be sick.
"They did the right thing," said Howard Penney, who covers the chain
for Hedgeye Risk Management. However, he argued that Chipotle was
still a "broken company" and that it would take years to return to
its peak performance.
Chipotle spokesman Chris Arnold said the company closed the
restaurant after employees called in sick.
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The restaurant closure comes as Chipotle has tried to lure back
diners with coupons for a free burrito and other food.
Chipotle sales have fallen sharply since the E.coli outbreaks came
to light late last year. The stock traded above $750 last summer.
Sales at established Chipotle restaurants tumbled 14.6 percent in
the fourth quarter, including a drop of 30 percent in the month of
December.
"The publicity around this news announcement will be another
negative data-point that may affect consumer demand," CRT Capital
analyst Lynne Collier said in a client note.
Chipotle temporarily closed all of its U.S. restaurants on Feb. 8
during prime lunch hours to hold staff meetings on food safety.
Up to Tuesday's close of $524.69, the company's stock had fallen
about 18 percent since the first E.coli outbreak was reported on
Oct. 31.
(Reporting by Brian Snyder in Billerica, Mass. and Lisa Baertlein in
Los Angeles. Additional reporting by Subrat Patnaik in Bengaluru and
Peter Henderson in San Francisco; Editing by Ted Kerr, Jeffrey
Benkoe and Bernard Orr)
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