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Archive for the ‘2008 Recall’ Category

What We Learned…

July 24th, 2009 by Michael McCain

This week the report of the Weatherill Investigation into the listeriosis tragedy of last year was released. It reflected interviews with government, Maple Leaf, industry, and victims’ family. I said and strongly believe that there is good medicine for government, the industry and Maple Leaf in the report. I hope government doesn’t wait long to move forward with the recommendations. I know we aren’t.

Maple Leaf has never ducked responsibility for what happened. We were accountable for the death of 22 Canadians. Our company will never be the same. We have moved from shock and remorse to anger that this happened on our watch and an absolute resolve that we will have one of the best food safety programs in the world.

I attribute this disaster largely to one factor – our misplaced confidence in our food safety system that just wasn’t good enough. It’s not that management didn’t care.  We went well beyond the regulations.  We invested millions.  At the time, the Canadian government recommended a Listeria management program but did not require one.  Unlike many companies, we followed the recommendation, and we were always early adopters of new standards.  We had a detailed testing protocol for Listeria and we aggressively sanitized any location where Listeria was found. We followed our procedures rigorously and we found no violations of that. That is why it was never escalated.

But – the procedures were inadequate!

The Weatherill report rightly noted that the main thing we got wrong was failing to analyze the pattern of Listeria test findings to trace them back to root causes – like the slicing machine that was harbouring Listeria. The Weatherill report suggested we didn’t  follow our own policy. We don’t quite see it that way, but the major point is the same. What trend analysis meant to us in August 2008 was tracking the number of test positives and making sure that every one was sanitized.  We did that.  What trend analysis means to us now is daily, scientific analysis to look for repeat patterns and root causes, full management oversight, and quarantine procedures.  We didn’t do that, because – tragically – it wasn’t in the protocol. It didn’t exist in the Canadian industry or government. It does now.

Some people understandably wonder how Maple Leaf could have had Listeria positive after positive without ever warning the public that we had a food safety problem.  This is really important to understand – and it’s hard to understand, especially if you lost a loved one to Listeria. 

Yes, we had periodic positive findings for Listeria.  Every plant that tests for Listeria finds positives for Listeria.  Listeria exists in every plant, every food establishment and every kitchen – almost every day.

We knew we had Listeria in the plant as all plants do – but, not in the food. Every time we found it, we sanitized that part of the plant extra-carefully, and then we retested three times to make sure the Listeria was gone.  And we never had a repeat positive.  We believed our program was working.  We were confident that we did not have a food safety problem.  We were sure we had nothing to warn anybody about.

We were wrong, tragically wrong.  Because we never tracked our positive findings back to that contaminated slicer, we never got to the source of the Listeria – and eventually the Listeria got into some of our food. 

Would we have acted sooner if we had known then what we know now? Yes – and we could have saved lives in the process. That is something I live with every day, and because of that I will never be satisfied until we have the best food safety system in the world.  This is not much comfort to the victims and their families, I know. But it is what I can do to try to prevent this kind of tragedy from happening again.

My Thoughts on the Weatherill Report

July 21st, 2009 by Michael McCain

Today the report on the Weatherill Investigation into the listeriosis outbreak last year was made public.  Ever since this investigation got underway, we have made sure that Ms. Weatherill and her team had complete access to our people and any information they required.  The final outcome is a very thorough report which provides valuable insights and recommendations to improve Canada’s food safety system.  I am personally grateful for the effort of the investigative team…this is a life and death matter and they took that mandate very seriously.

 It is also an important and a painful reminder of the factors that led to last year’s tragedy which resulted in the deaths of 22 people. Some areas of the report are tough on Maple Leaf and our practices as it ought to be.  We don’t protest our innocence and continue to take full responsibility.  No report, no matter how thorough, can match the level of self-criticism and remorse we have felt as a result of this tragedy.  We have left no stone unturned to improve every part of our food safety program as a result.    

What we believed was a strong food safety program at the time was quite simply, not good enough. We lacked the scientific rigour, investigative substance and Listeria quarantine nets that we have in place now.  We cannot expect people to forget and neither will we.  Ultimate accountability for last year’s tragedy rests with us. We can and will continue to use it as an opportunity to remind ourselves that lives and livelihoods depend on the duty of care that we take – day in, day out – to ensure that it never happens again.

Parliamentary Sub-Committee Releases Final Report

June 18th, 2009 by Michael McCain

The Parliamentary sub-committee on Food Safety released its final report today. Maple Leaf welcomed the opportunity to participate in the investigation.  My own testimony spoke to the need we saw for a much stronger set of regulatory requirements, especially in the area of testing, and resources such as the number of CFIA inspectors. 

The final outcome is a comprehensive report that has important implications for strengthening the food safety system in Canada and builds on the stringent new Listeria policy introduced in April this year which we believe makes for a safer system.  The report also provides clear direction for further improvement. 

In terms of key recommendations and improvements, Maple Leaf reinforces the following:

  •          We continue to believe that the patchwork of existing regulatory regimes be pulled together as one national standard.  Consumers shouldn’t need to worry about whether the food they purchase is made in a federally or provincially regulated plant or imported from other countries. All food for sale in Canada should meet a consistent and enforced standard.
  •          Maple Leaf supports the call for a comprehensive review of CFIA resources, recognizing that there must be sufficient inspectors to ensure compliance with tough new standards with the necessary training to conduct sophisticated root cause analysis of test results to identify potential risks.
  •          Maple Leaf continues to advocate for any changes that result in faster identification of proven food safety risk, whether through increased inter-governmental and agency coordination or through accelerated testing and expansion of laboratory capacity.

There will continue to be global advancements in food safety knowledge and technology and it is our promise to learn from these and implement ongoing improvements. We will also be strong advocates for food safety with industry and government, sharing what we know and pushing to raise the bar to protect consumers. After the tragedy of last August, which resulted in the death of 22 Canadians, it is our responsibility to be a leader in food safety; a responsibility we take extremely seriously.

Thank you for visiting Our Journey to Food Safety Leadership blog.

The team at Maple Leaf has recently redirected our food safety resources to the Food Safety section of our website, www.mapleleaffoods.com. The information on our blog is also available on this site, including what Maple Leaf is doing to achieve our goal of becoming a food safety leader, and what consumers can do to practice food safety. If you have comments or questions, we encourage you to send them to us through the Contact Us menu on our website.

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