Civic News

Baltimore has a new site for searching restaurant inspection reports

The health department released a new website this week where the public can search reports.

Baltimore's new food-safety portal. (Screenshot)

Baltimore city took another step forward in the effort to make restaurant inspections more widely available to the public this week.
The city’s health department launched a new web portal where citizens can search inspection reports. The inspection reports, which show whether eateries are clean and why they received violations, are available from the beginning of 2016 to the present. Anything before this year will require a public records request.
Check it out
The city also plans to make the data available on OpenBaltimore.
The latest release follows last year’s move by City Council to require some restaurant data to be posted. The legislation also resulted in a list of restaurant closures being posted.
The move means that Baltimore’s homegrown startup for opening up restaurant reports will finally have data for its own hometown. HDScores founder Matthew Eierman said this week’s release was a “pleasant surprise,” and he plans to add the data to the app.
Upon inspection, the new portal provides access to PDFs of individual reports. City Councilman Brandon Scott, who is leading the inspection report transparency effort, pushed for the city to give restaurants letter grades (a la Los Angeles and other cities) and require them to be posted. But that legislation did not pass.
The city joins most other Baltimore-area counties in making data available, but there’s still work to do in the jurisdiction next door. Eierman noted that Baltimore County doesn’t currently release data publicly.

Companies: HDScores / City of Baltimore

Before you go...

Please consider supporting Technical.ly to keep our independent journalism strong. Unlike most business-focused media outlets, we don’t have a paywall. Instead, we count on your personal and organizational support.

Our services Preferred partners The journalism fund
Engagement

Join our growing Slack community

Join 5,000 tech professionals and entrepreneurs in our community Slack today!

Trending

What actually is the 'creator economy'? Here's why we should care

Skills, not schools: A new path for government tech

Meet Baltimore's winners in the 2024 Technical.ly Awards

A community survives the blows: Baltimore tech and entrepreneurship’s top 2024 stories

Technically Media