Dairy

  • Posted: December 12th, 2011 - 2:23pm by Doug Powell

    The Brits love their birds.

    But not so for a dairy farmer from the Somerset Levels who told BBC News
    that roosting starlings and their salmonella-laden poop contaminating feed has led to the loss of 40 calves and is costing his business up to £40,000 a year.

    He fears the droppings may also result in salmonella in his cattle's dairy milk.

    Thousands of starlings migrate from Baltic countries, such as Russia, to Somerset and other parts of the UK over the winter months.

    In recent years their murmurations as they prepare to roost have become a major attraction for wildlife enthusiasts.

    RSPB spokesman, Graham Madge, said, "The fact that starlings are visiting Somerset are not because the RSPB are encouraging them, it's basically because these birds can find plenty of food in areas that are relatively warm for the winter.”

     

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  • Posted: April 2nd, 2011 - 8:52am by Doug Powell

    Nearly half of Chinese dairies inspected in a government safety audit have been ordered to stop production, a spokesman said today.

    The move follows the 2008 melamine-in-baby milk health scandal, in which Chinese authorities said at least six babies died and another 300,000 were sickened.

    Only 643 companies from a total of 1176 had their licences renewed, while 426 failed the quality criteria set by the audit and 107 others had already stopped production to bring themselves into compliance, said administration spokesman Li Yuanping in comments reported on its website.

    Of the 145 companies producing milk powder for babies, 114 had their licence renewed, he said.

    The authorities will strengthen supervision of dairy companies, both those who passed the audit and the those who did not, and "production without authorisation will be severely punished", said Li.

    The measures taken will lead to more than 20 percent of businesses being closed, the Dairy Producers Association of China predicted in an article in China Daily.

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  • Posted: January 24th, 2011 - 10:34am by Doug Powell

    A Kansas State colleague was telling us about his travels during the winter break, including a visit to a daughter-in-law who is seriously committed to providing her young children – and his grandchildren – with raw or unpasteurized goat’s milk.

    I said we’d update the table of outbreaks and he could provide it, as information, without the lectures, to his daughter, and possibly leverage the future health of his grandchildren, although that kind of discussion wouldn’t go very far (even though several of the outbreaks involve raw goat’s milk).

    Columnist Stephen Hume of the Vancouver Sun writes today that he doesn’t believe claims that pasteurizing milk destroys its nutritional value or that it’s a conspiracy of big agribusiness and big government to promote the interests of big pharma.

    I see pasteurization of dairy products as a blessing. It prevents our return to a dreadful past in which diseases transmitted by raw milk afflicted hundreds of thousands every year. In fact, they still do in many parts of the world where people can’t get pasteurized dairy products. …

    Raw milk advocates who trumpet the health benefits of unpasteurized products are in fact the beneficiaries of precisely the public health “conspiracy” to pasteurize that so many deride and vilify.

    I’m all for personal choice, and there are lots of risky foods out there. Choice is the reason raw milk farmer Alice Jongerden in British Columbia can risk public health, waste tremendous public health resources that could be better used elsewhere, and take up time in the Supreme Court of B.C. by asking judges to set aside a 2010 court order that prohibits her from producing and packaging unpasteurized dairy products.

    I choose not to consume raw dairy because the pasteurized alternatives offer an easy disease control option, and I try not to inflict food poisoning risks on my children, who don’t have much of a choice.

    An updated list of outbreaks related to raw and unpasteurized milk and products is available at:

    http://bites.ksu.edu/rawmilk
     

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  • Posted: August 27th, 2010 - 3:27am by Doug Powell

    The News-Review reports that salmonella that contaminated packages at Umpqua Dairy's milk processing plant in Roseburg was found in equipment that washes and sanitizes crates receiving packaged milk and juice, Doug Feldkamp said Wednesday.

    Feldkamp said he didn't know how the salmonella got into the system, which state health and agriculture officials say has been cleaned and now meets safety standards.

    The Oregon Public Health Division attribute 23 cases of salmonellosis in nine counties to the bacteria at the dairy. Two people were hospitalized. The cases date back to October of last year. Health officials say that they only last week traced the illnesses to the dairy.

    The dairy shut down the Roseburg plant last week and voluntarily recalled products packaged there.
     

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  • Posted: May 26th, 2010 - 8:22pm by Doug Powell

    Billy Joe Gregg Jr. – a man with not two but three first names and of course, it’s Billy Joe – an Ohio dairy farm worker has been charged with 12 counts of cruelty to animals after a welfare group released a video it says shows him and others beating cows with crowbars and pitchforks.

    He’s in jail, pondering his 15 minutes of fame.

    Associated Press reports the County sheriff's office says Gregg was fired from Conklin Dairy Farms in Plain City on Wednesday.

    Conklin calls the mistreatment shown on the video "reprehensible." Chicago-based Mercy For Animals says the undercover video was shot between April 28 and Sunday.

    The video is available at:
    http://www.youtube.com/verify_age?next_url=http%3A//www.youtube.com/watch%3Fv%3DgYTkM1OHFQg

    It is graphic and disturbing.

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    Animal Welfare  |  1 Comment
    Abuse, Cow, dairy, Ohio, video