mashgiach, or rabbinical inspector — in addition to local health or state agri- cultural department employees — would be responsible for ensuring at least some measure of cleanliness, authorities at the Union of Orthodox Congregations' kashrut division say they tend to leave such matters to the governmental au- thorities. 'We try to make sure the standards of the plant meet the standards set by the government, the FDA, the USDA. [But] we rely on them for that," said Rabbi Menachem Genack, rabbinic ad- ministrator of the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America's kashrut division (OU), the largest kashrut organization in the nation. Rabbi Elimelech Goldberg of Young Israel of Southfield and a member of the Council of Orthodox Rabbis of Greater Detroit (Vaad Harabonim) said the rab- binic group operates in the same way, LLJ Cr) w CD ce LLJ 58 allowing state and local health inspec- tors to determine the status of a store. The Vaad is responsible for providing rabbinic supervision at most area retail kosher shops, including bakeries, butch- ers, markets and food service business- es. "Obviously, if it was so terrible, [health officials] would close [them] down," he said, adding that he was un- aware that health officials did tem- porarily close the now-defunct Sara's Glatt Kosher Deli and also have issued numerous insanitary notices to several kosher businesses. This is not to say that the mashgichim and the rabbis themselves have stood idly by as sanitary conditions have waned at stores. "It is a very important thing," Rabbi Goldberg said, regarding the health con- ditions of a store. The Vaad's control can only go so far, he said. 'We are not in the position to take ac- tion to close an establishment," he said. "At best, if we thought the consumers were at risk, we could yank the super- vision." "Our basic point of control is to su- pervise or not to supervise," he said. "That is the question." Jack Zwick agrees. As a member of a group overseeing the providers of food to Federation Apartment dwellers, he canceled a contract held by one of the lo- cal kosher business owners after find- ing that the store owner's product was "substandard." "I firmly_ believe that the Vaad is not capable or respon- sible to be health inspectors or business ethics inspectors," Mr. Zwick said. "However, I believe that if businesses have been found by the state to flagrantly violate these matters, they should be issued a formal warning and then hashgachah (kashrut su- pervision) should be removed." Sanitation aside, some debate whether the Vaad covers some halachic requirements ofsupervision. For example, the Vaad is responsible for the supervision of all of the kosher butcher shops in the area but does not require constant supervision of these re- tail stores, an oversight some would see as a violation of Halachah. (The Metropolitan Kashruth Coun- cil, headed by Rabbi Jack Goldman of West Bloomfield, meanwhile, refuses to provide supervision for any business with meat products. Citing the constant need for supervision, Rabbi Goldman said he prefers to stick to dairy and pareve products or raw ingredients used to manufacture such food, which do not require constant supervision.) "Halachically, meat requires that it be supervised at all times," said Rabbi Menachem Genack, rabbinic adminis- trator of the Union of Orthodox Jew- ish Congregations of America's kashrut division (OU). "Cheese and wine also have higher levels, pareve items on a less frequent basis." Local butchers said that their mash- giach (on-site kosher supervisor), often a rabbi or a friend of a Vaad member, visits for only a few brief moments a day, checks the shop's shipments of meat products and leaves. One store, Superi- or Kosher Meats in Oak Park, employs a mashgiach who lives in Boston who in turn employs a local mashgiach who stops in the store twice a week. "The inspection?" asked Mr. Co- hen, the butcher. "Walk in that door, walk to the back door, walk back out. That's my inspection." Rabbi Goldberg said the supervi- sion that is supplied is adequate ac- cording to Halachah. He said inspectors visit the butcher shops once or twice daily to check on meat shipments and to make sure proper preparations of the meat are fol- lowed. Despite the arguments over su- pervision, the question remains over whether kosher is actually cleaner. Bill Carlson, a supervisor for the Oakland County Health Depart- ment, said kosher establishments make up a small percentage of the 3,800 es- tablishments the county department is responsible for inspecting. All businesses are treated in the same manner. 'We expect all of them will be in com- pliance [with the health code]," he said. Not all kosher establishments have suffered the wrath of health officials. Before it recently closed due to fi- nancial reasons, Classic Coney Island Above: Jack Cohen cuts beef, then chicken, on the same machine without washing the surface in between. Right: Jack Cohen said the Vaad's supervision was cursory. "The inspection? Walk in that door, walk to the back door, walk back out. That's my inspection." had three near-perfect ratings since its December 1995 opening. The second in- spection report, issued March 18, con- cluded with the inspector's remarks, "Excellent operation!" Jerusalem Pizza, owned by Aryeh and Soril Sharon, has tallied up two high scores on its inspection reports since it opened last summer. Aside from a dent- ed can of beets and misplaced cleansers, the store has had very favorable reports with few violations. Others have repeatedly racked up violations and in- sanitary notices. Cohen & Son is a prime example. Although his most recent inspection report in April 1996 had a handful of viola- tions, it was hardly the most typical of reports for the al- most five-decade-old busi- ness. Inspection reports revealed a consistent roach problem since 1990 at this meat store. The most serious occurred in November 1993, when nearly 300 roach- es were discovered on floors, shelves and counters, in pots and pans, behind the toilet, and "in orange scum in [the] drain tank." A dead mouse lay near the bath- room and "bird-nesting material" was found in the corner of the ceiling. Mr. Cohen was charged with a mis- demeanor and the store was briefly closed. In December 1993, he pleaded guilty and was ordered to pay $200, or spend five days in jail. He paid the mon- ey. By March 1994, a state inspector not- ed "significant progress" in Cohen & Son's sanitation. But in subsequent vis- its, roaches continued to bedevil the store. Mr. Cohen spoke frankly about the difficulty of sustaining a family butch- er shop in the face of sharp competition and a shortage of young Jews willing to learn his trade. "It's a dying business," said Mr. Co- hen, who worked for 43 years in the store founded by his father. "No Jewish kids want to work [in butcher shops] anymore ... Sooner or later, us alter kock- ers, we want to quit." He closed his store at the end of De-