United States district judge Sunil Harjani ruled that the group of suppliers, restaurants and others could team up for the lawsuit, claiming Hormel, Butterball and others conspired to fix prices, according to court records.
Agri 007
"It's my role to report. It's your role to press for reforms"
Friday, January 24, 2025
Judge advances turkey price-fixing lawsuit
Wheat ship caught in ice
The 663-foot Manitoulin had dropped off a load of wheat and was heading back to Sarnia on Wednesday when it became stuck in ice that was rapidly forming in sub-zero temperatures off the Buffalo shoreline. It remained there through Thursday, creating a striking sight on the lake, surrounded on all sides by ice and snow.
“We just haven’t had a bad winter in quite a while. So now that we’ve had one and people haven’t seen this for a bit, they’re like ‘what’s going on?’” said Paul Angelillo, a search and rescue specialist with the Coast Guard in Buffalo.
Great Lakes freighters typically are able to navigate surface ice in the winter, but occasionally encounter ice that’s too hard or thick to break through, he said.
U.S. egg prices soaring
Economist Greg Archer of Texas A&M University said highly-infectious avian influenza is to blame.
Since Feb. 8, 2022, more than 134.7 million birds have been lost across 1,410 flock outbreaks, including 637 commercial and 773 backyard flocks, the federal government said.
The USDA reported 304 million table egg laying hens in the U.S. flock as of Jan. 1, a 2.3 per cent decline compared with the 311 million laying hens at the same time last year.
Wholesale prices for large Grade A eggs hit an all-time high of $6.14 per dozen on average nationally Jan. 18 compared with $2.20 in 2-23 before the flu hit hard.
In Vancouver, where avian flu has hit hard for two months, the retail price for Grade A Large eggs is averaging $7 a dozen.
Thursday, January 23, 2025
Dairy files appeal against milk board
The Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Agribusiness Appeal Tribunal has scheduled a hearing Feb. 28 to deal with preliminary matters.
The dairy is also known as St. Brigid’s Creamery and St. Brigid’s Dairy and is north of Brussels. It is famous for butter and includes some made from grass-fed milk.
Peavy closing dozens of stores
The company that owns Peavey stores, formerly TSC, is closing a couple dozen stores in Ontario.
They are in Chatham, Sarnia, Goderich, Collingwood, Mount Forest, Arnprior, Bedford, Bowmanville, Brockville, Cornwall, Goderich, Grimsby, Kingston, Kitchener, Lambeth, New Liskeard, Smiths Falls, St. Catharines, St. Jacobs, St. Thomas, Sudbury, Woodstock, and Uxbridge, Rockland and Hyde Park.
Trump muzzles disease reporting
Reports on the H5N1 avian flu outbreak and other public health updates were expected this week but are now on hold.
It remains unclear if the directive will delay urgent communications such as foodborne illness outbreaks or drug approvals, the report said.
Health officials expressed concern over the move, citing previous attempts during Trump’s first term to control messaging during the COVID-19 response.
Wednesday, January 22, 2025
Dutch court orders nitrogen cuts
They have until 2030 to cut manure-containing manures used as fertilizer.
The court in The Hague said the government had clearly failed to comply with European regulations to preserve vulnerable nature reserves and cut excessive emissions of nitrogen oxides and ammonia, which hurt biodiversity and damage the quality of water, reports Reuters news agency.
It ordered the government to meet its target of reducing the emissions to legally allowed levels in 50 per cent of all affected nature reserves by 2030 and ruled that it should be fined 10 million euros ($15 million Cdn) if the goal was not met.
The lawsuit was brought by Greenpeace.