Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Fewer Meat Inspectors Could Lead To More Food-borne Illnesses: Union

The Canadian Press, 20 Aug, 2015 11:52 AM
    WINNIPEG — The union representing Canada's meat inspectors says slaughter facilities in Manitoba are severely understaffed and public safety is at risk.
     
    Bob Kingston, president of the Public Service Alliance of Canada's agriculture union, says slaughterhouses in the province typically operate with one-third fewer inspectors than required by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.
     
    That will be exacerbated by the federal government's decision to cut $35 million from the agency's budget, which will mean 273 fewer inspectors across Canada by 2018, he says.
     
    "Canadians do not trust the food industry to police its own safety practices, yet the government is relying more heavily on food-production companies to self-police," Kingston said Thursday at a Winnipeg news conference, one of several the union has held across the country recently.
     
    "Without action to address the inspection shortage, it is just a matter of time before the next major food-borne illness outbreak occurs."
     
    Tainted cold cuts from a Maple Leaf plant in Toronto led to an outbreak of listeriosis that killed 22 people across the country in 2008.
     
    Three years ago, meat tainted by the E. coli bacteria prompted the XL Foods meat-packing plant in southern Alberta to recall 1.8 million kilograms of beef in Canada and the United States. No one died, but health officials confirmed that 18 people tested positive for the bacteria linked to the meat.
     
    Kingston said the current shortage of federal meat inspectors is so acute, that Manitoba's plants are borrowing provincial inspectors to fill in the gaps.
     
    "They can be pulled from those facilities without a lot of screaming and yelling so they can get away with it," he said. "Because inspectors working in Manitoba's federally licensed processing- and cold-storage facilities barely meet minimum staffing levels, this is like robbing the poor to pay the destitute."
     
    A spokesperson for the Canadian Food Inspection Agency was not immediately available for comment.
     
    A spokesman for Health Minister Rona Ambrose has previously said 200 frontline food safety inspectors are to be hired and the government has provided the agency with the highest funding levels in Canadian history.
     
    Chris Aylward, vice-president of the Public Service Alliance of Canada, urged voters to consider food safety when casting a ballot in the upcoming federal election.
     
    "It can't be much worse than what it is today," Aylward said. "For those voters who expect more than what the federal government is delivering on food safety, now is the perfect time to voice your concerns prior to the Oct. 19 election."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Find Body Of Missing Five Months Pregnant Woman In Her Quebec Home

    Police Find Body Of Missing Five Months Pregnant Woman In Her Quebec Home
    Cheryl Bau-Tremblay of Beloeil, northeast of Montreal, was 28 years old and five months pregnant.

    Police Find Body Of Missing Five Months Pregnant Woman In Her Quebec Home

    Former Mountie Faces Sex Charges Involving Child During 1960s In Cape Dorset

    Former Mountie Faces Sex Charges Involving Child During 1960s In Cape Dorset
    CAPE DORSET, Nunavut — Nunavut RCMP have charged a former Mountie with sex offences involving a child that stem back to the 1960s.

    Former Mountie Faces Sex Charges Involving Child During 1960s In Cape Dorset

    So Who Won Canada's Election Debate? Depends Which Leader You Ask, Apparently

    So Who Won Canada's Election Debate? Depends Which Leader You Ask, Apparently
    OTTAWA — All of the party leaders were winners in the kickoff election debate — at least, according to the leaders themselves.

    So Who Won Canada's Election Debate? Depends Which Leader You Ask, Apparently

    Three Indian Americans Charged With $2.5-Million Bank Fraud And Money Laundering

    Three Indian Americans Charged With $2.5-Million Bank Fraud And Money Laundering
    US authorities have charged three Indian Americans with a $2.5-million bank fraud and money laundering, media reports said.

    Three Indian Americans Charged With $2.5-Million Bank Fraud And Money Laundering

    B.C. Says Park Policy Offers Protection While Others Fear Development

    The Ministry of Environment is expected to release its policy on issuing permits for research and information gathering within provincial parks on Friday.

    B.C. Says Park Policy Offers Protection While Others Fear Development

    As Canadian Leaders Debated, Donald Trump Was Producing The Wildest Show In Politics

    As Canadian Leaders Debated, Donald Trump Was Producing The Wildest Show In Politics
    The first debate of the U.S. presidential election cycle was only a moment old and arguably wilder than anything that's happened in any Canadian leaders' debate, ever — let alone Thursday's.

    As Canadian Leaders Debated, Donald Trump Was Producing The Wildest Show In Politics