Thursday, June 16, 2016

CFIA truckwash standard is wrong

Saskatchewan Pork Development Board Chair Florian Possberg has joined the critics speaking out against the Canadian Food Inspection Agency’s requirement that hog-hauling truck trailers need to be washed in the United States before returning to Canada.

He says when Canadians take trailers to clean farms in the U.S., then send them to dirty U.S. truck washes, we're putting our whole industry at risk and now we have a number of cases that demonstrate that.

There have been three recent farms in Manitoba hit with Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea virus. There is no published information linking those outbreaks to truck trailers returning from the U.S.

What is known is that most of the U.S. truck washes taking in hog transports are contaminated with PED virus.

For a while, the CFIA allowed trucks to return to Canada for washing with clean water. Many truckers still do that after returning from the U.S., but the critics say the risk is higher because the prior washing in the U.S. is likely to deposit PED virus.


Manitoba’s pork board was the first to speak out forcefully about the CFIA reverting to its old standard this spring.