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Agriculture minister defends food inspection process
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CTV.ca News Staff
Date: Thu. Aug. 28 2008 5:54 PM ET
The number of deaths in Canada being blamed on a nationwide outbreak of listeriosis has grown from five to eight.
All three of the latest victims are from Ontario, Mark Razienne of the Public Health Agency of Canada said at Thursday's press conference. Their cases had previously been on a list of deaths under investigation.
At the same press conference, Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz continued his defence of Canada's food inspection system but backtracked on an earlier claim that inspectors spend half their time at meat-processing plants.
The inspectors' union challenged that claim, and now Ritz says the 50-50 split between paperwork inspections and floor inspections is the way the system is designed -- but not necessarily the way it actually works.
Paul Mayers, of The Canadian Food Inspection Agency, said the criticism that inspectors spent most of their time doing paperwork is a "derogatory" way of describing their work. He said the paperwork side of the job is just as important as work on the plant floor.
Earlier in the day, Ritz told Canada AM the country has a world-class food inspection process, but more resources are being added to boost its effectiveness.
"There's a lot of mixed messages," Ritz said. "The opposition parties are screaming that we're cutting funding. Nothing could be further from the truth. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to add up the numbers and see there's 113 million new dollars going into the system."
Ritz denied reports based on a leaked government memo that suggested anticipated changes to the federal food inspection system may have already been in use at the Toronto plant.
Ritz said the memo actually dealt with slaughtering processes, not processing guidelines, and wasn't relevant to the listeria outbreak.
Adding to the list
The announcement of further deaths confirmed with the outbreak came as more products were added to the growing recall list of potentially tainted foods.
Cooked ham and salami sandwiches sold in Sobeys, Foodland and IGA stores in Ontario may contain listeria monocytogenes, the bacteria that has been linked to 15 deaths.
The sandwiches are made with both whole wheat and white bread and were in 900, 450 and 220-gram packages and are marked as having been packed as recently as Aug. 24, 2008.
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency also added certain Kirkland Signature platters to its list of products that could contain listeria.
Kirkland Signature brand croissant and meat-and-cheese platters -- which carry best-before dates up to and including Aug. 28 and 29, respectively -- may contain meat products already recalled by Maple Leaf Foods. The platters were sold at Costco outlets across Canada.
The products were added to a list that now includes more than 220 food items manufactured at the Toronto Maple Leaf foods plant at the centre of the outbreak.
A family mourns
Meanwhile, an Ontario family prepared for the funeral of the 89-year-old great-grandmother they say died from listeriosis and as
The funeral for Frances Clark, of Madoc, Ont. was held Thursday.
She was described by her daughter as an active and healthy octogenarian who made the "best raspberry pie in the world" before she suddenly fell ill last week, then died on Monday.
It has not been confirmed whether Clark was infected by the same strain in the outbreak that originated at the Toronto plant.
Her daughter Karen Clark said her mother began feeling ill on Wednesday night. By Thursday she had a headache, and by Friday when she was taken to hospital her eyes were fixed and staring, and she was non-verbal.
On Sunday, a doctor confirmed a blood sample was positive for listeria, By Monday, she was dead.
"It hit so fast and so furious and so cruel, I mean one minute you have her and the next you don't," Karen Clark told CTV's Canada AM.
"Somewhere along the line something happened. We can't even get to the grief stage yet because we don't even know what to think, where to begin."
Clark leaves behind two children, four grandchildren and four great-grandchildren, her daughter said.
Full responsibility
On Wednesday, president of Maple Leaf Foods, Michael McCain, took full responsibility for the outbreak.
"We have an unwavering commitment to keep our food safe, and we have excellent systems and processes in place. But this week it's our best efforts that failed, not the regulators or the Canadian food safety system," said McCain at a press conference in Toronto.
According to the Public Health Agency of Canada there are 29 confirmed cases of the outbreak strain in the country, resulting in 15 deaths -- 12 in Ontario, and one each in Saskatchewan, B.C. and Quebec.
With files from the Canadian Press
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It is about time - as a grandparent I have watched our kids (who were allowed to fail although I do remember some nagging on our part) learn, I have watched our children now micro-manage their children. A big part of it is the fact that there are predators out there and an extreme reluctance on the parents part to alllow freedom that might result in the children becoming victims.


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Norm in Ontario
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AWL
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Also note the 'international standards' referenced, which of course means the US-FDA. The US Supreme Court has recently cited the FDA as 'neglecting its regulatory duties and acting as an agent for the industry its meant to regulate.' And our governments plan to 'improve' the Canadian system by making it more like the US system. Lucky us.
Mr. Graham Stanners
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Im glad to hear that they are reacting to the problem, but where was this investment and the inspectors before the outbreak. It is assuring, even though there is a PR undertone, to hear Mr. McCain of Maple Leaf Foods shoulder the blame, but clearly he is taking responsibility to ensure that this doesn't happen again. Yet, Mr. Ritz, the Conservative Agriculture Minister is more concerned about an election and doesn't want the voting public to read the tea leaves and understand that his gov't dropped the ball on this problem and wasn't doing a sufficient job of providing adequate resources for CFIA.
Mr. Harper and the Conservatives must share blame (not equally, but to a certain degree) in this problem, they oversee CFIA, and they must ensure that front-line inspectors have required training and expertise to do their job, but also to ensure that there is a swift response, not mounting deaths in Canada.
Bedore
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Doug
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"Canada has one of the most stringent food safety systems in the world..."
is much the same sort of thing that they were saying when Mad Cow first cropped up in Canada.
The truth in that case was that the Canadian system was far from being a world leader in food safety.
That a minister can come out and say, roughly, that 'the system works' in spite of a number of deaths is incredible.
I wonder why it's not possible to be honest and frank, instead, and say "This is a terrible tragedy and the system failed. We will fix it."