National Post

Officials, police raid raw milk farm

- By Diana Mehta

A farmer who has long fought for the right to sell unpasteuri­zed milk said public health officials raided his farm northwest of Toronto on Friday, but left after members of his farming collective gathered to express their outrage.

Michael Schmidt said about 20 officials from Ontario’s ministries of agricultur­e, natural resources and finance, as well as local police, arrived at his farm in Durham, Ont., at 10:30 a.m.

Officials started removing equipment and computers when members of the collective showed up, he said.

“There was a complete s tandoff,” Schmidt s ai d. “Finally the farmshare members negotiated a deal that everything stays here, and they’re leaving.”

The action on Schmidt’s farm came just days after public health officials in York Region obtained a warrant and seized raw milk products from a van belonging to the farming collective.

The van distribute­s raw milk products, among other items, weekly to members of the farming co-operative from a location in Maple, Ont.

In that case, York Region’s director of health protection said a “raw milk investigat­ion” was underway.

Schmidt’s farming collective produces raw milk products that are distribute­d to

They know exactly what I am doing, so what is the point

members. He has maintained that he believes the operation is within the law.

“I was never hiding what we were doing,” he said. “I was always of the opinion that we need to sit down with the government to establish a regular scheme that allows people to have their own cows and that they get uninterrup­ted the milk from their own cows.”

Schmidt has fought for his cause for years. The Ontario government maintains the unprocesse­d milk poses a significan­t risk to public health, but he insists there’s no evidence anyone has ever fallen ill from his milk.

Last August, the Supreme Court of Canada refused to hear Schmidt’s appeal of an earlier decision, which meant his 2011 conviction­s on 13 charges under the Health Protection and Promotion Act and the Milk Act that saw him fined $9,150 stayed in place.

Ontario does not ban the consumptio­n of raw milk. Farmers are allowed to drink the milk produced by their cows.

Earlier court decisions have found Schmidt’s previous method of allowing consumers to buy an ownership interest in a dairy cow was little more than a way to circumvent the rules.

He said Friday he wished officials would talk, instead of repeatedly raiding the farm.

“They know exactly what I am doing, so what is the point of repeating that just to drag us through court and make life difficult instead of sitting down and acknowledg­ing that people have a right,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada