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XL Foods beef recall impacts local grocers, producers



    This month the Alberta beef industry was dealt a blow, and the effect continues to reverberate.
    Early in September American and Canadian officials detected E. coli. By September 16 a recall of ground beef products was introduced and the list of affected products keeps growing.
    Last week the US banned the importation of Alberta beef. As well, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) suspended the operation of the Brooks plant of XL Foods.
    Last Friday local grocers pulled beef products tied to XL Foods recall off the shelf.  
    Darryl Jacques, manager of Freson Bros. IGA in Drumheller said he has seen customers staying away from some products.
    “It has slowed down a bit,” said Jacques, adding that consumers can help protect themselves by using best food preparation practices.
    “The thing about E. coli is to cook your meat properly and do not cross contaminate. That is something we should all be aware of at all times, not just at times of heightened alert.”
    The Drumheller Co-op’s main supplier is XL Foods, and on Friday all of its fresh beef was pulled from the shelf.    
    Before this, manager Gordon Van Kannel said  the store had not seen a whole lot of impact from the initial  recalls.
    “We have been providing the customers  with as much information as we can, and directing them to the (CFIA) website,” he said.
    “Customer confidence and food safety are going to be the real issue here, they have to ensure that every product  leaving that plant is food safe."
    He adds that if the recall continues, the Co-op could  look to other suppliers.
    “That has yet to be decided right now,” said Van Kannel. “But it could change because we have to maintain a counter.”
    The turmoil in the industry has producers concerned.
    “It puts a hindrance on the market and scares people away from beef for a while, but I hope it comes back,” said Brad McDougald, an area producer.
    “A few years ago there was Listeria, but people went back to eating meat again, North Americans love their beef.”
    He said the solution is simple and that is for XL Foods to clean up their act.
    “Hopefully XL Foods takes the steps they need to do to rebuild confidence in people that they are doing the proper cleaning procedures,” said McDougald. “It is all at the packing plant, it’s not the beef, it’s the machines and the cleaning procedures.”
    He hopes this sorts out quickly.
    “The actual solving of the problem at the packing plant is probably already fixed. It shouldn’t take long to clean the machines and shut it down. Now it has to go through all the political hoops and the public scrutiny to have people believe it’s safe and get back to eating beef.”
    “I think it will come back around,” he said.
    In the meantime Michelle Ahner of Riverside Packers said they have seen an increase in business  since the recall.
    She said if the recall continues, consumers may be more concerned about where their food is coming from.            “I could see them leaning toward  the smaller  places and the local farmers,” she said.


Ministers visit Drumheller to hear budget priorities



    The Honourable Doug Horner, President of the Treasury Board and Minister of Finance and the Honourable Kyle Fawcett, Associate Minister will be through the valley next week to hear from Albertans about budget priorities.
    The ministers are hosting public consultations on Tuesday, October 9 at the Badlands Community Facility. Mayor Terry Yemen said this was an election promise from Alberta Premier Alison Redford.
    “That’s what she said during the election campaign, she was going to send ministers throughout Alberta to see the people and talk to people,” said Yemen. “We like dialogue, but what we like better is results from dialogue, and sometimes that doesn’t happen as frequently."
    He said one priority he would like to see addressed is funding for seniors housing.
    “That is a burning issue, there is a lot of work needed on Sunshine Lodge. Requisitioning doubled this year and right now it’s scheduled to double again next year so it's not fair to keep putting that cost to people of Drumheller. It’s time for the Alberta government to step in and make that right,” he said.
    The meeting is October 9 from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Those interested in participating in the meeting can RSVP to tbf.minister@gov.ab.ca

Where were you in ‘72? Residents recall goal of the century

    It’s been 40 years to the day since one of the most iconic moments in Canadian cultural history; the goal of the century.
    Today, is the 40th anniversary of Paul Henderson’s series winning goal from the 1972 Summit Series. In the series, Canada’s finest hockey players went up against the Soviet Union to determine which nation could claim hockey supremacy.
    inSide Drumheller caught up with residents and asked where they were when the goal was scored.
    “I was teaching here at the high school and we were watching it on TV,” said Dave Wood, Education Director for Drumheller Dragons. “Because it was the final game, we tuned in. It was pretty exciting, we were ecstatic, because we were down 5-3 at one point in the game.”
    “I think most people in Canada were watching it.”
    Albert Durbano, hockey fan and former off-ice official, has a similar story. At the time, Durbano was working moving furniture in Calgary.
    “I was in Calgary at the time. I was working, but we stopped to watch the last period,” said Durbano. “It was a good game. Everybody jumped six feet high when Henderson scored.”
    Jim Fisher, who managed the Drumheller Miners wasn’t in Canada at the time.
    “I missed out on all the fun back home. I was in Salt Lake City. We had to get the results via telephone, because no American channels were interested,” said Fisher. “I found it hard to believe, coming back on the Russians in the last 20 minutes.”
    Throughout the game Fisher, who was working as a play by play announcer for the Salt Lake Golden Eagles in the Western Hockey League, would get phone calls letting him know how the game was going.
    Fisher had also run into the Soviets during his time with the Miners. They played a game against the Russians only a few years before.
    “We played the Russians in Sweden in 1967 and I was telling everyone then in a few short years it’s going to take the best in the NHL to compete with them. It turned out five years later,” said Fisher. “We ended up beating them 4-3, but it was quite a game.”
    Fisher also recalled the Soviet shenanigans when it came to playing hockey against western teams.
    “When we played in Sweden in ‘67, you weren’t allowed to go watch hockey in Russia. At that time you didn’t know who you were playing, because the Russians kept things pretty secret.  It was only a year before the Summit Series that you could go watch a game in Russia,” said Fisher.
    “The Russians would play games with you off the ice. If they knew [western] people were watching, they’d let in goals from the red line just to throw you off.”
    Wherever Canadians were on September 28, 1972, it is a moment that sticks out in our collective consciousness as an iconic Canadian moment.
    “At that time we had the naive belief we were the hockey gods of the world and the Russians were bursting that balloon a bit,” said Wood. “I think our national pride was restored.”


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