XL Foods criticized over beef recall communication
Alberta company has been absent from E. coli conversation, say critics
CBC News
Posted: Oct 2, 2012 10:46 PM MT
Last Updated: Oct 2, 2012 11:37 PM MT
The company at the centre of a national beef recall is facing some tough criticism.
XL Foods management hasn't been available for media interviews since the plant was linked to E. coli contamination weeks ago. Production at the company’s Brooks, Alta., plant has been suspended by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency as more than 1,500 products have been recalled from across the country.
“The big hole you can drive a tractor trailer through is the total absence of XL,” said Tom Donoghue, who runs a Calgary firm that specializes in crisis communication.
He says he, and many others, have questions that the company should be answering.
“What went wrong? But what went wrong is still under investigation. What they are doing about it would certainly be useful and also what would be even more useful is who are they?”
Donoghue says XL Foods has been let off too easily.
“The media have not followed up on its obligation to hold the company accountable.”
The case is being compared to the Lysteria crisis at Maple Leaf Foods in 2008.
When that happened the company president addressed the public almost immediately.
Calgary consultant Barb Samuels says that's a lesson other companies can learn from.
“Despite the catastrophic events, the company came back.”
Samuels says people are pretty forgiving when a company admits that there's a problem, apologizes and promises to fix it.
Share Tools
Latest Calgary News Headlines
- Ranchers spotting grizzlies in southern Alberta
- Grizzly bears are returning to the prairies, according to a wildlife officer in southwest Alberta. more »
- Duck population soaring, census data shows
- Alberta's breeding duck population appears to be healthy, according to early results from an annual waterfowl census. more »
- SPCA investigates animal rescue farm near Calgary
- A farm that took in horses and other animals is under investigation by the Alberta SPCA. more »
- Alberta's beef industry: 10 years after mad cow crisis

- Alberta's beef industry is still in decline, with Canadians eating less of the meat and fewer producers raising cattle 10 years after BSE, or mad cow disease, savaged the industry. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- 'Very upset' Harper wants fast Senate spending reform
- Prime Minister Stephen Harper told the Conservative caucus this morning that he's "upset" about the recent conduct of some senators and his own office, and he wants Senate spending rules tightened quickly. more »
- Children driven around too much, Canadian report suggests
- Fewer Canadian kids are commuting by walking or biking as a new report reveals a marked decline among young people using active modes of transportation. more »
- Keith Boag: Have you heard about the murderous abortion doctor?
- The gruesome trial and murder conviction of Philadelphia abortion provider Dr. Kermit Gosnell is unlikely to change American abortion law, Keith Boag writes. But it has U.S. journalists questioning their priorities and how they cover such a sensitive issue. more »
- Oklahoma tornado death count not firm, governor says
- The number of deaths caused by the Oklahoma tornado may yet rise, Gov. Mary Fallin indicates, saying there have been 237 injuries reported in the aftermath of the storm 16 kilometres south of Oklahoma City. more »
- Unlicensed teen ticketed for high-speed drive
- Campers pack up after long weekend
- Harper's constituents react to chief of staff's resignation
- Lethbridge massage therapist charged with sexual assault
- Edmonton driver, 62, charged in boy's patio death
- Alberta's beef industry: 10 years after mad cow crisis
- Police nab Calgary motorcyclist at 180 km/h
- Six campers rescued after getting lost in Kananaskis Country
- Town's historians collecting graveyard stories

