Thursday, October 10, 2013

Food safety moves from AAFC to Health Canada


The federal health department and health minister are taking food safety out of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency and Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz’s portfolio.

The transition has begun and will be completed as quickly as possible, federal officials say.

The shift brings three agencies under Health Minister Rona Ambrose – food safety from the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, Public Health Agency of Canada with head offices in Winnipeg and Health Canada.

A “transition team” of staff from Health Canada, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, CFIA and PHAC has been set up “to ensure that the transition happens as quickly and seamlessly as possible.”
CFIA, in a separate statement Wednesday, said the new reporting structure and changeover “will be taking place immediately, but it will take some time to complete the transition.”
The agency, “in recognition of its unique regulatory mandate and federal separate employer status… will continue to operate as a distinct, separate organization.”
Ritz will still head the Canadian Food Inspection Agency which will continue to handle animal health, plant protection and international trade issues.
Ritz has been on the hot seat several times over CFIA handling of crises, such as a Listeria monocytogenes outbreak among customers of Maple Leaf Foods Inc.’s products processed at a plant in Toronto, the largest beef recall in Canadian history at XL Foods Inc. at Brooks, Alta., and the current outbreak of E. coli 0157:H7 that includes nation-wide distribution of Belmont Meat Ltd. products by the Loblaws and Sobeys supermarket chains.
It's been a long time coming, but it's a sensible move to put food safety into the Health department. Too often the interests of farmers and meat packers took precedence over the health of Canadians.
And I've seen that happening since the mid-1970s when the federal agriculture department, which was then in charge of meat inspection, allowed Burns Meats Ltd. to keep its plant in Kitchener open while the place literally crumbled to pieces, some of them falling into the meat.
It took a tour by U.S. meat inspectors to force the Canadians to enforce regulations and standards, but not, unfortunately, to revamp the system.