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The Rural Voice, 2019-04, Page 65Any opinions expressed herein may not necessarily reflect the views of the Perth County Pork Producers’ Association. If you are not reporting the movement of your pigs, what are you waiting for? It has been mandatory to report the movement of pigs, dead or alive, onto or off of your farm since July of 2014. If you fail to accurately report the movement of your pigs within a week of the movement, you could be fined up to $1,300 for a first offence. To keep everyone honest, and make our traceability system credible, your pig suppliers and pig buyers are required to report these corresponding movements separately. This makes it very easy for the CFIA to find farms who are not reporting their movements. Traceability is one of the pillars of the Canadian Pork Excellence program that is to be implemented across the country over the next three years. If you do not have a record of your pig movements, your farm will not be certified under this program, and federally inspected packing plants will not buy your pigs. However, these sticks are not the best reason to spend 15 minutes per week reporting your movements. The threat of African Swine Fever, a foreign animal disease that would shut down our export markets if found in Canada, is the latest and grimmest reason to start reporting your pig movements. To emphasize the impact that a foreign animal disease (FAD) can have in the absence of a robust traceability system, let’s look at what happened to the Canadian Beef Industry starting in May of 2003 when a case of Mad Cow Disease was reported. Immediately 40 countries closed their borders to our beef and cattle. In November of 2004 BMO reported that cattle producers had lost $5 billion since the crisis began. From the beginning of the Crisis until the middle of 2005, the government gave the industry over $2.5 billion in compensation. The border to the U.S. partially opened and closed two times, finally opening again in July of 2005, over two years after the crisis had begun. Reporting your movements is all about being able to trace the origin of an animal from the packing plant, or the assembly yard where a problem is identified, all the way back to where the pig was born. The faster the source of a FAD case can be identified and eliminated, the sooner our export markets can re-open and business can return to normal. Reporting your pig movements to the Pig Trace database allows this trace- back process to take minutes instead of days. But the benefit of this system is only as good as the percentage of pig movements that are reported. We need our trading partners to be able to trust our traceability system so that if there is a FAD outbreak in Western Canada, we have records to show that this will not affect Eastern Canada allowing pork to be exported from unaffected regions. If we look at the pattern of PED outbreaks across Canada, we can see that this is the case, but the documentation of the Pig Trace database is critical to prove this to our trading partners. This zoning of quarantine is still being negotiated with the World Organization for Animal Health and our trading partners. Right now, you are in the same boat as every other pork producer in Canada. The Canadian Pork Excellence program (CPE) is enforcing a high standard for pork production that mitigates or eliminates most risks, including FAD. This program ensures your customers and fellow producers that you are taking all the steps necessary to produce safe, secure, nutritious pork. Don’t let your neighbour, who isn’t following CPE protocols climb into the boat, by using your premise ID so his child can send his pig to the fair. We need to ensure that backyard production stays out of our federally inspected plants. Don’t let a trailer of pigs leave your farm without knowing the premise ID of the destination. Don’t accept a trailer of pigs without knowing the premise ID of where they came from. We are all being held to the same standard in case of an FAD outbreak, we need to hold each other to a higher standard. Ensuring Canada has a robust traceability system is up to you. All of the infrastructure to report your pig movements is in place, waiting for you to use it. If you already know your user name and password, you can go to https://pigtrace. traceability.ca/login Unfortunately the pigtrace.ca homepage has not been working since August, so if you need help getting set up to report your movements, call Ontario Pork at 1-877-668-7675. ◊ Sources: https://globalnews.ca/news/1830438/ timeline-canadas-2003-mad-cow- disease-crisis/ https://lois-laws.justice.gc.ca/eng/ regulations/SOR-2000-187/page- 1.html https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/ regulations/C.R.C.,_c._296/page- 22.html#h-113 – Submitted by Craig Hulshof, President, Perth County Pork Producers Association Perth, Huron, Grey and Bruce Craig Hulshof, President craig.hulshof@gmail.com / 519-301-8483 * The Rural Voice is provided to Perth County Pork Producers by the PCPPA perthcountyporkproducers@gmail.comCounty Pork Producers NEWSLETTER Please report your pig movements! APRIL 2019 61 PERTH COUNTY PORK PRODUCERS PORK PRODUCTS • Smoked Pork Chop • Fresh Pork Chops • Stuffed Loin Chops • Smoked Sausage • Smoked Cheddar Sausage • Bacon Burgers • Teriyaki Pork Steaks Have the Perth County Pork Producers BBQ at your next event or celebration! Phone Jerry DeGroot 519-393-5237 for more information. AVAILABLE FROM: Dave and Ruth Kloostra (Monkton).. 519-347-2619 Ted and Donna Keller (Mitchell)........519-348-9836 Jerry and Sandra DeGroot (Kinkora) 519-393-5237 Leis Feed (Milverton)..........................519-595-2048