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Manitoba

Butcher shop may sue supplier over E. coli outbreak

A Winnipeg butcher shop is considering legal action against the farm or slaughterhouse that supplied it with contaminated meat.

A Winnipeg butcher shop is considering legal action against the farm or slaughterhouse that supplied it with contaminated meat.

The Winnipeg Regional Health Authority announced Friday that more than half of the 40 E. coli cases in the region in August had been traced back to the Dutch Meat Market in St. Boniface.

Grant Stefanson, the lawyer for the store, said Monday that his client may take legal action against the supplier.

"They'd have to first of all see if they have suffered any damages. And then if they have, they could consider recourse against the entity that was responsible for the problem, no question."

Dutch Meat Market distributed ground beef toseveral local restaurants and burger joints in the first two weeks of August. Meat was also sold to food retail outlets and individual customers.

Four people are currently in hospital, with two in critical condition, and 14 people have had to be hospitalized since June.

Store not blamed

Dr. Pierre Plourde, the WRHA's medical officer of health, said Friday he does not blame the Dutch Meat Market for the E. coli outbreak.

"There's nothing that Dutch Meat Market could have done themselves to prevent this from happening," Plourde said Friday.

"We don't know when [the contaminated meat] came into Dutch Meat Market."

The process of making ground beef is inherently risky because one piece of contaminated meat can contaminate the whole lot, Plourde said.

The restaurants in question have since been inspected and measures were taken to improve safe food handling, but Plourde said ongoing monitoring will continue.