Tragically Hip

  • Posted: April 5th, 2011 - 8:46am by Doug Powell

    Sometimes, I write so fast I miss details.

    While updating news on the E. coli O157:H7 outbreak in walnuts imported to Canada, I focused on the distributor, Amira Enterprises Inc. of St. Laurent, Quebec (that’s in Canada), and their website which stated they import specialty food products from Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Iran.

    What I glossed over was this statement: “The raw shelled walnuts are imported from the U.S.”

    Where did the nuts originate within the U.S.? And where did the nuts get pooped on in the farm-to-fork system?

    BTW, Amira, it would be courteous if you put some information on your own website about the walnuts you voluntarily recalled.

    Sometimes the faster it gets
    The less you need to know
    But you gotta remember
    The smarter it gets the further it's going to go
    When you blow at high dough

    Tragically Hip, Canadian national anthem, 1989.
     

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  • Posted: January 21st, 2011 - 1:40pm by Doug Powell

    A B.C. meat processing plant that covered up lab results revealing a sample of its product was contaminated with a deadly E. coli strain will not have to test for the bacteria now that it's provincially regulated.

    Pitt Meadows Meats Ltd. said it made a business decision to abandon its federal licence because it incurs higher costs than are necessary because the company doesn't export.

    Regulations require federally licensed plants to report positive findings of E. coli O157 strain to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.

    But testing for E. coli O157 isn't mandatory in a provincially regulated plant.

    Joseph Beres, inspection manager for the Canada Food Inspection Agency, said federal and provincial plants are committed to the same health and sanitation standards and use the same inspectors. But he said the presence of the deadly bacteria might only be discovered if people become sick.

    Ritinder Harry, a spokesman for the B.C. Centre for Disease Control, told CBC News, apparently with a straight face and acting like he’d never heard of the U.S. zero tolerance policy for E. coli O157:H7 that has been in place since 1994, and the whole Mike-Taylor-it-doesn’t-get-us-anywhere-to-blame-consumers-for-O157-bit, also back in 1994, that provincial meat processing facilities are not required to regularly test for pathogens because "the likelihood of finding a contaminated sample is very low,” and that the best way to eliminate risk of being infected is to follow basic food safety rules, including using a thermometer to ensure the meat is properly cooked, avoiding cross contamination with raw meat or raw meat juices in the kitchen, and promptly refrigerating meat regardless of whether it is cooked or uncooked.

    This isn’t some Greasy Jungle, Metropolis Noir, with funeral home sandwiches and coffee. People get sick.

     


    The Tragically Hip - Greasy Jungle
    Uploaded by UniversalMusicGroup. - Watch more music videos, in HD!

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  • Posted: July 20th, 2010 - 12:54pm by Doug Powell

    After bombing out as a genetics grad student and dabbling in journalism, I re-entered academia teaching risk analysis to engineering students at the University of Waterloo (that’s in Canada, down the road from Guelph). I taught a course called Science, Technology and Values to about 100 engineering undergrads twice a year.

    I loved it.

    We got to examine in real-time the assessment, management and communication failures of the 1994 Intel chip melt-down, which is now being repeated with the Apple iPhone. Engineers are big on failure analysis and figuring out ways to prevent future accidents.

    The causes are usually cultural rather than technological failures.

    As William J. Broad writes in the New York Times this morning, disasters teach more than successes.

    While that idea may sound paradoxical, it is widely accepted among engineers.

    They say grim lessons arise because the reasons for triumph in matters of technology are often arbitrary and invisible, whereas the cause of a particular failure can frequently be uncovered, documented and reworked to make improvements.

    Disaster, in short, can become a spur to innovation.

    Henry Petroski, a historian of engineering at Duke University and author of “Success Through Failure,” a 2006 book, said,

    “It’s a great source of knowledge — and humbling, too — sometimes that’s necessary. Nobody wants failures. But you also don’t want to let a good crisis go to waste.”

    What’s baffled me is that the food industry seems immune to such lessons. Or it takes forever. It took 29 outbreaks involving leafy greens before the California industry had a tipping point and decided to get serious about food safety? The same mistakes are repeated over and over and over and it’s boring (and really dangerous).

    Canadian greats, The Tragically Hip, who are not engineers, just dudes from Kingston (that’s in Ontario) summed it up in their 1994 song, Titanic Terrarium:

    An accident’s sometimes the only way
    To worm our way back to bad decisions

     

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  • Posted: April 27th, 2008 - 4:29pm by Doug Powell

    Not just the title of the 1991 album by Canadian rockers, The Tragically Hip, road apples is slang for horse shit.

    And Los Angeles has lots of it (and doesn't even freeze to use as a makeshit hockey puck).

    Bloomberg reports that zoning restrictions have resulted in the closure of all the traditional "manure mulcher" businesses in Los Angeles County, forcing stables to haul their horse poop to ordinary land fills, which charge up to US$47 a ton, or roughly five times what the mulchers used to charge.

    L.A. County is home to about 45,000 horses and almost 10 million people. Horses generate an estimated US$900-million a year in revenue from things such as riding lessons, blacksmiths, feed sales.

    But more about the Hip.

    Released in 1991, the original title of the record was Saskadelphia, but the record label considered it "too Canadian." As a joke, they re-titled it Road Apples, slang for horse dung. After the album was released, they created the Another Roadside Attraction festival -- another joke referring to "road apples."

    The album is often cited by fans and critics as the band's finest work. As with most Tragically Hip albums, Canadian themes appear in the album's lyrics. "Three Pistols" is an English translation of the name of the Quebec town Trois-Pistoles, and refers to Tom Thomson, a Canadian painter, as well as Remembrance Day, the Canadian commemorative day for its war dead. "The Luxury" refers to the fleur-de-lis, provincial symbol of Quebec, while "Born in the Water" is about the controversy surrounding Ontario municipalities (particularly Sault Ste. Marie) declaring themselves "English-only" in the dying days of the Meech Lake Accord debate.


    Three Pistols is used in the opening and closing credits of our safefoodcafe videos. Like this one:


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