by Allison Finnamore
The largest culled-cattle slaughter plant in Eastern Canada has been conditionally approved for a loan to construct a new processing facility next to its existing slaughter house in St-Cyrille-de-Wendover, Que.
The producer-owned Quebec beef packer Levinoff-Colbex is set to receive $9.6 million through the federal government under Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada’s Slaughter Improvement Program, part of Canada’s Economic Action Plan.
“It’s imperative that Quebec farmers and, indeed, farmers throughout Eastern Canada have access to slaughter facilities,” says Jean-Pierre Blackburn, minister of national revenue and minister of state (agriculture).
With 375 employees, Levinoff-Colbex is a key service to the bovine livestock sector in Eastern Canada, serving as the only significant cull-cow slaughter facility for producers in Ontario, Quebec and the Atlantic provinces. Levinoff-Colbex slaughters and processes 150,000 cull cattle per year.
The largest culled-cattle slaughter plant in Eastern Canada has been conditionally approved for a loan to construct a new processing facility next to its existing slaughter house in St-Cyrille-de-Wendover, Que.
The producer-owned Quebec beef packer Levinoff-Colbex is set to receive $9.6 million through the federal government under Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada’s Slaughter Improvement Program, part of Canada’s Economic Action Plan.
“It’s imperative that Quebec farmers and, indeed, farmers throughout Eastern Canada have access to slaughter facilities,” says Jean-Pierre Blackburn, minister of national revenue and minister of state (agriculture).
With 375 employees, Levinoff-Colbex is a key service to the bovine livestock sector in Eastern Canada, serving as the only significant cull-cow slaughter facility for producers in Ontario, Quebec and the Atlantic provinces. Levinoff-Colbex slaughters and processes 150,000 cull cattle per year.
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