Iranian Golden Pages Canada - Zarvaragh.com
Home Directory Promote Your Business Services Need Business Advice? About Us Contact Us  
 


Advanced Search



 




Contact us to promote your business
Your listing will appear on Google!
 

California city declares Sriracha-maker a nuisance




IRWINDALE, Calif. – A Southern California city has declared the factory that produces the popular Sriracha hot sauce a public nuisance.

The Irwindale City Council’s action Wednesday night gives the factory 90 days to make changes to stop the spicy odours that prompted complaints from some residents last fall. Declaring a public nuisance will allow city officials to enter the factory and make changes if the odours persist after the deadline.

The decision came despite testimony by air-quality experts that progress was being made toward a resolution. The South Coast Air Quality Management District said its inspectors have taken air samples inside the plant, and believed the information gathered should allow the factory and the city to resolve their differences.
Attorney John Tate, who represents Sriracha maker Huy Fong Foods, Inc., said the company had been working with the AQMD on its filtration system since the complaints first arose and was committed to finding long-term solutions by June 1.

He called the public nuisance declaration a demonstration of “the city flexing its muscle and thumbing Huy Fong in the eye.”

A call to Irwindale City Attorney Fred Galante was not immediately returned.

Irwindale sued Huy Fong Foods last October, asking a judge to halt production at the company’s factory, saying residents downwind complained that fumes from the grinding of red hot chili peppers was stinging their eyes and giving them headaches and coughing fits.

In November a judge ordered the company to stop producing the annoying odours, but by then the annual pepper-grinding season, which runs from August through October, had ended.

In the meantime, several residents complained that the smell was persisting as Huy Fong Foods workers continued to bottle the popular hot sauce that is a staple in Asian restaurants and homes. Data provided by the AQMD showed the majority of complaints came from four households.

Huy Fong Foods moved to Irwindale two years ago, opening a new $40 million plant in the largely industrial city of 1,400 residents.

The company was founded by Vietnamese immigrant David Tran, who began mixing up his distinctive sauce in a bucket at his home in 1980. As business boomed, he opened a plant in Rosemead, moving to Irwindale when his company outgrew that facility.

He said the privately held company took in about $85 million last year, adding it employs about 200 workers during the pepper-grinding season and 60 year-round.

The flaming hot sauce is contained in distinctive green-tipped bottles, each with a drawing of a rooster on the side.

The Associated Press


1078 page views
Want to convert pinglish to english?   Want to convert date?   Want to find out today's currencies' value?
         
Need a dictionary?   Want to download Zarvaragh's pdf version?   Need business advice?

 
 
 
 
 
   
 
   
 
 
 
     
 
Head Office
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Phone: 416-222-2211
Toll Free: 1-855-460-2211
Fax: 416-222-7422
mail@zarvaragh.com
   
3500 Dufferin Street
Suite 603 Toronto,ON M3K 1N2

Montreal, Québec, Canada
Toll Free: 1-855-460-2211
Fax: 416-222-7422
montreal@zarvaragh.com

Orange, California, USA
Phone: 714-978-4888
Toll Free: 1-855-460-2211
usa@zarvaragh.com

© 2011 www.zarvaragh.com
Sitemap:

Home
Add Your Business
Directory
Promote Your Business
Services
Need Business Advice
About Us
Contact Us
Website Legals
Download Zarvaragh Online Versions:

2015 - 2016
2014 - 2015
2013 - 2014
2012 - 2013
2011 - 2012
2010 - 2011
2009 - 2010
2008 - 2009
2007 - 2008
2006 - 2007
2004 - 2005