Charlie;
I see this on DTN today;
"More Testing May Uncover More Mad Cow
11/17 09:10
WINNIPEG (Dow Jones)--Canada can expect more cases of the mad-cow disease that has rocked the cattle industry, officials with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency said Tuesday in a Canadian Press report.
The statement comes as testing is steeply ramped up for bovine spongiform encepalopathy (BSE) to 38,000 next year from the 8,000 tests this year, in response to recommendations by an international expert panel.
"It's important to note that as our surveillance program proceeds it will not be surprising to detect a low number of additional BSE-infected animals," spokeswoman Frederique Moulin said in the CP report.
"Such findings will be consistent to our understanding of how BSE was introduced in North America.
"Moreover, Canada's BSE safeguards have been built on the assumption that BSE still lingers in the national herd. As a result, finding additional cases will not change our food safety and animal health situations," Moulin said in the report.
It's the first time a food agency official has publicly acknowledged an assumption BSE lingers in Canada. A Health Canada scientist who said last year that "BSE is here to stay" was formally reprimanded."
Sask. has a problem right now... but the gov. is hiding it... as close as we can tell. Local communities just will not say anything... hope against hope... that against strong odds it is not BSE related. Detecting a true BSE problems, scientifically, can only be confirmed after death.
So we must wait... cattle farmers, grain farmers... for the other shoe to drop.
Canadian gov. officials are publically preparing... are we?
I see this on DTN today;
"More Testing May Uncover More Mad Cow
11/17 09:10
WINNIPEG (Dow Jones)--Canada can expect more cases of the mad-cow disease that has rocked the cattle industry, officials with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency said Tuesday in a Canadian Press report.
The statement comes as testing is steeply ramped up for bovine spongiform encepalopathy (BSE) to 38,000 next year from the 8,000 tests this year, in response to recommendations by an international expert panel.
"It's important to note that as our surveillance program proceeds it will not be surprising to detect a low number of additional BSE-infected animals," spokeswoman Frederique Moulin said in the CP report.
"Such findings will be consistent to our understanding of how BSE was introduced in North America.
"Moreover, Canada's BSE safeguards have been built on the assumption that BSE still lingers in the national herd. As a result, finding additional cases will not change our food safety and animal health situations," Moulin said in the report.
It's the first time a food agency official has publicly acknowledged an assumption BSE lingers in Canada. A Health Canada scientist who said last year that "BSE is here to stay" was formally reprimanded."
Sask. has a problem right now... but the gov. is hiding it... as close as we can tell. Local communities just will not say anything... hope against hope... that against strong odds it is not BSE related. Detecting a true BSE problems, scientifically, can only be confirmed after death.
So we must wait... cattle farmers, grain farmers... for the other shoe to drop.
Canadian gov. officials are publically preparing... are we?
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