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FairPrice Will Inspect Scales At All Outlets Daily To Take A Weight Off Shoppers’ Minds


The_King

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FairPrice To Check Scales Daily At All Outlets After Labelling Discrepancies

Recently, there has been a great hoo-ha about the accuracy of fresh food labels at supermarkets.

This came after 2 shoppers found that the weight stated on chicken and salmon labels were inaccurate.

 

Now, the supermarket chain is instituting more protocols, such as conducting daily checks on scales at all stores, to prevent such incidents.

 

Fresh products that have already been labelled will also have their weight rechecked to ensure accuracy.

FairPrice will check scales & reweigh labelled fresh products

The first incident, involving the mislabelling of the packet of chicken, occurred at NEX FairPrice Xtra.

 

Since then, FairPrice has engaged certified technicians to recertify all the store’s scales.

Additional protocols are also put in place: From now, all stores will have to conduct daily checks on scales before opening.

 

Labelled fresh products will also have their weight rechecked to ensure accuracy of the label, reported ST.

Checks on supermarkets’ weighing machines

The weighing instruments at AMK Hub FairPrice Xtra, where the second incident took place, have also been inspected and verified by the Weights and Measures Office, reported Channel NewsAsia (CNA).

 

The office is now in contact with NTUC to determine the actual cause of the mislabelling.

According to ST, scales at all FairPrice outlets are calibrated by authorised vendors annually. They also undergo preventive maintenance twice a year.

Cold Storage and Giant supermarkets, under the DFI Retail group, also have their scales calibrated once a year.

Trained staff will carry out verification checks daily on its weighing scales to avoid errors.

 

 

DFI Retail group shared that the weighing and labelling processes are manual, and inevitably, there will be room for human error.

Nonetheless, they constantly remind staff and supplier partners to double-check before the products are displayed for sale.

Weight and Measures Act

The Weights and Measures Office, overseen by Enterprise Singapore, is committed to safeguarding the interests of consumers and businesses by ensuring a uniform and accurate system of weights and measures.

Every year, it conducts about 2,400 surveillance checks on businesses, including supermarkets.

 

Under the Weight and Measures Act, the accuracy of regulated weighing and measuring instruments used for trade must be verified annually by independent, authorised verifiers.

Businesses also must supply the number of goods accurately reflected on the product label.

According to ST, the office will take action against businesses that fail to meet these requirements, including selling short-weight goods.

The Weights and Measures Office stressed that they take a serious view of non-compliance with regulations. They will investigate public reports on infringements.

Shoppers point out inaccurate labels

NTUC FairPrice’s weighing practices have been in the spotlight since a TikTok posted on 5 Feb showed a packet of chicken breast was inaccurately labelled and priced.

 

On 6 Feb, FairPrice apologised and said it was reaching out to the customer and investigating the cause of the “alleged mislabelling”.

Days later, a second TikTok video emerged showing a pack of salmon weighing 0.296kg. However, when weighed, it was only 0.176kg.

 

The supermarket chain explained that the discrepancy was likely due to human error.

According to The Straits Times (ST), FairPrice could not retrieve the product for further investigations but offered the customer a refund for her purchase.

The supermarket stressed that the error should not have occurred. They assured shoppers that they had reviewed and taken steps to tighten their labelling processes.

 

Report discrepancies immediately

Due to the manual weighing and labelling processes, human errors might be bound to happen from time to time.

NTUC, Cold Storage, and Giant encourage customers who find labelling discrepancies to approach staff for help immediately.

 

 

https://mustsharenews.com/fairprice-check-scales/

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29 minutes ago, The_King said:

On 6 Feb, FairPrice apologised and said it was reaching out to the customer and investigating the cause of the “alleged mislabelling”.

According to ST, scales at all FairPrice outlets are calibrated by authorised vendors annually. They also undergo preventive maintenance twice a year.

Cold Storage and Giant supermarkets, under the DFI Retail group, also have their scales calibrated once a year.

Trained staff will carry out verification checks daily on its weighing scales to avoid errors.

 

Days later, a second TikTok video emerged showing a pack of salmon weighing 0.296kg. However, when weighed, it was only 0.176kg.

 

Due to the manual weighing and labelling processes, human errors might be bound to happen from time to time.

NTUC, Cold Storage, and Giant encourage customers who find labelling discrepancies to approach staff for help immediately.

 

 

https://mustsharenews.com/fairprice-check-scales/

 

ntuc really think all peasants r gong gong, is it?????

 

weight discrepancy is 120g, more than 1/3 below stated weight liao.

 

limpeh me use my pigu think also know the scale is seriously spoilt liao and so is  confirmed not 1-off incidence.

 

if scale is calibrated yrly, the discrepancy will not be at most more than a few grams difference, not up to 120g.

 

either the scale is seriously defective or the scale has not be calibrated for at least 2 yrs liao.

 

mind u, the scale they use is commercial grade, so is more long-lasting.

 

nb, really think limpeh dont have common knowledge, is it?????

 

limpeh can tell human errors will also not happen since once the pack is weighed. the sticker is immediately pasted onto the pack.

 

the only time mispasting of stickers will occur is when the handling staff hoarded the stickers and paste at last minute, which doesnt happen as per sop.

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