“Canadian dairy farmers care about protecting the health and welfare of their farm animals. This updated Code of Practice will help them continue to enhance the care and handling of animals while boosting consumer confidence that our food system is meeting the highest standards,” said the Honourable Marie-Claude Bibeau, Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food.
Canada’s Codes of Practice provide critical guidance for the care and handling of farm animals. They serve as the foundation for ensuring that farm animals are cared for using sound management and welfare practices that promote animal health and well-being. Codes are used as educational tools, reference materials for regulations, and the foundation for industry animal care assessment programs.
NFACC’s Code development process is a unique consensus-based, multi-stakeholder approach that ensures credibility and transparency through scientific rigour, stakeholder collaboration, and consistency. The development of the Dairy Cattle Code was led by an 18-person Code committee that includes participants from across Canada including dairy farmers, animal welfare and enforcement representatives, processors, researchers, veterinarians, and government representatives.
Aiding in their work was a five-person Scientific Committee that included animal science and veterinary expertise in dairy cattle behaviour, health, and welfare. A public comment period was held from November 29, 2021 – January 27, 2022 to allow the public and all stakeholders to provide input.
Canada’s Codes of Practice are a powerful tool for meeting rising consumer, marketplace and societal expectations relative to farmed animal welfare. Codes support responsible animal care practices and keep everyone involved in farmed animal care and handling on the same page.
The Dairy Cattle Code was the first Code of Practice to be updated through NFACC’s Code process in 2009 and has now undergone its second update utilizing this process. For more information on the Codes of Practice and NFACC’s Code development process visit www.nfacc.ca.
The project was funded in part by the Government of Canada under the Canadian Agricultural Partnership’s AgriAssurance Program.
Source : Dairy Farmers of canada