Meat recall expanded to 1,500 products over E. coli threat - Action News
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Canada

Meat recall expanded to 1,500 products over E. coli threat

The recall of meat products from a processing plant in Alberta due to possible E. coli contamination has now expanded to every province and territory.

Five cases confirmed to be linked to the XL Foods recall

Meat recall impact

12 years ago
Duration 3:05
The tainted meat recall is impacting farmers wanting to sell their cattle for slaughter at Alberta's XL Foods meat processing plant

The recall of meat products from a processing plant in Alberta due to possible E. coli contamination has been expanded toinclude every province and territory, 40 states in the U.S. and Puerto Rico.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agencysaid Tuesday it has now recalled more than 1,500beef products in Canada from the XL Foods meat processing plant in Brooks, Alta. The expanded recall list now includescuts of steaks and roasts, stewing beef and beef breakfast sausage.

Fivecases of E. coli in Alberta have been linked to meat that originated at XL Foods, all of which were purchased at a Costco store in Edmonton.

"Officials aren't sure where the meat became contaminated," reports CBC's Briar Stewart.

The public, distributors and food service establishments are being told not to consume, sell, or serve the meat. The products in question were manufactured at the XL Foods planton Aug. 24, 27, 28, 29 and Sept. 5.

Provincial health officials are also investigatingfivemore cases of E. coli, which have notbeen linked to meat from XL thus far.

In all, there are 10 confirmed cases of E. coli in Alberta.New cases wereconfirmed in the province on Tuesday.

The CFIA has advised Canadians to staycurrent bysigning up for email updates, checkingthe agency's investigation sitefor new information, or following its alerts on Twitter.

Those who ate tainted beef want answers

Those who consumed the contaminated meat know all too well how stressful the repercussions can be.

Mike Lees' five-year-old son, Elijah, had to be hospitalized after eating tainted steak. His mother, Pat, is still in and out of the hospital andfamily friend Matthew Harrisonhas launched a class-action lawsuitagainst XL Foods.

Concerns raised over how meat is tenderized

Lynn McMullen, a microbiologist at the University of Alberta, said bacteria can spread when needles are used to pierce meat a process that healthofficials have asked Costco stores to stop using.

"To be honest, I am not surprised that this has happened,"McMullen told CBC News, adding that meat tenderized this way should be labelled.

"That will alert consumers that this is being done, and then they can take the appropriate steps to make sure it's safe for human consumption."

"E. coli definitely wasn't on our radar at all," Lees told CBC News Network, adding that the "stressful" experience could only have been worse if his three-year old daughter had fallen victim.

Although he said it's hard to pin the responsibility on one group, Lees singled out XL management, those who feed cattle, and the government as parties that must work to restore public confidence in beef products.

"When we go to pick up meat at the market, we never thought about this at all until it happened to us," said Lees, who added that he will continue to eat steak, just not the way he likes it until the risks are addressed.

But little Elijah said he doesn't want to eat beef anymore.

"I have something to say, I will put my hand on my heart and say, 'gee America, nothing is worser than getting bug from E. coli,'" the boy said in an interview with CBC News.

Saskatchewan cases may be linked to recall

Meanwhile, the Saskatchewan Ministry of Health said Tuesday13 people were sick from E. coli last month, a higher number than thetypical monthly average of zero to four cases.

The ministry said itis investigating to determine whether these cases are linked to the recall.

CFIA saysthe recall also includes some unlabelled unbranded beef products sold at retail stores not included onits products list. Those retail storesmay include small retailers, local meat markets and butcher shops.

Understanding E. coli

How savvy are you about the symptoms, spread andprevention of E. coli?Read our backgrounder.

The new additions are products sold in Ontario by The Kitchen Table, Zehrs, Your Independent Grocer and Valu-Mart, in Quebec by Entrepot de Viandes stores, by Brooks Meat Packers in Alberta, and Co-op, ValuFoods and Village Mart in the Atlantic provinces and Quebec.

Also added to the list are products from Real Canadian Superstore and Extra Foods stores across most provinces, along with many Dominion stores, Loblaws in Quebec, Real Atlantic Superstore in the Maritimes and Save Easy stores in the Atlantic provinces.

Consumers who areunsure if they have the affected beef products in their homes are advised to check with the store where the products were bought or tothrow them out.

Littleimpact on beef demand, industry group says

The Conservative governmentwas hammered with questions from Liberal and NDP MPs on Tuesdayover how meat tainted with dangerous E. coli bacteria made it to Canadian store shelves, and why it took two weeks to issue a recall.

Officials say they were alerted on Sept. 4 to a positive E. coli test in beef shipped to the United States, but recalls in Canada didn't start until Sept. 16.

Canadian inspectors also had a positive E. coli test in a shipment that went to a small plant in Calgary on Sept. 4, which was part of the same shipment out of the XL Foods plant in Brooks.

On Sept. 27, CFIA temporarily suspended the licence of XL Foods to process meat.

"The plant will remain shut down until the Canadian Food Inspection Agency is convinced that it is safe to operate," Prime Minister Stephen Harper said in the House of Commons.

"On this particular case, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency acted to contain contaminated product, beginning on September 4 and has been acting ever since then."

Someindustry groups add that thewidespread recall does not appear to have impacted consumers buying behaviour.

David Wilkes, the senior vice-president of the Retail Council of Canada's grocery division, said it appears to be business as usual.

"It's early days but at this point in time, we have seen very little change in the demand for beefConsumers have confidence in their grocers and the CFIA."

With files from The Canadian Press

Food safety cooking temperatures chart

(CBC)