Almost one in seven Wycombe businesses that handle food are failing to meet hygiene standards.

All food businesses are given a hygiene rating from zero to five, with a rating of at least three indicating they are broadly compliant with hygiene law.

There are 1,275 such establishments in Wycombe, according to the latest data from the Food Hygiene Standards Agency, which includes restaurants, shops and takeaways as well as food manufacturers and distributors.

Of these, 175 – 14 per cent – had a hygiene rating of two or below as of 2018-19, meaning improvements are necessary.

This was higher than the rate across England, Wales and Northern Ireland, where nine per cent of food businesses were found to be non-compliant.

Not all establishments will have been inspected during the course of the year.

Of all the businesses that did face an inspection or other form of assessment in 2018-19, 18 were subject to some kind of formal action from the council or courts.

Written warnings were issued to 434 businesses.

Across England, Wales and Northern Ireland, council inspectors took enforcement actions, including informal written warnings, against almost 160,000 establishments.

The proportion of businesses with a rating of at least three increased slightly, rising by 0.5 percentage points compared to the previous year.

In total, councils carried out 86.3 per cent of all the interventions due to be completed during the course of the year, which can include activities such as surveillance, sampling visits or full inspections – up from 85.1 per cent the previous year.

Maria Jennings, director of regulatory compliance of the Food Standards Agency, said: “Local authorities are there to ensure that food businesses produce food that is safe and what it says it is.

“One of the FSA’s roles is to have oversight and assurance about their performance.

“It is good to see an increase in the total percentage of planned hygiene interventions that local authorities are carrying out and an increase in premises with standards equivalent to a food hygiene rating of three, four and five.”

Wycombe District Council estimates that it employs the equivalent of 2.3 full-time members of staff who are responsible for managing food hygiene standards.

That’s 1.6 employees for every 1,000 businesses, lower than the national average of 2.6.