Close X
Saturday, September 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Raw milk farmer loses bid to take case to Supreme Court, vows to continue fight

Darpan News Desk Canadian Press, 14 Aug, 2014 10:53 AM
    The Supreme Court of Canada will not hear an appeal from an Ontario farmer who has long championed the right to sell and drink unpasteurized milk, but he says "it's not the end of the road."
     
    The top court's refusal to hear Michael Schmidt's case — as is usual it did not provide reasons — means his 2011 convictions of 13 charges under the Health Protection and Promotion Act and the Milk Act that saw him fined $9,150 stand.
     
    He will, however, continue his crusade to provide people who wish to buy raw milk with the unpasteurized product. The Ontario government maintains the unprocessed milk poses a significant risk to public health, but Schmidt insists there's no evidence anyone has ever fallen ill from his milk, and he and his supporters argue raw milk offers health benefits.
     
    "I don't think it's the end of the road at all," he said from his farm in Durham, Ont., south of Owen Sound. "I think it was a ruling on a very specific case, a very specific situation. I think it will become much more a political issue now than a legal issue."
     
    Ontario does not ban the consumption of raw milk and farmers are allowed to drink the milk produced by their own cows. Earlier court decisions have found that Schmidt's method of allowing consumers to buy an ownership interest in a dairy cow was little more than a way to circumvent the rules.
     
    Schmidt has since changed the structure of his business, getting his approximately 150 customers to buy part ownership in the farm, rather than just the cows. The government has — so far — not prosecuted him in regards to his new operation, he said.
     
    "I'm always open for surprises," Schmidt said, laughing. "But at the same time they know I'm committed and this issue will not die."
     
    Schmidt has been locked in a decades-long battle with the province — including a hunger strike — over raw milk, arguing that willing consumers must have the right to choose what they consume. When Ontario's Appeal Court upheld his conviction it disagreed, saying unpasteurized milk poses a risk to public health, and the sales ban is constitutional absent definitive evidence of any health benefits.
     
    "The impugned legislation prohibits the appellant from selling or distributing a product that certain individuals think beneficial to their health," the court ruled earlier this year. "Lifestyle choices as to food or substances to be consumed do not attract Charter protection."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Manitoba: On the run for weeks, Cat with bug catcher on its head is safely trapped

    Manitoba: On the run for weeks, Cat with bug catcher on its head is safely trapped
    According to the Brandon and Area Lost Animals group, Butterscotch is in good shape considering his ordeal and was being treated at the Grand Valley Animal Clinic.

    Manitoba: On the run for weeks, Cat with bug catcher on its head is safely trapped

    WHO seeks expert advice on the ethics of using experimental Ebola drugs

    WHO seeks expert advice on the ethics of using experimental Ebola drugs
    TORONTO - On Monday experts from around the world will converge, by telephone, to try to chart a path through a mine field of ethical issues related to the expanding Ebola outbreak in West Africa.

    WHO seeks expert advice on the ethics of using experimental Ebola drugs

    Unicyclists Show off their Skills at World Championships in Montreal

    Unicyclists Show off their Skills at World Championships in Montreal
    MONTREAL - Some of the world's most skilled athletes on one wheel are finishing up more than a week of showing off their moves in Montreal.

    Unicyclists Show off their Skills at World Championships in Montreal

    Earthquake Rocks Alberta, Knocking Out Power and Shutting Down Gas Plant

    Earthquake Rocks Alberta, Knocking Out Power and Shutting Down Gas Plant
    he ground rumbled in Alberta today as a small earthquake hit an area west of Red Deer. Natural Resources Canada reports the 4.1 magnitude quake happened at 9:28 local time near Rocky Mountain House.

    Earthquake Rocks Alberta, Knocking Out Power and Shutting Down Gas Plant

    Not all Canadians were equal at First World War recruiting stations

    Not all Canadians were equal at First World War recruiting stations
    Refurbishments are underway on a First World War cenotaph in Vancouver's Stanley Park honouring Japanese-Canadian soldiers — a memorial that stands as both a...

    Not all Canadians were equal at First World War recruiting stations

    Quebec to amend Civil Code to better protect animals from abuse

    Quebec to amend Civil Code to better protect animals from abuse
    Quebec's new agriculture minister is promising to clean up the province's bad reputation as one of the best places to be an animal abuser....

    Quebec to amend Civil Code to better protect animals from abuse