“Concentrate on the headlines — that’s often all that people read or remember” says Cornelius Kiley at the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.
Well, ‘Joe’ & ‘Corny’ (and other CFIA and DFO staff) this headline goes out to you…. cheers, salmonguy.
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“It is clear that we are turning the PR tide to our favour… and we will win the war, also” says ‘Joe’ [Joseph Beres] the BC manager of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.
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How are you feeling about the safety of your food now?
And to think that Joe and Corny and others included in the email (including Stephen Stephen from the Department of Fisheries and Oceans) are most likely in the high $100,000+/year wage scale. Take a look at the wage scales in the Canadian Food Inspection Agency for the highest executive levels…
Effective Date | Minimum | Maximum |
---|---|---|
From: Effective April 1, 2010 | $163,100 | $191,900 |
Effective April 1, 2011 | $166,100 | $195,300 |
Effective April 1, 2012 | $168,600 | $198,300 |
If the Canadian Food Inspection Agency top staff and the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (and the BC Government) think that it’s about headlines and winning PR wars… what does that say about the safety of our food in Canada?
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It’s been said on this blog a lot: “marketing is everything and everything is marketing”
It seems quite clear that the Canadian Food Inspection Agency and the Department of Fisheries and Oceans fully agree — and add in the Privy Council Office that answers directly to PM Harper (but then we know that they fully subscribe to the “marketing is everything, everything is marketing” school-of-thought. [Hence, why one of PM Harper’s main staff people moved over from one of Canada’s oil companies…]
CBC is running an article on this issue today:
“It is clear that we are turning the PR tide in our favour, and this is because of the very successful performance of our spokes at the tech briefing,” CFIA B.C. manager Joseph Beres wrote.
“One battle is won, now we have to nail the surveillance piece, and we will win the war, also.”
“Spokes” most likely refers to spokespeople. [that’s so cute]
But then… what well paid public/civil service employee then sends out an email like this, knowing full well that it can be accessed through Freedom of Information (FOI) or government sponsored judicial/public inquiries?
Along with the 400 pink slips being handed out to DFO employees, maybe there’s another one coming to this group of CFIA employees and to Stephen Stephen at DFO (no that’s not a typo, that’s his real catchy name).
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The CFIA home page states:
Dedicated to safeguarding food, animals and plants, which enhances the health and well-being of Canada’s people, environment and economy.
[So I’m wondering ‘Joe’ and ‘Corny’ and Stephen Stephen at DFO — how does farmed salmon from the BC Coast laced with both ISA and heart and skeletal muscle inflammation virus (or HSMI) ENHANCE the health and well-being of Canada’s people (let alone the environment and economy)?]
&
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) continuously strives to be transparent and accountable in how it does business.
…
The CFIA is accountable to Canadians and reports to Parliament through key documents.
[So how is the CFIA and Parliament going to account for this accountability? — this is a cover up, and it’s shameful… more so through the arrogance of civil service employees…]
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Scroll down a little here and you’ll see good ol’ Infectious Salmon Anemia (anémie infestieuse du saumon) tucked in between things like: “highly pathogenic avian influenza” “Foot and Mouth disease” “koi herpesvirus disease” and “lumpy skin disease.”
Nasty stuff!
And, yet Senior managers at the Canadian Food Inspection Agency figure this is a “public relations war” where we manipulate news headlines for that silly, dumb public…
embarrassing, shameful, and worthy of serious repercussions — wouldn’t you say?
Health of Animals Act (S.C. 1990, c. 21)
SCHEDULE
(Section 2)
REPORTABLE DISEASES
- African horse sickness
- peste équine
- African swine fever
- peste porcine africaine
- anaplasmosis
- anaplasmose
- anthrax
- fièvre charbonneuse
- bluetongue
- fièvre catarrhale du mouton
- Bonamia ostreae
- bovine spongiform encephalopathy
- bovine tuberculosis (M. bovis)
- brucellosis
- ceratomyxosis (Ceratomyxa shasta)
- chronic wasting disease of cervids
- classical swine fever (hog cholera)
- contagious bovine pleuropneumonia
- contagious equine metritis
- cysticercosis
- epizootic haematopoietic necrosis
- equine infectious anaemia
- equine piroplasmosis (B. equi and B. caballi)
- foot and mouth disease (FMD)
- fowl typhoid (Salmonella gallinarum)
- Haplosporidium nelsoni
- highly pathogenic avian influenza
- infectious haematopoietic necrosis
- infectious pancreatic necrosis
-
infectious salmon anaemia
- anémie infestieuse du saumon
- koi herpesvirus disease
- lumpy skin disease
- Marteilia refringens
- Marteiliodes chungmuensis
- Mikrocytos mackini
- Newcastle disease
- Perkinsus marinus
- Perkinsus olseni
- peste des petits ruminants
- pseudorabies (Aujeszky’s disease)
- pullorum disease (S. pullorum)
- rabies
- Rift Valley fever
- rinderpest
- scrapie
- sheep and goat pox
- spring viraemia of carp
- swine vesicular disease
- Taura syndrome
- trichinellosis
- Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis
- vesicular stomatitis
- viral haemorrhagic septicaemia
- whirling disease (Myxobolus cerebralis)
- white spot disease
- white sturgeon iridoviral disease
- yellow head disease