Close X
Tuesday, October 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Bird Flu at 52 BC commerical flocks

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Dec, 2023 04:58 PM
  • Bird Flu at 52 BC commerical flocks

More than 50 poultry farms in British Columbia have been infected with avian flu since October, but animal health officials say that rate is slowing as the fall migration of wild birds ends. 

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency said Thursday 47 commercial farms and five small-flocks have been infected with the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus this fall. 

B.C.'s Agriculture Ministry says in a news release that it is working with the agency and B.C.'s poultry producers to ensure enhanced biosecurity measures are in place to limit the spread of disease. 

If the flu is detected in a flock, all the birds on the farm must be destroyed and the CFIA said in November about five million birds in B.C. have been culled due to H5N1 since the first case was detected in April 2022. 

The ministry says avian flu poses a low risk to public health with no risk to food safety, and there are currently no poultry food supply disruptions due to the virus. 

The B.C. government introduced a $5-million farmed animal disease program this year that helps farmers beef up their biosecurity measures, equipment for disease response, research and training to better prevent the flu from entering the barns. 

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Rebranded 'sustainable jobs' plan published today

Rebranded 'sustainable jobs' plan published today
The Liberal government's long-promised plan to transition Canada's labour force to respond to climate change says a clean energy economy will not prompt massive unemployment in the country's energy towns. It says if Canada plays its cards right, the clean energy economy will create so many jobs there may not be enough workers to fill them.

Rebranded 'sustainable jobs' plan published today

Minor earthquake strikes off B.C. coast

Minor earthquake strikes off B.C. coast
Earthquakes Canada reports a 4.8 magnitude quake struck just before 11 p.m. PST. There are no reports of damage. No tsunami is expected.

Minor earthquake strikes off B.C. coast

Two dead, one hurt in southeastern B.C. avalanche

Two dead, one hurt in southeastern B.C. avalanche
Avalanche Canada says a group of five snowboarders and one skier were caught in the slide Thursday in an area known as Terminator 2.5 outside of a ski area boundary near the town of Golden. Avalanche Canada says the two buried victims did not survive and the one person partly buried was rescued with injuries.    

Two dead, one hurt in southeastern B.C. avalanche

Sex offence charges laid against ex-teacher: RCMP

Sex offence charges laid against ex-teacher: RCMP
Brian Moore has been charged with 10 counts of indecent assault on a male, one count of sexual touching of a person under 14 years old, and one count of sexual assault. North Vancouver RCMP say Moore, now 83, taught at Upper Lynn Elementary School starting in 1970 before the end of his employment in 1982.

Sex offence charges laid against ex-teacher: RCMP

MLA John Rustad joins B.C. Conservatives

MLA John Rustad joins B.C. Conservatives
John Rustad, who has been representing the northern B.C. riding of Nechako Lakes as an independent, said Thursday the B.C. Conservatives now best represent his political views and goals.

MLA John Rustad joins B.C. Conservatives

Why politicians stray in non-English messaging

Why politicians stray in non-English messaging
Wat, speaking on Phoenix TV's Daily Topic Show, said "we are very opposed to so-called safe injection sites," remarks she later said "accidentally misrepresented" her party's position. The Liberal MLA representing Richmond Centre is the latest politician to be accused of straying from an official line or tailoring a message to non-English-speaking audiences.       

Why politicians stray in non-English messaging