Finance
Hospitality Alliance Trains Vendors on Food Safety to Boost Business Confidence
Ghana’s street food scene is getting a facelift, as the Hospitality Alliance of Ghana launches a sensitization drive in Madina to raise hygiene, safety, and business standards among vendors. The two-day programme combined classroom lessons with live demonstrations, proving that food safety is mo...
The High Street Journal
published: Aug 31, 2025

Ghana’s street food scene is getting a facelift, as the Hospitality Alliance of Ghana (HAG) launches a sensitization drive in Madina to raise hygiene, safety, and business standards among vendors.
The two-day programme combined classroom lessons with live demonstrations, proving that food safety is more than a health requirement, it is also a winning business strategy.
Held on the theme “Clean Food, Healthy Business”, the program drew dozens of street food vendors, many of whom operate daily in bustling corners of Madina. Organisers believe that instilling safe food handling practices will not only protect consumers but also strengthen livelihoods in one of Ghana’s most important informal industries.
“Food safety is business safety”

According to Chef Joe Wilson-Tetteh, President of the Hospitality Alliance of Ghana, the training was designed as both advocacy and empowerment.
“This program is more than just training. What we intend doing is protecting both customers and livelihoods. We know that most Ghanaians consume from the streets, and if these foods are produced hygienically, then we are sure of our health and we are sure those businesses also get sustained.” he told participants.
Chef Wilson-Tetteh underscored that hygienic preparation translates directly into customer trust and repeat business. “When food is handled safely, people trust the provider. They keep coming back and even recommend to others,” he said.
From Lectures To The Streets

Day one of the program was held in a hotel setting, where facilitators shared knowledge on personal hygiene for food handlers, safe storage and temperature control, and Ghana’s food safety regulations. Trainers emphasised the need to avoid cross-contamination and to understand the requirements of the Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) and the Public Health Act.
The second day moved to the streets of Madina, where participants practiced hygienic methods in real-world settings. Vendors washed hands with running water and soap, wore gloves, aprons, and hairnets, and prepared snacks using sanitized surfaces and containers. Trainers also introduced clean packaging techniques, freshness labeling, and the use of mobile payments to minimise cash handling.
Residents of Madina got a taste literally of the transformation, as vendors offered neatly packaged, safely prepared snacks at covered stalls. For many patrons, it was a refreshing change from the often-overlooked hygiene challenges of street food.
“Not about spending more, but working smarter”

One of the recurring themes of the program was that food safety does not necessarily demand expensive investments. Instead, vendors were shown how simple, low-cost practices could improve hygiene and attract more customers.
“It’s not about spending more money to improve service, it is about working smarter, staying healthy, and keeping businesses strong. We taught them simple things to do to ensure that the hygiene of their production is enhanced and elevated.” Chef Wilson-Tetteh explained.
He added that the program should be seen as an investment not only in the vendors’ businesses but in their personal health and long-term sustainability. “Whether you’re a street vendor, caterer, chef, or cook, this is an opportunity you should grab with all the speed. Clean food isn’t just safer it sells better.”
Building A Culture Of Safe Food

The Hospitality Alliance has signaled that this program is part of a broader agenda to advocate for better food handling across Ghana. The group hopes to replicate similar initiatives in other communities, stressing that food safety awareness is a shared responsibility between vendors, regulators, and consumers.
As street food remains an integral part of Ghana’s urban culture and economy, initiatives like this could mark the beginning of a shift where hygiene is no longer treated as optional but as central to profitability.
For the street vendors of Madina, their take-home message hindered on the fact that food safety is not just about avoiding disease, it is about building trust, winning loyalty, and securing the future of their businesses.
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