June 6th, 2025

Here are some facts about the proposed cull of hundreds of ostriches at B.C. farm


By Canadian Press on June 2, 2025.

Protesters have been gathered for weeks at an ostrich farm in Edgewood, B.C., where an outbreak of avian flu killed 69 of the birds in December and January.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency wants the remaining 400 or so birds killed. Here’s the situation:

WHY DOES THE CFIA WANT THE BIRDS CULLED?

The CFIA says allowing an exposed flock to live increases the risk of reassortment or mutation of the virus, particularly because the ostriches are raised in the open and are exposed to wild birds and other animals.

It says in a May 30 statement that the infection that hit the flock is a “novel reassortment not seen elsewhere in Canada” and it includes a genotype associated with a human infection in a poultry worker in Ohio.

It says there are “ongoing serious risks for animal and human health, and trade.”

WHY DO THE FARMERS OPPOSE THE CULL?

The owners of Universal Ostrich Farms say their ostriches are a valuable scientific resource and that the flock should be studied because they have acquired herd immunity to avian flu.

They say the flock poses no threat and want the birds tested for ongoing avian flu infections.

They have also said compensation of $3,000 per bird is inadequate.

WHAT’S HAPPENING AT THE FARM?

Dozens of protesters are camped at the farm in an attempt to thwart a cull. Their numbers were bolstered over the weekend when a convoy of about a dozen vehicles arrived.

The protest has been widely popularized on social media, including in the United States, with supporters seeing the planned cull as an unnecessary example of government overreach. The farmers have also been visited by provincial and federal legislators who support them.

RCMP have made several trips to the farm, both to prepare for potential arrests and to investigate the recent death of an ostrich that the farm owners say was shot.

The CFIA says the protest “has delayed a timely and appropriate response” resulting in ongoing human and animal health risks.

WHAT HAVE OFFICIALS SAID?

Agriculture Minister Heath MacDonald said last week that the CFIA was following “due process” regarding the flock, while B.C. Premier David Eby said on May 14 that he was “frustrated” by the actions of the CFIA and he hoped the farmers were properly compensated.

United States Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. wrote to the CFIA’s president on May 23 to call for a halt to the cull, so the ostriches could be studied. Dr. Mehmet Oz, the administrator for the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, later offered to save the birds by relocating them to his ranch in Florida.

WHEN COULD A CULL HAPPEN?

The CFIA says it continues planning for “humane depopulation” of the ostriches but will not make the date of the operation public.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 2, 2025.

Canadian Press Staff, The Canadian Press

Share this story:

25
-24
Subscribe
Notify of
1 Comment
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
R.U.Serious

I would like to know more, but the way I understand this right now is that these birds are infectious with a disease that might be able to be contracted by humans, and can be spread to other animals and can be transmitted to wild animals and wild birds so why are they running around a farm where there wild animals or even humans could be infected?
If you want to study them, fine! Quarantine them in a safe facility where they are contained and no contact to any other animal, where safety measures can be put in place!
Measures taken by poultry farmers with enclosed buildings during bird flu didn’t allow any exposure to any other animal and access to the buildings were restricted.
I don’t see these measures at this farm! I am sorry but most of the birds needs to be euthanized and some should be sent to secure facilities for further studies.
When it comes to whether a bird lives or a human, the human needs to be the choice!



1
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x