Penticton Herald

Virus closes poultry plant

2 workers from chicken processing facility test positive

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COQUITLAM, B.C. — A poultry processing plant in Coquitlam has been closed by Fraser Health after an outbreak of COVID-19 among its workers.

The health authority says two workers at the facility operated by Superior Poultry Processors Ltd. have tested positive for the virus and all employees have been screened.

The authority says the Canadian Food Inspection Agency has advised there is no evidence to suggest the virus is transmitte­d through food.

As a result, it says no chicken products from the plant have been recalled.

The plant is the sister facility to the United Poultry Co. Ltd. in Vancouver, where 35 staff members have been diagnosed with COVID-19.

Officials from the plants have not commented.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said Thursday investigat­ions are underway at both facilities, but it appears there was movement of workers and management between plants.

Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix said in a joint statement on Friday that those outbreaks are in addition to a growing a number of inmates and staff at the Mission Institutio­n, where 78 have tested positive.

The statement says there are also 10 confirmed positive cases in B.C. connected to workers returning home from the Kearl Lake oil sands project in Alberta. They say they expect to see more positive tests in the coming days connected to the outbreaks.

The province reported four new COVID-19 deaths, bringing the toll to 98. There have been 29 new cases since Thursday, for a total of 1,853 cases, while 1,114 people have recovered.

There are 158 cases in the Interior Health region. The B.C. government also announced it is accelerati­ng a program to get faster internet services to rural and remote communitie­s.

A funding stream has been created from a $50 million program and will help service providers pay for upgrades to improve internet speeds and connectivi­ty. Citizens’ Services Minister Anne Kang said it’s important for these communitie­s to be connected during the COVID-19 pandemic as children are online for schooling and families are connecting with doctors through the internet.

“Responding to the pandemic requires the best from all of us. Our communitie­s need reliable internet access right now, and this new fund will get projects completed quickly,” she said.

The program allows service providers in B.C. to apply for grants of up to $50,000, or 90 per cent of their expenses, to cover costs of equipment.

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