
There was “some movement” of employees between a Vancouver poultry plant currently experiencing a COVID-19 outbreak and its sister-plant in Coquitlam, where new cases were announced, says Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry.
In a press conference on Thursday, Henry confirmed the new outbreak at Coquitlam’s Superior Poultry plant, where two people have tested positive so far.
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Superior Poultry is the sister facility to the United Poultry plant in Vancouver, where there have been 29 confirmed cases. That plant has since been closed.
“There was some people working in both places or at least some movement between both places,” said Henry.
“They are under a different management structure and I know the investigation is ongoing, but it does look like there is likely to be others who are in the new facility as well who are also ill.”
Henry added that public health is in charge of shutting down food processing facilities when they see fit.
“This is something public health does. We have a whole public health inspector program — environmental health officers, they’re called — they’re the people who go around and do restaurant inspections so they’re not doing that at the moment… They do inspections in workplaces for health hazards for the workers,” she said.
“They have been going around and looking at all of our meat processing plants in the province, whether they are federally inspected or provincially inspected… But the order to close does come from public health if needed.”
According to its website, Superior Poultry is a federally inspected processing company.
Henry says transmission in large facilities or workplaces shows that although “it may seem like nothing … even one extra connection can lead to an introduction in an environment where others will get sick as well.”
Both the Coquitlam and Vancouver plants continue to be under investigation.
Daily Hive reached out to Superior Poultry on Friday but was told they would not be speaking to media at this time.













