How Niagara records differ
Public health sources do not all publish the same fields. For Niagara, normal inspection records can emphasize finding details without the same simple pass or fail badge structure users see in some other regions.
Verdine handles that difference directly: it shows the source-published inspection context, including visible finding information and published closure information, in a format that is easier to scan.
What Verdine can show for Niagara
For supported Niagara restaurant records, Verdine surfaces inspection dates, visible finding context, and published closure events from the source history.
Instead of flattening Niagara into another region's format, Verdine focuses on visible findings, recent history, repeated context, and closure events that users can act on while reviewing restaurant options.
That makes Niagara coverage useful even when the source uses a different structure. Verdine helps users notice whether the record is recent, whether findings recur, and whether closure history appears in the supported timeline.
How Verdine makes Niagara context easier to read
Niagara inspection context is especially useful when recent findings or closure events need to be reviewed together. Verdine makes those signals easier to find from restaurant search.
That is the point of the interpretation layer: Verdine can simplify the inspection story while respecting the way each source publishes its records.
Users get a cleaner timeline of the Niagara signals Verdine supports, instead of having to compare individual source rows one at a time.