Montana

  • Posted: January 25th, 2012 - 2:23pm by Doug Powell

    RiverStone Health in Montana was criticized last month when it raised concerns about a man who wanted to make Christmas dinner in his family’s kitchen and deliver the meals to shut-ins.

    Health officials say they were only doing their job.

    “Let’s imagine the unimaginable,” said RiverStone Health CEO John Felton. “Suppose 35 people got salmonella. What would the question of RiverStone Health have been at that point? We would not have been the Grinch who stole Christmas. We would have been the folks who allowed 35 people to get sick because we didn’t execute our responsibility.”

    RiverStone objected to Cody Walter, owner of Delivery 2u, using private kitchens to prepare and distribute food. RiverStone provided Walter with information on food safety. They also identified a number of commercial kitchens so the holiday meals could be prepared in a facility equipped to safely store and prepare the food and milk donations he was receiving.

    Walter said he was “shut down” and suggested the Grinch had stolen Christmas.
    Public sentiment overwhelmingly sided with Walter.

    “What needs to be clear is that we don’t have any interest whatsoever in preventing churches, nonprofit organizations and others from doing the good they do in the community,” Felton said. “Our compelling interest is to protect the safety and health of the public. What we don’t want is to have a bunch of people get sick because we didn’t provide the information they need.”

    RiverStone Health employs nine registered sanitarians, six of whom are involved in food inspections. In fiscal year 2011, they conducted 1,750 unannounced inspections in 1,000 licensed establishments. The number of inspections does not include temporary events such as Christmas Stroll, Saturday Live and the Strawberry Festival.

    “Cody Walter was doing a good thing,” Felton said. “If we would have had advanced notice we could have worked closely with him. We don’t want to discourage people from doing those types of things. He seems like a good-hearted guy, but there is a huge difference between cooking for five people and cooking for 50 and then delivering it.”

    Walter said he understands now that RiverStone Health was only trying to protect him as well as those to whom he would deliver meals. “There are no hard feelings. They were only doing what they should be doing,” he said. “They are there for a reason.”

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  • Posted: December 24th, 2010 - 11:35pm by Doug Powell

    Since no one publicly knows anything about the supplier or source of sprouts linked to a 15-state wide salmonella outbreak with 89 sick, I have no idea why a Jimmy John’s owner in Montana thinks local is safer.

    Dan Stevens, the owner of the Missoula and Great Falls Jimmy John’s, decided to share his knowledge of microbiological risk reduction in raw sprouts by e-mailing KRTV and stating,

    “…the sprouts for our Great Falls store are grown right here in MT. Right outside of Billings. I would like to stress that fact. Our sprouts are a few states and over 1000 miles removed from Illinois. Sprouts have not been taken off our local menu as we have encountered zero problems since our opening over a year ago.”

    Not.
     

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  • Posted: September 23rd, 2010 - 1:48pm by Doug Powell

    Finally, a use for all that zucchini rather than dumping it on unsuspecting friends and neighbors.

    When a 90-kilogram black bear attacked a Missoula County woman's dogs just after midnight on Wednesday on the back porch of her home, she tried to separate the animals, and was bit in the leg by the bear.

    Lieutenant Rich Maricelli, from the sheriff's department said the woman reached for the nearest object at hand on the porch's railing - a large zucchini she had harvested from her garden.

    She flung the vegetable at the bear, striking it and forcing it to flee.
     

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    bear, Montana, zucchini
  • Posted: July 31st, 2010 - 6:20am by Doug Powell

    Whenever I go to a cottage or a camp – rare these days -- I always ask about the water source, how often it is tested and whether it is chlorinated. Most people can readily answer; some can’t.

    County and state health officials on Friday said several people have become ill after consuming water from a privately owned public water supply near Hebgen Lake, Montana (right, exactly as shown).

    The Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services has confirmed 14 cases of campylobacter gastrointestinal illness. Information collected about the cases "strongly suggests that exposure occurred at the Campfire Lodge Resort," according to the statement. At least 70 more cases are considered "probable."
    Along with county health agents and DPHHS, the Montana Department of

    The owners of the resort are cooperating with the probe, and have taken action to prevent future illnesses.


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  • Posted: January 17th, 2009 - 1:46am by Michelle Mazur

    On September 3rd, 2008, Montana lost its brucellosis-free status due to two cases of infected cattle.  It was a big blow since last February the U.S. Department of Agriculture declared all 50 states to be free of brucellosis — the first time that had happened in 74 years.
    Montana’s livestock producers will now be required to test bulls and nonspayed females, 18 months of age or older, 30 days before interstate shipment.

    Ranchers in Montana and surrounding states are taking action to prevent any further spread of brucellosis.  A brucellosis plan of action has been proposed by the Montana Department of Livestock, which includes surveillance, vaccination, traceability/animal identification, fencing/pasture management, and other measures to help the state regain its brucellosis free status. If no additional cases of brucellosis in livestock are found, the state will be able to apply for Class Free status to USDA APHIS in late May of 2009. Also, Montana needs to prove to USDA that no additional cases of brucellosis in cattle exist in the state.

    Brucellosis
    is an infectious disease caused by the bacteria of the genus Brucella.  
    It is a devastating illness for herds as it causes cattle to spontaneously abort if pregnant.  Humans become infected by coming in contact with animals or animal products that are contaminated with these bacteria.  To prevent infection, herdsman should use rubber gloves when handling viscera of animal; all consumers should not have unpasteurized milk, cheese or ice cream.

    Who’s to blame for the source of the brucellosis disease?  Livestock officials point to wild elk and bison in the area, though there has been much discussion as to whether these are the true culprits. A four-foot high, seven-mile long electric fence has been erected near Gardiner to steer bison that migrate out of Yellowstone National Park to acceptable grazing land. In terms of sheer numbers, the Yellowstone region's 25 elk herds dwarf the three herds of bison. And unlike bison, which move in groups, elk move freely over the region's numerous mountain ranges, often alone or in small numbers. Livestock officials say infected elk herds around Yellowstone must be culled, but hunters are pushed back saying that efforts should focus on vaccinating cattle or eradicating the disease in bison.

    There is also the probability that neither of these species are the ones responsible for the infected cattle. The fact that both the 2007 and the current brucellosis detections have occurred in Corriente cattle, a breed closely associated with brucellosis, has many questioning whether cattle, and not Yellowstone wildlife, are responsible for the transmissions resulting in Montana losing its brucellosis free status.

    Government authorities continue to work with local officials toward regaining its status as a state free from brucellosis.

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    Brucella, Brucellosis, Cattle, Disease, Montana, Outbreak
  • Posted: December 23rd, 2008 - 3:19pm by Doug Powell

    Just to raise me up a crop of Dental Floss.

    Frank Zappa (right, exactly as shown) came to mind as I read this morning why children shouldn’t eat snow. I ate lots of Ontario snow, Amy ate lots of Montana snow, but we both avoided that yellow snow.

    Julie Deardorff writes in the Chicago Tribune that,
     
    "University of Toronto environmental chemist Frank Wania reports that the atmosphere is exceedingly efficient at transporting pollutants—so efficient, in fact, that industrial pollutants released into the atmosphere in India could be found in snow in northern Canada only five days later.

    "Argonne National Laboratory's Dr. Jeff Gaffney is more specific. He says snowflakes can contain anything that floats in the air: the chemicals that fall in acid rain, bacteria, sulfates, nitrates and even lead from areas in the world that still burn leaded gasoline."


     

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  • Posted: October 7th, 2008 - 11:08pm by Doug Powell

    About 90 children at Stevensville Elementary School in Montana have started a series of six shots of anti-rabies vaccine after a local schoolmom gave show-and-tell-and-touch presentations in five classrooms involving a dead bat.

    The bat was subsequently confirmed to be diseased.

    School officials say they will use liability insurance to pay up to $70,000 for the exposed children to be vaccinated. The overall cost could surpass $150,000.

    The school has since set a policy requiring that anyone visiting the school obtain a visitor pass.

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