Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Tainted beef detected in U.S. agency's tests
OTTAWA -- The Canadian Food Inspection Agency first became aware of problems with beef produced at an Alberta company when tests conducted in the U.S. came back positive for E. coli.
Agency spokesman Garfield Balsom confirmed word of the positive findings came from the Food Safety Inspection Service of the U.S. Drug Authority on Sept. 3, nearly two weeks before the CFIA began issuing advisories about ground beef products produced at Edmonton-based XL Foods.
Balsom said XL initiated the recall on its own, insisting it was not ordered as a result of the U.S. test results.
"There were some positives identified by the FSIS, but the positives were not the trigger for the recall," Balsom said in a telephone interview. "The recall was a voluntary recall by the company."
A statement on the FSIS website said both the service and the CFIA conducted followup tests on the beef products, which were distributed in eight states.
The FSIS has issued a public health warning about the contaminated meat and said it's working to ensure all affected products are pulled from store shelves.
The international twist is the latest development in a recall that has already spread from coast to coast and depleted meat supplies at nearly all the country's major grocery retailers.
The CFIA issued another expansion to a recall of ground beef products made by Edmonton-based XL Foods on Friday, extending an advisory whose scope has grown almost daily since it was first issued on Sept. 16.
The latest additions to the growing list involve not only packages of ground beef, but products prepared with the meat suspected of containing E. coli. Those include sausages, meat loaf, meatballs and burgers.
Unbranded meat products carried at Walmart locations in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia have officially been recalled, the CFIA said. The other products included in the expanded advisory were sold at Metro locations in Ontario and Safeway stores in all five provinces. The risk of contamination also exists in unlabelled or unbranded beef products sold at independent shops not covered on the CFIA's advisory, the agency said.
The CFIA urged consumers who are unsure if they have the affected ground beef product to check with the store where the product was purchased or throw it out.
Walmart is just the latest of the country's food retailers to feel the effect of the recall.
Previous announcements from the CFIA said affected beef products have been distributed in all 10 provinces, as well as parts of northern Canada.
Retailers forced to pull the products from their shelves include Sobeys, Co-op, Foodland, Giant Tiger and several corporate and franchised Loblaws Companies stores such as Real Canadian Superstore and Your Independent Grocer.
Balsom said no E. Coli cases in humans have been linked to tainted meat, setting this recall apart from the deadly listeria outbreak that forced grocery stores to yank thousands of Maple Leaf Foods products from their shelves in 2008.
"The Maple Leaf was a reaction to an outbreak that was currently ongoing in Canada. We have no outbreak at this point, no illnesses linked to this product."
-- The Canadian Press
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition September 22, 2012 B5
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