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Posted: September 17, 2020

MoG suggests meat processing policy changes for rural areas

Ranchers and abattoir operators in British Columbia are contributing to improve rural food supply and food security in the province, as part of ongoing government efforts to increase livestock production and processing in rural communities.

The Ministry of Agriculture (MoG) has released an intentions paper with suggested policy changes to meat processing in rural areas of the province that prioritize food safety and animal welfare. The policy changes will also increase economic opportunities and strengthen B.C.’s provincial food system.

Policy changes being shared with ranchers, abattoirs, local governments and health authorities for consideration include:

* increasing the amount of meat that can be processed annually by Class D and E licence holders, and expanding the criteria of who and where their meat can be sold to;

* developing alternative models of licensing mobile abattoirs to improve service for smaller-scale producers;

* exploring a pilot program for conducting certain inspection components virtually; and

* renaming the current “Class A, B, D and E licenses” to more intuitive categories.

The ministry is also collecting input on a number of topics to support public health and a safe meat supply, such as:

* updating licensee training on slaughter practice, animal welfare and food safety to ensure provincially consistent and effective learning opportunities for rural producers;

* revising the code of practice for abattoir operators with required standard operating procedures to bring consistent practices and improved clarity for administrators and operators; and

* increasing the frequency of government inspector visits to rural abattoirs to an annual basis to ensure awareness and compliance with all requirements.

Comments are being accepted from stakeholders and the public until Oct. 19.

Information on meat inspection in B.C., including licence types.

Lead image: Grant Kelly operates the Columbia Valley Meat & Sausage Co., an example of a small rural abattoir. e-KNOW file photo

e-KNOW


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