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BISON
INDUSTRY RESPONSE TO FOOD SAFETY
By
Bob Ford
Farm direct marketers are on the front line and have been answering
consumers’ food safety questions as long as they have been marketing their
bison products. In discussions with experienced farm direct marketers across
Canada
, it is clear that the types of food safety questions and assurances their
customers are seeking are of two varieties.
According
to Gary Fakeley, Edseland Bison Ranch Inc.,
Ardrossan
,
Alberta
, “Some food safety questions are very direct. I am often asked, “Was
the product processed in a provincial or federally registered plant? Were
any antibiotics fed to these animals?” and over half my customers ask,
“Is this product 100% bison?”
Farm
direct marketers agree that direct food safety questions are very common and
must be directly answered. They indicate that most potential consumers are
satisfied with an explanation that addresses the question.
Other
questions are more subtle. The
customer may not recognize that they are indeed asking a food safety related
question. Questions such as “did you produce this animal?” or “what
was this animal fed?” indirectly addresses an underlying consumer concern.
Farm direct marketers note that in traditional market settings, the consumer
does not have the ability to directly ask the supplier these questions, but
know their customers are asking these questions on a daily basis.
The
questions asked show that consumers’ knowledge of food safety issues is
becoming much more advanced.
Tim Belch
, Peterborough Buffalo Farms in
Ontario
, has been direct marketing for several years. According to Tim,
“Prospective customers are beginning to ask questions about how the
animals were raised. I have been asked about feed and water sources,
fertilizer and pesticide applications to specific ingredients in value-added
products by customers seeking a ‘natural’ product.”
Bernie
Kot, K-1 Bison Ranch,
Weyburn
,
Saskatchewan
, also has customers asking questions that address production practices.
“My customers are seeking assurances that they are buying safe, high
quality products. This includes my production systems and feed sources as
well as questions related to BSE and the use of growth hormones and
antibiotics.” Bernie Kot, Co-Chair of the Canadian Bison Association’s
Food Safety Committee, says, “The Canadian Quality Bison On-Farm Food
Safety program will help assure my customers that I can back up my answers
to their questions with documented proof if need be. As a further marketing
effort to maintain consistent product quality, I now record the animal’s
identification on each meat label so that I can trace back and correlate any
comments related to the quality and safety of the product I sell to every
single animal.”
There are plans to develop
a National Trace Back System for the Canadian Bison Industry. These
programs, once fully implemented, will provide consumers with assurances
that the bison they consume is a high quality, safe product. The Canadian
Bison Industry will be able to provide assurances to their customers that
food safety concerns are being addressed and documented at the farm level.
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