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New BSE Controls

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    New BSE Controls

    OTTAWA, July 9, 2004 – The Government of Canada today announced it will introduce new animal feed restrictions to further strengthen Canada’s safeguards against bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE). The Government intends to require the removal of bovine specified risk materials (SRM) from the animal feed chain. SRM are tissues that, in infected cattle, harbour the BSE agent. These tissues are already removed from all animals slaughtered for human consumption.

    This measure will add an additional level of security to Canada’s current feed ban, which has prohibited feeding cattle with ruminant materials including SRM since 1997. Preventing these potentially infectious materials from entering the entire feed production chain at the start diminishes the effects of potential cross-contamination of ruminant animal feeds that could occur as feed is produced and distributed, as well as any inappropriate on-farm use. Based on risk analyses, removing SRM from animal feed will more quickly reduce the incidence of BSE in North America by preventing future disease spread.

    "Canada had the foresight to implement protections, such as the feed ban, well before we discovered BSE in this part of the world," said Bob Speller, Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food and Minister Responsible for the Canadian Food Inspection Agency. "Taking a forward looking approach to build on those safeguards will provide the long-term level of animal health protection needed."

    The Canadian Food Inspection Agency will introduce a regulatory proposal to require the removal and redirection of SRM and dead and downer cattle from all animal feed, including pet food. Given the importance of this measure, the Government has been carefully considering various options in consultation with provincial and territorial representatives, stakeholders and international counterparts, including from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The Government will continue to consult widely on the scope, implementation timetable, and other operational details for this measure as it is further developed.

    Following the detection of BSE in North America, the international team of animal health experts that reviewed the Canadian BSE situation strongly endorsed removal and redirection of SRM from the animal feed chain. A similar recommendation was made by the team that reviewed the American BSE experience. Feed restrictions are universally recognized as the critical measure to contain the spread of BSE.

    Canadian and American authorities have worked cooperatively over the past months to develop coherent approaches to address BSE in North America. This effort reflects the integrated nature of the North American market and the shared commitment of both countries to implement science-based safeguards to protect animal health.

    Since detecting BSE in North America last year, the Government has taken significant steps to strengthen Canada’s BSE safeguards. Canada has excluded SRM from human food, is enhancing animal identification and intensifying BSE surveillance. The addition of new feed controls will further strengthen the future health of the national herd and complete Canada’s response to the key recommendations of the international team.

    "Today's announcement complements the substantial measures we've already taken to protect public health," said Minister of Health Pierre Pettigrew. "We will continue to work with the international community to ensure that the most effective safeguards for bovine-derived products are in place in Canada."

    The Americans have introduced similar controls. Apparently they take effect now, but they are still accepting comments.

    #2
    What a lot of garbage being trotted out as a distraction. All this talk of the US and Canadian industries being identical and working together to ensure our policies are developed in complete harmony completely overlooks the reality that one party is completely shafting the other by allowing it's pirate corporations to exploit a captive market for personal gain. Let's point this out again and again to politicians and public alike and then maybe politicians may need to do their duty instead of mouthing platitudes to the Americans.

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      #3
      The American version of this is at

      www.usda.gov/Newsroom/0280.04.html

      Among other things, it mentions the following:

      "FSIS is also specifically seeking comments on whether a country's BSE status should be taken into account when determining whether a country’s meat inspection system is equivalent to the U.S. regulations including the provisions in the FSIS interim final rules."

      I would suspect they are talking about us.

      "Publication of this USDA-FDA notice, as well as the two FDA documents, is scheduled for mid-July in the Federal Register."

      This can be found at www.regulations.gov

      When both countries come out with similar rules on the same day, I personally think they are setting things up for future moves. If we are harmonized on all BSE mitigations, there is less opportunity for opposition to an open border.

      Comment


        #4
        For all those who feel that BIG C is doing nothing, and probabaly still say that; CCA and ABP will no doubt take a whole bunch of credit for this new developement, however some of the people from BIG C have been in constant contact with CFIA over this issue along with the testing issue, and the issue of developing a program to prove the theory of BSE contamination through feed sources period.
        Slap everyone else on the back, by I would have to say thet this is a victory for everyone.
        The word in the streets is that BIG C is radical and against the grain. The truth is we are out to help preserve the family farm, and ground must be given by both BIG C and the mainstream industry representatives to find common ground to move ahead to solve our commmon dilemma.

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