Edmonton Journal

Inquiry into sick cattle won’t start until fall

- JOHN COTTER

Canada’s food safety watchdog says it won’t begin tests to find the source of a bovine tuberculos­is outbreak until the fall.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency wants to focus on how the disease got onto one Alberta farm and infect six cattle, said Dr. Harpreet Kochhar, the agency’s chief veterinari­an.

“While we have focused extensivel­y on the potential for the spread of disease so far, we are now turning our focus to tracing activities to identify the source of the infection,” he said Friday. “Testing of herds identified through tracing activities will begin in the fall because calving season has already begun in Western Canada.”

The CFIA said 51 farms in southeaste­rn Alberta and seven in southweste­rn Saskatchew­an remain under quarantine pending the results of tests to see if the disease has spread from the infected farm.

Initial test result evidence suggests there is a low risk of the disease spreading, he said.

The destructio­n of about 10,000 cattle linked to the infected herd has also eliminated some of the risk.

So far the agency has paid $11.2 million in compensati­on to producers. The federal and Alberta government­s have also paid producers about $3 million to help feed and care for about 28,000 cattle held under the quarantine.

Some ranches have been locked down since October.

Kochhar said farms where cattle have been destroyed will soon be able to be cleaned and disinfecte­d so producers can buy replacemen­t cattle.

The investigat­ion into the source of the TB could run into next year.

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