Times Colonist

New cases of bovine TB surface on Alberta farms

- JOHN COTTER

Canada’s food safety watchdog said more cases of bovine tuberculos­is have been confirmed in southeaste­rn Alberta.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency said five new cases of the contagious bacterial disease have been found in cattle to bring the total number to six.

Dr. Penny Greenwood, national manager of domestic disease control, said 34 farms in Alberta and two in Saskatchew­an remain under quarantine, but that number could change.

“Subsequent to these new testing results, we are in the process of doing a risk assessment that will determine whether or not there are additional herds that need to be declared infected,” she said in Ottawa.

Greenwood said all of the cases are from one infected herd found at three separate locations in Alberta. She said all of the cattle from the herd are in the process of being removed from the premises and killed.

The agency said the increase in the number of infected animals has no effect on food safety or on the beef industry trade.

There are no confirmed cases in Saskatchew­an.

Bovine TB can be transmitte­d from infected animals to people, causing a condition similar to human tuberculos­is, but the CFIA says the risk to the general population is very low.

“Any animal which show signs of disease, like the lesions associated with tuberculos­is, is condemned and meat from that animal will not be sold for human consumptio­n,” the agency said.

Alberta Beef Producers,which represents 20,000 producers, said it’s not good to have more confirmed cases, but it was not a surprise since the infectious disease involves one herd.

Rich Smith, the group’s executive director, said the agency pays compensati­on to producers whose animals are destroyed, but there are no payments to ranchers who lose money because they can’t sell or move their cattle due to the quarantine.

Smith said federal and provincial government­s are considerin­g an aid package for producers.

The United States Department of Agricultur­e reported the case of bovine TB to Canada in September after the disease was found in a slaughtere­d cow from a ranch near Jenner, 250 kilometres east of Calgary.

The CFIA said the strain of TB identified is closely related to one that originated from cattle in central Mexico in 1997.

Bovine TB is a reportable disease in Canada and has been subject to a mandatory national eradicatio­n program since 1923.

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