Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Food Safety Agency Working With Game Farmers To Develop Rules Against Disease

The Canadian Press, 05 Jun, 2015 06:22 PM
  • Food Safety Agency Working With Game Farmers To Develop Rules Against Disease
EDMONTON — Canada's food safety watchdog says it is developing rules with people who raise elk and deer on commercial farms to guard against animal diseases.
 
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says voluntary standards are being developed with Agriculture Canada and an industry group called the Canadian Cervid Alliance.
 
The alliance website lists game farm associations in Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and Quebec.
 
The CFIA says a new biosecurity standard will set guidelines to reduce the risk of chronic-wasting disease and other animal diseases such as tuberculosis and brucellosis.
 
The agency says the new standards could take up to two years to develop.
 
Producers in Alberta and Saskatchewan have been dealing for years with chronic-wasting disease in farmed deer and elk — a fatal disease that experts have said may not be possible to eliminate.
 
The disease known as CWD has been spreading in the region and has also been found in wild deer and elk.
 
CWD is caused by abnormal proteins called prions and is similar to mad cow disease.
 
Experts say there is no scientific evidence to suggest that CWD can affect humans, but people have been cautioned to avoid meat infected by prions.
 
"Canadian cervid producers have a long-standing history of working hard to protect their herds from disease," the CFIA said Friday in a notice to the game farm industry. 
 
"A national standard will build on this knowledge and help share best practices across the country to strengthen the industry as a whole."

MORE National ARTICLES

Canadian Team Scouts Nepal Hinterlands To Plan Aid And Find Stranded Canucks

Canadian Team Scouts Nepal Hinterlands To Plan Aid And Find Stranded Canucks
OTTAWA — Government ministers say members of a Canadian team are moving out from the Nepalese capital of Kathmandu on a reconnaissance mission in the earthquake-ravaged hinterlands.

Canadian Team Scouts Nepal Hinterlands To Plan Aid And Find Stranded Canucks

Former Newspaper Tycoon Won't Get A Supreme Court Hearing In Tax Appeal Case

OTTAWA — Former newspaper baron Conrad Black has lost his last effort to shield million of dollars from the Canadian taxman.

Former Newspaper Tycoon Won't Get A Supreme Court Hearing In Tax Appeal Case

GM Canada To Cut Oshawa Assembly Workforce By 1,000 Jobs This Year

GM Canada To Cut Oshawa Assembly Workforce By 1,000 Jobs This Year
OSHAWA, Ont. — General Motors says it will cut about 1,000 positions from its Oshawa, Ont., manufacturing operations this year as the company plans to spend billions of dollars to boost its U.S. operations. 

GM Canada To Cut Oshawa Assembly Workforce By 1,000 Jobs This Year

Waterloo Region Officer Stabbed And Man Shot By Police In Cambridge

Waterloo Region Officer Stabbed And Man Shot By Police In Cambridge
CAMBRIDGE, Ont. — A Waterloo Region police officer is in hospital with stab wounds along with a man who was shot by police following a domestic violence incident in Cambridge, Ont.

Waterloo Region Officer Stabbed And Man Shot By Police In Cambridge

Proposed Class Action Targets Loblaws Over Bangladesh Factory Collapse

Proposed Class Action Targets Loblaws Over Bangladesh Factory Collapse
TORONTO — A Toronto law firm has launched a proposed class-action lawsuit against retail giant Loblaws and its Joe Fresh clothing line over the collapse of a clothing factory in Bangladesh that killed more than 1,100 people.

Proposed Class Action Targets Loblaws Over Bangladesh Factory Collapse

Ontario Law To Require Schools To Let Asthmatic Kids Keep Inhalers

Ontario Law To Require Schools To Let Asthmatic Kids Keep Inhalers
TORONTO — Asthma advocates believe Ontario is set to become the first province in which children can legally carry their inhalers with them at school.

Ontario Law To Require Schools To Let Asthmatic Kids Keep Inhalers