Thursday, August 4, 2016

MacAulay won’t over-rule CFIA


Federal Agriculture Minister Lawrence MacAuley will not over-rule the Canadian Food Inspection Agency on its requirement that hog-hauling transports be washed in the United States before returning to Canada.

Hog farmers are angry about that requirement because they say many U.S. truck washes recycle water contaminated with the Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea virus.

Instead of acting to prevent the spread of the virus, the washing actually increases the likelihood that it will contaminate trucks that then carry it into Canadian farms.

MacAulay was asked about the truck-washing rule during a visit this week to Winnipeg.

“It’s very difficult for me to overrule the regulations continually,” said MacAulay. “I am the government, but I am not a scientist.”

He acknowledged the disease has been a huge issue south of the border, but said the inspection agency has indicated washing swine-hauling trailers before they return to Canada is the right approach.

The Manitoba Pork Council disagrees and has been working to convince the agency otherwise.

“I think that it’s pure logic that if there is more disease down south and they use recycled water in their wash facilities, that it is a time bomb,” said Pork Council president George Matheson.

“It will only be a matter of time before more PED enters the province because of that, so we’re hoping that between the minister and CFIA that they closely look at it and perhaps make a regional protocol for us.”

For two years an emergency federal protocol allowed empty hog trucks coming into Manitoba from the U.S. to be cleaned and disinfected on the Manitoba side of the border. That protocol ended in May.

Matheson said he remains optimistic that negotiations will lead to rule changes that are acceptable and effective in preventing the spread of the disease via trucks returning from the U.S.