Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Poultry Cull Begins In B.C., 80,000 Birds To Be Euthanized Because Of Avian Flu

The Canadian Press, 06 Dec, 2014 12:45 AM
    VANCOUVER — The destruction of as many as 80,000 birds at four poultry farms in British Columbia's Fraser Valley has begun in the effort to stem the spread of avian flu.
     
    Officials with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency say they are systematically destroying the birds according to international guidelines, starting with a broiler-breeder chicken farm in Chilliwack, B.C., where the H5N2 strain of flu was first detected.
     
    Dr. Harpreet Kochhar, Canada's chief veterinary officer, says police are assisting to secure the area around the farm that will be tightly sealed off and then infused with carbon dioxide gas.
     
    He says the single turkey and three chicken operations will be compensated by the federal government for each bird killed.
     
    Kochhar says the industry has voluntarily imposed a three kilometre containment zone around the infected farms, and so far there are no signs that the virus has moved beyond them.
     
    The outbreak of the highly-virulent strain of the flu has prompted several Asian countries to ban poultry products from the region or the whole of Canada.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Sex Workers Say New Anti-prostitution Law Still Puts Them In Danger

    Sex Workers Say New Anti-prostitution Law Still Puts Them In Danger
    VANCOUVER — The Conservative government's new anti-prostitution law will continue to endanger the lives of people who work in the sex trade and in some cases make things worse, sex workers and advocates said Thursday as the law received royal assent.

    Sex Workers Say New Anti-prostitution Law Still Puts Them In Danger

    B.C. Man To Serve Five Years In Prison For Luring Underage Girls Online

    B.C. Man To Serve Five Years In Prison For Luring Underage Girls Online
    VERNON, B.C. — A British Columbia man has been sentenced to almost five years in prison for luring underage girls online.

    B.C. Man To Serve Five Years In Prison For Luring Underage Girls Online

    Surrey High School Stabbing: Assault Charges Recommended Against Teen Suspect

    Surrey High School Stabbing: Assault Charges Recommended Against Teen Suspect
    SURREY, B.C. — Assault charges are being recommended against a 17-year-old boy who was arrested in connection to a Vancouver-area school stabbing.

    Surrey High School Stabbing: Assault Charges Recommended Against Teen Suspect

    B.C. Landowners Group Launches Second Legal Challenge Of Site C Dam Approval

    B.C. Landowners Group Launches Second Legal Challenge Of Site C Dam Approval
    VANCOUVER — A group of B.C. landowners has taken legal action to quash the federal government's approval of the multibillion-dollar Site C dam.

    B.C. Landowners Group Launches Second Legal Challenge Of Site C Dam Approval

    No Charges Against Two B.C. Officers Who Used Force During Separate Arrests

    No Charges Against Two B.C. Officers Who Used Force During Separate Arrests
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's criminal justice branch says no charges will be laid against two police officers involving separate allegations of use of force.

    No Charges Against Two B.C. Officers Who Used Force During Separate Arrests

    Surrey Board of Trade announces 2014 Surrey Business Award Winners

    Surrey Board of Trade announces 2014 Surrey Business Award Winners
    Surrey, BC – On Thursday, November 7, 2014, the Surrey Board of Trade recognized six of Surrey’s best businesses in a variety of different categories. 

    Surrey Board of Trade announces 2014 Surrey Business Award Winners