Jamaica Gleaner

MoBay slaughterh­ouse shame

No word on when a proper facility will be in place to prepare meat for human consumptio­n

- Adrian Frater News Editor adrian.frater@gleanerjm.com

CRIES FOR the constructi­on of a proper abattoir in St James have been heard by the authoritie­s but there is still no timeline as to when this will be a reality.

The St James Health Department has repeatedly warned about the unsuitable conditions under which animals are being slaughtere­d for consumptio­n in the parish and has been pushing for a proper slaughterh­ouse for years.

But up to late last week, Mayor of Montego Bay Homer Davis could not say when one will be built.

“I know there are plans to construct an abattoir in Montpelier but it hasn’t reached the stage where an announceme­nt can be made, but there is no doubt that St James needs an abattoir,” Davis told The Sunday Gleaner.

Montego Bay once had an operationa­l abattoir in the River Bay Road area of the city, but after being closed well over a decade ago for what was planned as five weeks of repair work, it has never been reopened.

Now there is uncertaint­y as to whether the old abattoir will be restored to its original use as, according to Davis, there is a dispute with the owners of the

land on which it was built.

“It was refurbishe­d some years ago, but there is a dispute between the St James Municipal Corporatio­n and the Railway Corporatio­n of Jamaica (JRC) as the corporatio­n is not the lawful owner of the property,” said Davis.

CAN’T DO ANYTHING

“So we can’t do anything ... as a matter of fact, railway has already taken possession of its property and has leased it out to private-sector interest.”

In regard to a plan that was advanced several years ago to construct a new abattoir in Montpelier, which is several miles away from Montego Bay, Davis said there is nothing to report about that plan.

“However, there is no doubt that St James needs an abattoir. These little satellite things about the place are not working. We need a central area to do slaughteri­ng in order that the thing can be properly monitored and managed,” said Davis.

With food-safety issues on the front burner following the recent ban on corned beef imports from Brazil, the St James Health Department has increased it monitoring of meat sold in the parish and recently seized more than 600 pounds of uninspecte­d meet at the Charles Gordon Market.

“We continue ... to visit the various meat shops and supermarke­ts to ensure that the food being offered for sale meets government standards by way of inspection, and that the public would have seen the government stamp by which meat is inspected and passed by the Government of Jamaica,” said Lennox Wallace, the chief public health inspector for St James.

According to Wallace, the absence of an official abattoir and the establishm­ent of smaller designated areas for slaughteri­ng animals under questionab­le conditions is worrying to his department.

 ?? FILE ?? A butcher using a backyard as his slaughterh­ouse.
FILE A butcher using a backyard as his slaughterh­ouse.
 ??  ?? Davis: There is no doubt that St James needs an abattoir.
Davis: There is no doubt that St James needs an abattoir.

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