The Turkey Farmers of Canada’s plans to update the course materials for their on-farm food safety program have picked up about $50,000 in federal funding.
The turkey producers’ on-farm food safety (OFFS) program, based on hazard analysis of critical control points (HACCP) principles, identifies potential on-farm food safety hazards and provides producers with best management practices to mitigate those risks.
The turkey farmers’ national OFFS program is intended “to make sure that potential food safety problems are caught before products leave the farm gate,” the government said in a release Wednesday.
Read Also
‘Not a happy Trump supporter’: U.S. Cattle ranchers hit by push for lower beef prices
Much like the price of eggs during the Biden administration, the cost of beef has become an emblem of the affordability crisis in Donald Trump’s America. Beef prices hit record highs earlier this year as the cattle herd shrank and consumer demand remained strong.
Funding will go toward new training course materials “to ensure that farmers keep up to speed with new science and food safety practices,” the government said.
The funding for the Turkey Farmers will come from the Growing Forward ag policy funding framework, by way of its Canadian Integrated Food Safety Initiative, a program to support on-farm and post-farm HACCP-based food safety systems development, as well as traceability infrastructure.
“To assure our industry partners and consumers that our farmers take their roles very seriously, we work with our members to ensure the effectiveness of on-farm food safety practices,” said Turkey Farmers chair Mark Davies, a producer from Centreville, N.S., in the government’s release.
