Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Clares escape CFIA penalties

Richard (Butch) Clare and his son, Jay, have escaped three fines imposed by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency over the identification of cattle.

The CFIA alleges that the Clares switched an RFID tag intended for a 13-year-old Simmental cow culled by Ed Hasson to a cow in the Clare feedlot that was less than three years old and exported to the United States.

But Donald Buckingham, chairman of the Canada Agricultural Review Tribunal wrote in his decision this month that the CFIA was unable to present “a single shred of evidence” to prove that the Clares switched the RFID tag.

The testimony indicates that the cow left the Hasson farm without the tag applied. Hasson gave the tag in a plastic pouch to the trucker who delivered her to OLEX sales barn north of Waterloo.
Clare bought the cow along with a number of other cattle.

He claims the tag must have been switched at OLEX. An OLEX employee testified that it’s possible that’s where the mixup occurred.

Butch Clare is notorious for running deadstock through the Aylmer Meats packing plant he operated near Burford.

The plant was shut down after a raid by inspectors found the deadstock in the plant and Clare was convicted.


He continues to operate as one of the more significant buyers of cull cows at OLEX. Most are either exported almost immediately or moved to the feedlot near Burford operated by Jay Clare.

As far as I'm concerned, Butch Clare ought to be banned for life for having anything to do with livestock or food production.