Thursday, November 29, 2012

CFIA on the hot seat


The Canadian Food Inspection Agency is on the hot seat because CTV News has a memo from a CFIA supervisor at the XL Foods Inc. plant at Brooks, Alta., telling his underlings to ignore visible manure contamination on carcasses – except those destined for Japan.

The CFIA says this allegation of a double standard is “categorically false.”

That's a denial I find hard to swallow, given that CTV has the memo.

"Within meat plants, there are specific inspection tasks conducted at various stations and production points in production," the CFIA statement reads.

"The memo referenced simply emphasized this division of labour."

Really? Carcasses destined for Japan need to be clean. Those for further processing in Canada don't. That's a "division of labour"? 

CFIA is fast losing all credibility.

It's statement says "this information was clarified with the union and front line inspection staff over three weeks ago when the union first brought their allegations to the CFIA's attention. It was also explained in detail on two occasions to CTV.

"What the union and CTV fail to mention is that every carcass processed in Canada must meet Canada's high food safety standards.

“There is zero tolerance for any form of contamination, and critical control points to detect problems are in place at multiple points throughout the inspection process," the CFIA said.  

Zero tolerance? Then how come the biggest beef recall in Canadian history was carried out in October when beef from XL Foods was found contaminated with E. coli 0157:H7?

That discovery came first from U.S. inspector checking beef at the border.

Later the CFIA shut down the plant, conducted a thorough audit and identified a number of deficiencies.

Yet the CFIA says now that "if at any time during inspection a potential risk to food safety is detected - regardless of the product’s destination - the line is stopped and product is held until the concern is resolved and product is in compliance."