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Would you rather have safe food or no deficit?

PSAC launches second video highlighting absurdity of cuts

December 15, 2011
Food inspection cuts squirrel

The giant squirrel strikes again! Last night, the Public Service Alliance of Canada launched another video as part of its Third Choice campaign. In this one, a giant squirrel disrupts a meat inspector and secretly plants non-inspected meat in a young mother’s grocery cart. It’s designed to highlight the absurdity of forcing Canadians to choose between eliminating the deficit and having food properly inspected.

But the threat to food inspection in Canada is no joke. In the summer of 2008, 22 Canadians died after eating Maple Leaf cold cuts tainted with listeria. Dozens more were left seriously ill.

A federal investigation would later determine that in the years leading up to the listeriosis outbreak, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) was not conducting mandatory safety audits at the Maple Leaf Foods plant that produced the tainted meat.

The same flawed meat inspection system is still in place today, continuing to rely on the meat industry to police itself. That means inspectors spend more time reviewing the industry’s own reports and test results than doing independent hands-on inspection. Some improvements have been made, but there are still too few inspectors covering too many facilities, making it impossible to verify that all of the meat processing facilities are following the rules that keep Canadians safe.

The federal government is planning to cut between 5 and 10 per cent from every department and program. This includes food safety and meat inspection.

“A safe food supply should be non-negotiable,” says John Gordon, National President of PSAC. “The Harper government’s proposed cuts aren’t just absurd, they are extremely dangerous.”

Visit ThirdChoice.ca to see the video: Giant Squirrel + Ground Beef = Sick!

For more information or to book interviews:

Ariel Troster:
613-292-8363 (cell)
trostea@psac-afpc.com
Shelina Merani:
613-293-9324 (cell)
meranis@psac-afpc.com

Date Modified : 2011/12/14

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