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EXCLUSIVE: Food shortages magnified by string of destroyed food processing facilities

Last Thursday, firefighters contended with a massive blaze at California’s Taylor Farms plant. That same day, an airplane crashed into Idaho’s Gem State Processing facility.

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(Editor’s note: The Western Standard also covered the instance of destroyed food processing facilities globally within the last two years in a separate article)

Food shortages have been exacerbated by a string of fires, plane crashes and explosions at nearly two dozen food processing facilities across Canada and the US.

The most recent happened on Thursday in Georgia when a small plane crashed shortly after takeoff into a General Mills plant just east of Atlanta. Two occupants of the plane were killed in the crash, as reported by the New York Post.

A massive fire on Monday night destroyed parts of the Azure Standard Headquarters in Oregon, a company that self-describes as “the USA’s largest independent food distributor.”

The company said, “basically any liquid product,” such as honey, oil, and vinegar, will be out of stock due to the fire, as reported by Vision Times.

The company also said it lost its fruit packing and carob product facility in the blaze, but said the effects will be minimal as fruit harvesting season hasn’t started yet.

Last Thursday, firefighters contended with a massive blaze at Taylor Farms packaged salad plant in Salinas, Calif. — a key agricultural region 177 km south of San Francisco. The fire broke out late Wednesday night, as reported by KTLA.

That same day, an airplane crashed into Idaho’s Gem State Processing facility — a plant said to process 18,000 acres worth of potatoes each year.  The pilot of the plane did not survive, however, no employees were injured, reported Vision Times.

On April 13, firefighters from several departments in Maine helped battle a massive fire that destroyed East Conway Beef & Pork butcher shop and meat market in Center Conway, N.H.

Investigators did not indicate what caused the fire, reported ABC affiliate WMTW in Portland, Maine.

In March, KAIT TV reported a major fire that forced the closure of the Nestle plant in Jonesboro, Ark. The plant makes frozen foods, particularly Hot Pockets.

The frozen foods plant announced its plans for a $100 million expansion last year.

NESTLE FIRE: Photo from Jonesboro Fire Department

The Penobscot McCrum potato processing facility in Belfast, Maine, was also destroyed by fire in March. Officials believe a deep-fryer was behind the fire, as reported by ABC affiliate WMTW News 8.

In Canada, fire crews and paramedics responded after an explosion at the Centre de valorisation de l’aliment de l’Estrie, an industrial food preparation and processing facility in Sherbrooke, Que. Five people were injured in the March explosion that turned into a major fire.

Fire at a food-processing and industrial kitchen centre in Sherbrooke, Que. Photo courtesy CBC (submitted by Dominic Diorio)

And, in late March, a fire at the Maricopa Food Pantry, a food bank in Arizona, saw 50,000 pounds worth of food burn up and yet another blaze at the Texas-based Rio Fresh severely damaged the onion processing facility.

In February, a portion of Wisconsin River Meats was destroyed by fire, according to Channel 3000 News. The Mauston-based company said the “old portion” of its plant was a total loss from the fire.

Another fire in February, sparked by a boiler explosion at a potato chip plant south of Hermiston, Ore., sent several people to hospital with minor injuries. The Shearer’s Food plant, as reported by The Oregonian, supplies much of the Western US with potato and corn chips.

A third fire in February caused the Louis Dreyfus Company’s Claypool, Ind., soybean processing and biodiesel plant — the largest fully integrated soybean processing plant in the US — to suspend production. Thankfully no injuries were reported.

A blaze at a poultry processing plant in the Hamilton region of Ontario in January caused extensive damage, but caused no injuries. The multiple-alarm fire, as reported by Global News, will cost millions in repairs.

Firefighters responded to a fire in January at the Cargill-Nutrena plant in Lecompte, La. The fire took more than 12 hours to put out, as reported by KALB-TV, an NBC/CBS/CW-affiliated television station.

A fire in December caused more than $100,000 in damages to a San Antonio food processing plant. KTSA-107.1 reported there were no injuries as a result of the fire.

In late November, a fire engulfed the Maid-Rite Steak Co. food processing plant in Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, as reported by ABC affiliate news station WNEP . The cause of the fire was ruled an accident.

A fire in mid-September at the JBS USA beef processing plant in Grand Island, Neb. halted operations in the facility that typically processes about 6,000 head of cattle daily. 

Although the fire damaged a portion of the facility, the company, at the time, released a statement that said the fire did not impact the primary production area, as reported by Reuters.

Another raging fire in August of 2021 severely damaged the Patak Meat Production company in Austell, Ga., as reported by Channel 2 Action News in Atlanta.

According to the company’s customer service department, Patak Meat Production is operating at a “much reduced” capacity, but hopes to complete repairs in the coming months and will then regain full operational capacity.

In July, Firefighters battled a large fire at the River Valley Ingredients plant in Hanceville, Al. The cause of the fire, as reported at the time by NBC affiliate WVTM-TV, was unknown.

River Valley Ingredients plant fire – (Photo courtesy NBC affiliate WVTM-TV – Kenneth Nail)

Another July fire at the Kellogg factory in Memphis, Tenn. was determined to be an accident and no injuries were reported. Dozens of crews were called in to help fight the fire due to the brutal heat, reported Fox 13 Memphis.

Memphis fire department response to 3rd alarm fire at the Kellogs factory (Photo courtesy WHBQ)

The cause of a fire in April 2021 at the Smithfield Foods plant in Monmouth, Ill., was unknown, according to WGIL-93.7FM in Galesburg.

Although a fire in January 2021 destroyed meat manufacturer and packager Deli Star’s production facility in Fayetteville, Ill., as of February 2022, it has opened a new plant in St. Louis. Longview News-Journal reported in January police did not consider the fire suspicious.

David Clement, North American affairs manager at the Consumer Choice Centre (CCC), said any disruption to the food industry will negatively impact pricing.

“Any additional disruption to the food industry and the food processing industry will create a ripple effect,” Clement told the Western Standard Friday from Toronto.

“Anything that affects product availability will put upward pressure on food inflation. This is why Canada and the US are seeing skyrocketing prices.”

CCC is an international consumer advocacy group that, among other things, works to reduce industry regulators that lead to “less consumer choice and makes products more expensive,” says the website.

Clement said he doesn’t believe Canadians will “go hungry” but said anything affecting food distribution could potentially reduce product quantity on store shelves and create what he called “shrinkflation.”

He explained shrinkflation is when there is a particular type of food shortage, consumers will pay the same for less of the product.

“An example would be, say if there is a potato shortage, and a 350-gram bag of chips cost you $4. Shrinkflation would see the size of that bag shrink to say 300-grams but you would still pay $4 for it,” said Clement.

Clement said he didn’t know the severity of what has happened with these food producers being affected in Canada and the US, but said anytime there is a “decrease in supply, there is always upward pressure on pricing.”

Melanie Risdon is a reporter with the Western Standard
mrisdon@westernstandard.news

Melanie Risdon is a Calgary-based Reporter for the Western Standard. She has over 20 years experience in media at Global News, Rogers and Corus. mrisdon@westernstandardonline.com

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14 Comments

14 Comments

  1. Kevin Cochrane

    April 22, 2022 at 11:35 am

    Don’t worry sheeple, it’s just another one of those weird coincidences that started happening daily about 2 years ago. Apparently food processing plants have become extremely flammable, more so than even refineries.

  2. Jack of all Trades

    April 22, 2022 at 11:40 am

    I do not believe in coincidences in all this.

  3. berta baby

    April 22, 2022 at 11:57 am

    Good luck city folks… God speed through the famine.

    As a country son let me extend a heart filled go fuck yourself .

    Your new pronoun to identify as is…. Starving

  4. Bryan

    April 22, 2022 at 3:52 pm

    By any chance, were there shouts of ‘Aloha snackbar!’ (or something similar) coming from the plane that crashed into the General Mills plant near Atlanta? For some reason, that phrase is often heard before a plane crashes.

  5. Shepherdess

    April 22, 2022 at 4:13 pm

    Something not right here…. I suspect the globalist cabal is behind this so they can expedite the food shortage and expedite fake meat to feed the masses. They are just evil enough to plan this….if they can depopulate with vaccines, they can do this too…nothing is beyond the evil cabal.

  6. WG Wereley

    April 22, 2022 at 6:39 pm

    Of course there couldn’t be any collusion involved in this, could there??? I agree with Jack of All Trades. Coincidences are seldom coincidences.

  7. Pete

    April 23, 2022 at 7:14 am

    I got notified by via email to read this article. Then I’m notified that I can’t read the article unless I upgrade my account. I pay $10 a month by the way but I can’t for the life of me find a link to a login screen. This comment is a test to see if I am able to bloviate on an article I have not read. If you are reading this comment I may just change my username to Albertan Muslin, make comments unrelated to reality and spend the $10 a month on Halal chicken or something.

  8. S Bremmer

    April 23, 2022 at 8:59 am

    All part of the great reset.
    I see Klaus schwab’s hand in this

  9. JB

    April 23, 2022 at 9:10 am

    And still the federal government will not allow provinces outside of Canada (Ont/Que) to be food independent.

    Forcing all members of Confederation to be reliant on basic food stuffs from Ont/Que could have been thought of as just a money grab but if the federal government really believes what they are saying about food shortages……

    Well lets just say the supply management systems that prevented us from growing food are looking a lot more sinister.

  10. Crazee Tymee

    April 23, 2022 at 12:51 pm

    I love me some crazee news for crazee people written by PR shills for tthose crazee extraction industries and the not so big anymore tobacco boys and gals Hell yeeeaaaazzz! Good stuff. Thanks Tucker!

  11. Mars Hill

    April 23, 2022 at 4:59 pm

    Anybody think we’re not in a war? Why do people vote for cabal puppet controlled politicians? Who owns msm? Fear not, the Military Alliance is in control, just letting a few more folks wake up and come to their senses. NCSWIC

  12. Left Coast

    April 24, 2022 at 12:23 pm

    Anyone concerned yet that the Largest Pork Packing Plant in the USA . . . belongs to the CCP. I wonder if any of these Food Producers that were destroyed belonged to the CCP?
    The CCP have also bought up millions of acres of farm land in the USA & likely Canada.
    The CCP have bought up Politicians, Media, Natural Resources . . . remember when they tried to buy Saskatchewan’s Potash Mines a few years ago?

    Anyone Concerned? Obviously not our Politicians or the Legacy FakeStream Media.

    Time to audit the Trudope Foundation . . . he may have taken as many $$$s as Biden from the CCP aka Chinese Communists!

  13. Illusion

    April 24, 2022 at 2:52 pm

    Not a coincidence. The same group that is pushing industry-crippling carbon taxes, covid lockdowns and vax mandates on the west are behind this, which makes sense because it all has the same effect: de-industrialization of western countries. A key player in this group is the WEF and Kenney/Trudeau are both under its control.

  14. Barbara

    April 26, 2022 at 2:59 pm

    We have to keep showing up at protests. This is not over.

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Soros, Clinton, Obama staffers campaigning to bring down Musk and boycott Twitter

Twenty six NGOs and advocacy groups have penned a letter telling of their frustrations about Musk’s plan to allow freedom of expression on his social media platform.

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High-profile liberal figures are collaborating to lobby corporate advertisers to boycott Twitter if soon-to-be-owner Elon Musk brings in his promised policy of unrestrained free speech to the platform.

Twenty-six NGOs and advocacy groups penned a letter telling of their frustrations about Musk’s plan to allow freedom of expression on the social media platform.

Musk responded to the letter inquiring about the authors’ source funding. The letter had been written by a number of different groups, including George Soros’s Open Society Foundation, NGOs founded by former Clinton and Obama administration staffers, wealthy Democrat foundation donors, labour unions, and even the governments of some European nations. 

“Elon Musk’s takeover of Twitter will further toxify our information ecosystem and be a direct threat to public safety, especially among those already most vulnerable and marginalized,” the alliance wrote.

They warned businesses in the letter advertising on Twitter “risks association with a platform amplifying hate, extremism, health misinformation, and conspiracy theorists.’ 

“Under Musk’s management, Twitter risks becoming a cesspool of misinformation, with your brand attached, polluting our information ecosystem in a time where trust in institutions and news media is already at an all-time low,” the authors said.

“Your ad dollars can either fund Musk’s vanity project or hold him to account. We call on you to demand Musk uphold these basic standards of community trust and safety, and to pull your advertising spending from Twitter, if they are not.”

Musk, in response to the letter, tweeted: “Who funds these organizations that want to control your access to information? Let’s investigate.” Musk added: “Sunlight is the best disinfectant.”

In April, the Twitter board accepted Musk’s $44-billion offer to buy out the company. Musk will take the social media platform into private ownership with the goal of liberating it from what many people consider unreasonable censorship and the banning of its users.

“Free speech is the bedrock of a functioning democracy and Twitter is the digital town square where matters vital to the future of humanity are debated,” Musk said in a statement included in the press release announcing the $44 billion deal.

“I also want to make Twitter better than ever by enhancing the product with new features, making the algorithms open source to increase trust, defeating the spam bots, and authenticating all humans. Twitter has tremendous potential — I look forward to working with the company and the community of users to unlock it.”

Amanda Brown is a reporter with the Western Standard
abrown@westernstandard.news
Twitter: @WS_JournoAmanda

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MPs call for controls over telecoms’ data collection abilities

Telecom executives testifying at committee hearings acknowledged customers would not know all commercial uses made of their aggregated data.

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After revelations the Public Health Agency bought data on millions of telecom clients in the name of monitoring pandemic lockdowns, MPs say Parliament should regulate telecom companies’ collection and sale of cellphone customers’ mobility data.

“I had not seen anything on this scale with such a large number of individuals’ mobility data being accessed without even any notice to the individual,” Ann Cavoukian, former Ontario privacy commissioner, testified at February 10 hearings.

“Forget about consent, but just notice.”

Blacklock’s Reporter said the ethics committee in a report said Parliament must “regulate the activities of private companies in the collection, use, sharing, storage and destruction of Canadian mobility data and that the government ensure private companies have obtained meaningful consent from their customers for the collection of such data.”

Blacklock’s last December 21 disclosed the monitoring program after the PHA issued a notice to contractors, Operator-Based Location Data And Services For Public Health Mobility Analysis. The PHA proposed to extend the data scoop for up to five years.

Parliament subsequently voted 173 to 155 against any extension of the program. A data contract expired March 18.

The ethics committee also recommended federal departments and agencies require data suppliers to show that “Canadians have the option to opt-out of the data collection” and that protections of the Privacy Act apply to “the collection, use and disclosure of de-identified and aggregated data.”

Telecom executives testifying at committee hearings acknowledged customers would not know all commercial uses made of their aggregated data.

“I recognize some individuals want to know everything that’s going on with their data, some don’t want to know anything and some want to know just in time, when they’re thinking about it,” Pamela Snively, vice-president at Telus Communications, testified February 17.

“I am aware data can be used for good and I am aware it can be used for ways that are not good, as well. I think it’s absolutely critically important that we are paying attention to how data is used.”

Bloc Québécois MP René Villemure (Trois-Rivières, Que.) noted Telus customers who agreed to terms of service would never know their aggregated data would end in the Government of Canada’s hands.

“I suppose it’s normal that a Telus user would think you would use data to improve service,” said Villemure. “However they might not expect it to be used for something else.”

“I think it’s challenging to know what anyone expects,” replied Snively.

“Does a user consent to having their personal information de-identified?” asked Villemure. “We have a lot of information in our privacy policy on our website about de-identification,” replied Snively.

“Users have to know they should go to the website to find this out, though,” said MP Villemure. “That’s correct,” replied Snively.

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Guilbeault says pandemic lead to emissions reductions

“We know 2020 because of the pandemic is an anomaly,” Guilbeault testified at the Commons environment committee on Tuesday.

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It was only because of COVID-19 that Canada saw reductions in greenhouse gases, says Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault.

But Guilbeault said he didn’t know what portion of reductions was due to his climate change program or the recession.

“We know 2020 because of the pandemic is an anomaly,” Guilbeault testified at the Commons environment committee on Tuesday.

“I have not spoken at great length about the 2020 emissions reduction numbers that we’ve seen in the last inventory.”

Blacklock’s Reporter said the environment department in an April 15 summary of its National Inventory Report 1990-2020 said the COVID-19 recession marked a decrease in emissions. Guilbeault in a statement at the time called the figures encouraging.

“We can see that Canada is moving in the right direction,” he said.

Guilbeault acknowledged the recession was a factor.

“What was a result of the economic slowdown that was obviously a result of the pandemic and what was a result of measures that we have been deploying in Canada over the last few years?” he asked.

“What the experts tell me is that it is very difficult to discern what comes from the plan and what would be more pandemic related.”

“If the plan is that to get an 8.9% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions that we get a 5.4% contraction in GDP, you would agree with me that is not a great plan,” said Conservative MP Kyle Seeback (Dufferin-Caledon, Ont.).

“We make no such linkages,” replied Guilbeault.

National emissions fell 9% from 738 million tonnes to 672 million tonnes. Reductions included an 11% decline in factory emissions “partially attributable to plants that closed,” a 17% cut in transport emissions “linked to a decrease in the vehicle kilometres traveled” with travel bans, and a 44% cut in jet fuel emissions due to the collapse of air travel.

Guilbeault said he remained committed to the carbon tax but would not say if the current fee schedule is sufficient. Cabinet originally capped the tax at $50 per tonne, the equivalent of  12¢ a litre on gasoline, then raised the cap to $170 per tonne by 2030.

“The carbon tax is clearly hurting Canadians,” said Conservative MP Dan Mazier (Dauphin-Swan River, Man.). “Can you promise Canadians today your government will not raise the carbon tax above $170 a tonne after 2030? I want a yes or no answer.”

“We have made a commitment all the way to 2030,” replied Guilbeault. “We have made no commitment as to what happens after 2030.”

The higher $170 per tonne charge is the equivalent of a total 27¢ more per litre of propane, 34¢ per cubic metre of natural gas, 40¢ more per litre of gasoline, 44¢ for aviation fuel and an extra 47¢ per litre for diesel.

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We the undersigned call on the Canadian government to immediately cease all payouts to media companies.

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