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The Rural Voice, 2001-05, Page 52Dr. Anne West of the program explained how CFIA would then react. Agency personnel. along with counterparts in the U.S. and Mexico, have already practiced their response, she said. An area emergency response team would be mobilized if the disease was identified. The infected farm would be isolated by quarantine. The process of tracing all animals that had left the farm or where animals entering the farm had come from would begin. CFIA officials have the power to order destruction of animals infected. All animals infected and any other animals on the farm would be destroyed because it's likely even healthy animals have been exposed. In Britain the policy has been to destroy all animals on the infested farm within 24 hours and animals on adjacent farms within 48 hours. If animals are ordered destroyed, farmers are compensated. A panel made up of a CFIA official, a representative of the commodity in question and the farmer, evaluate the News loss. Compensation is at market value and depends on the type of animal with the top values being: cattle. up to $2500; bison, $4000: sheep. $600; goats, $800; swine, $800. If farmers don't think these compensation limits are high enough they should take up the issue with their commodity associations and local MPs, West suggested. There can also be compensation for the destruction of property such as feed. The cost of transportation and disposal of animals can also be paid. Nothing in the Health of Animals Act mentions coverage for the cost of cleaning and disinfecting the barn, West said. After all animals and teed on a farm have been destroyed, the barn is disinfected and left vacant for a period of time. Sentinel animals are then introduced and monitored for a further outbreak. There is no government compensation for business interruption, West said and this may be an area that commodity associations want to address. EnGenius P1-4t;37J3 INDUSTRIAL CORDLESSTM PHONE SYSTEM Up to 250,000 sq. feet in Warehouses and up to 3000 acres on a farm COMMUNICATIONS 400 Huron St , Stratford, ON N5A 5T5 Office (519) 273-3300 Toll Free 1-800-565-9983 Fax (519) 273-4111 4X More POWER than 2.4 GHz Phones 2 -way radio Independent of Base \Nay Rodeo Independent of the Bose Unit OM MOTOROLA Authorized Two -Way Radio Dealer 48 THE RURAL VOICE More information on the disease is available by calling a CFIA toll-free telephone number at 1-877-277- 0677. There are also several good websites: www.inspection.gc.ca for the CFIA site; www.pighealth.com; and www.maff.gov.uk for extensive information on the British outbreak.0 Bruce pork, chicken producers frustrated by lack of CFIA support for HACCP Frustration with lack of support from the Canadian Food Inspection Agency for quality assurance programs was expressed by farmers from two commodities at the "meet the members" dinner sponsored by the Bruce County Federation of Agriculture in Walkerton, April 6. "We worked closely with the CFIA to develop a food safety binder which has been given to each and every chicken farmer in Canada," said the chicken producers brief presented to local federal and provincial members of parliament. "Now when we are ready to validate our inspectors and certify our farms, the CFIA seems to have disappeared. Why won't CFIA serve as a third party validator to give our food safety program the credibility that it and Canadian chicken farmers deserve?" Andy Ernewein of the Grey -Bruce Pork Producers said the situation was the same for the pork industry's CQA program. "We've got a Canadian Food Inspection Agency that will not recognize it (the program certification)," he said. Murray Calder, MP for Dufferin- Peel-Wellington-Grey and a chicken producer himself, said he understood the frustration but that CFIA says there are legal problems in backing the industry programs. "If it accepts this as protocol it is the federal government and CFIA that is on the hook," he said. Calder agreed with another part of the Federation's brief dealing with lack of competition in the food industry. The brief said that farmers 1