Thursday, May 17, 2012

CFIA may relax rules



The Canadian Food Inspection Agency is proposing a change to regulations to allow farmers to kill animals on the farm and send them to a packing plant.

"Their intent is to allow for the on farm slaughter of animals which are safe for human consumption but for which a variety of reasons may not be fit for transport," said Tim O'Connor, spokesperson for the agency.

"That may be because it's an overly aggressive animal. It may be an animal which has a broken leg."

The CFIA said it’s definitely not going to allow roadkill to be taken in by packing plants.

Under the proposal, farmers would need to have a veterinarian inspect the animal before it’s slaughtered on the farm “and then the carcass has to be shipped according to regulatory requirements… to a federally registered establishment where it is further inspected post-mortem by a veterinarian to ensure again it is suitable for human consumption," O’Connor said. "This does not include dead stock. That's unequivocal."

The Canadian Cattlemen's Association supports the proposal, noting that it would end pain for injured animals.

"I think it's a win-win scenario all around, “said John Masswohl, the CCA’s director  or government and international relations. it's good for the animal, it's good for the farmers and I would say it has zero impact on the safety of the food, zero impact on consumers," he said.