North Adams Restaurant Falling Short of Safety Standards

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The new owners of Meng's Pan-Asian are being ordered to get recertified on food safety standards after city inspectors found violations at the Main Street restaurant.
 
Code Enforcement Officer Heather DeMarsico asked the Board of Health on Wednesday to require them to retake the ServSafe training and tests. 
 
ServSafe is a program of the National Restaurant Association that sets standards for safe food handling and restaurant management.
 
DeMarsico told the board that she had shut down the restaurant for a week in September when following up on complaints from two customers who said they had become ill after consuming food from the eatery.
 
"They've had serious sanitation and safety issues," she said. "They had food without dates. The food wasn't covered, it wasn't being stored right. Food was freezer-burned. They had food that was being prepped, it was placed on the floor. There's nothing in the kitchen that was clean. ...
 
"No food should have been leaving that kitchen."
 
There was also an issue with the condition of the stove hood, which had been serviced by a Chinese-speaking company out of New York City that was not licensed in the state of Massachusetts and which had done a poor job in cleaning, said Building Inspector William Meranti. He said they had to go back to the original hood cleaning company but did not know as of Wednesday whether that was done and that inspectors would follow up. 
 
DeMarsico said there had been improvement but she and Meranti said a language barrier was making it difficult. The owners had passed a ServSafe test in December before buying the business in January. The previous owners had come in last month to help them come into compliance. 
 
"They had done a decent job of it. But again, the former owners were going to walk away. They weren't there to babysit them," she said. "So again, my worry is that once they walk away, they're going to go back to their old habits because they don't know what they're doing."
 
DeMarsico said she was not sure how translation had worked when the new owners took the ServSafe test because they didn't seem to understand the basics. 
 
"Walking in there and just general looking around and generally asking her questions, the competency is not there," she said. "They do not act like they've taken it. There's basic stuff that they don't know."
 
The health agent had contacted the state Department of Public Health to see if they could recommend translator services and was told there weren't any but DPH could try to get someone from the state to come down. DPH noted the board had the authority to require the test be retaken and suggested that action. 
 
"I don't want to just shut them down if we don't have to," DeMarsico said. "Obviously, you don't want to take away their livelihood. We want to help them if we can."
 
The board voted to required the test be retaken and the inspectors said they would continue to monitor their progress. No one from Meng's attended the meeting and the inspectors said they had tried several times to contact them. 
 
In other business, the board welcomed new member Bruce Miller. 
 

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North Adams Man Guilty of Murder

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A North Adams man was convicted Friday of murdering his wife, Charli Gould Cook, in 2019. 
 
A Berkshire Superior Court jury found Michael Cook Sr., 47, guilty of murder in the second degree, assault and armed assault with intent to murder, and assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon causing serious bodily injury and assault and battery on a family or household member.
 
Cook had broken into the Chase Avenue home of his estranged wife on July 11, 2019. The 41-year-old woman was in her bed when Cook hit on the back side of her head with a hammer. The assault resulted in significant injury to her skull causing traumatic brain injury. Emergency personnel found her unresponsive when called to the home approximately 1 a.m. that morning.
 
She passed away approximately five months after the assault at Baystate Medical Center. The medical examiner ruled her cause of death as a direct result of the brain injury from the July 11th assault. Cook was arrested on assault charges and indicted in 2020 of murder. He had been detained without the right to bail since that time after being determined a danger to the community.  
 
Charli Cook was a native of North Adams who attended McCann Technical School and had worked as a certified nursing assistant.
 
Sentencing will take place on Thursday, Oct. 10, at Berkshire Superior Court. 
 
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