Farmers angry over hundreds of pounds of meat spoiled as cooler breaks down

By RASHAD ROLLE

Tribune Staff Reporter

rrolle@tribunemedia.net

CHRISTMAS just got worse for some Bahamian farmers after hundreds of pounds of their meat spoiled after a cooler at the Farrington Road Abattoir stopped working over the weekend.

The farmers, many of whom had hoped to make money from selling the meat this week, will likely be deprived of potential funds during the holiday season.

Farmers have been critical of the government ever since the Bahamas Agricultural and Industrial Corporation (BAIC) assumed managerial responsibility of institutions like the Feed Mill, the Abattoir, the Produce Exchange and the Fish and Farm Store last year, citing unprofessionalism as a primary concern.

However, the spoilage of their meat has brought their frustrations to a new level, according to Lavarity Deveaux, a 69-year-old farmer and brother of former Environment Minister Earl Deveaux, who found out about the development yesterday.

Farmers are required to have their livestock inspected at the Abattoir by a veterinarian before it is slaughtered. Afterwards, a health inspector has to check the meat before farmers can take it out of the facility and deliver the animal products to customers.

Mr Deveaux had hoped to pick up his six pigs and three sheep on Saturday, but the facility was not open at the time.

Once sold, his livestock would have reaped him more than $1,000, he told The Tribune.

Officials have promised to reimburse farmers for the loss of their meat, although they have not given a timeline for when this will happen, he added.

The last time an incident of this nature took place – due a clipped electricity line – Mr Deveaux said it took three months before he was reimbursed.

The Tribune was unable to reach BAIC officials for comment yesterday.

“Ouch!” exclaimed Simeon Pinder, director of agriculture and fisheries, when told about the matter yesterday, although the Ministry of Agriculture no longer deals with the Abattoir.

“There have been problems in the past at the Abattoir, but not to this extent,” Mr Pinder said when informed that meat from 30 animals was spoiled.

Meanwhile, Mr Deveaux said the loss will dampen his holiday.

“I need the money before Christmas,” he said. “We were already struggling with farming, but this will make it harder all around. Christmas for Bahamians is family, friends and food. If you can’t provide food you know then Christmas is gone. How can you have your family coming for something to eat and you don’t have the money to get the food? I have to get something for the wife. You know anytime you don’t give the wife something for her Christmas or birthday then it’s a different experience.”

Comments

MonkeeDoo says...

Not to worry - the same Government will be looking after your health next year !

Posted 22 December 2015, 12:14 p.m. Suggest removal

BoopaDoop says...

Expect anything the government touches to be unacceptable, shoddy, over-budget, unprofessional and incomplete.

Posted 22 December 2015, 12:44 p.m. Suggest removal

asiseeit says...

Another failure, par for the course these days. How these people look at themselves and actually feel good, one wonders!

Posted 22 December 2015, 12:59 p.m. Suggest removal

birdiestrachan says...

I am sorry this has happened to those farmers. it must be hard for them, and they should be helped; Thing like this happens , it was not intentionally done. so there is no need to cast blame. the freezer was man made, these things go bad.

Posted 22 December 2015, 6:41 p.m. Suggest removal

tonymontana says...

back generator , or that is only for vibrators?
something as critical as meat supplies require one .

Posted 23 December 2015, 7:04 a.m. Suggest removal

B_I_D___ says...

When you have something that is mission critical, you have fail safes and back ups. But hey, this is government run now, chances are all the backups and failsafes had already failed and no one bothered to fix or maintain anything, which is the way this government works...don't address anything until it is completely broken down and beyond repair.

Posted 23 December 2015, 8:34 a.m. Suggest removal

The_Oracle says...

Yet another perfect example of failed self Governance, broken down systems.
Harsh? Yep, reality can be very very harsh.
Ironic that the "Government should help them"
when they, The Government, is the core problem.

Posted 23 December 2015, 8:56 a.m. Suggest removal

DillyTree says...

Surely an alarm system that alerts operators to a failed freezer would have been the bare minimum precaution in this case. As usual, government failures cost the people!

Posted 23 December 2015, 11:49 a.m. Suggest removal

MonkeeDoo says...

An alarm system ? You mean like a weather barometer ? Everyone in Government is asleep at the wheel in this country. And they don't give a RASS.

Posted 23 December 2015, 4:09 p.m. Suggest removal

DillyTree says...

No, MonkeyDoo, I mean a damn alarm system that alerts when the temperature of the freezer goes below a certain level! It can send an alert to a cell phone, house phone, or any phone you want -- even Perry's phone! It's almost idiot proof and requires no idiot standing around to monitor it. Just an idiot to fix it -- which is where the problem comes in, I suppose!

Posted 23 December 2015, 4:37 p.m. Suggest removal

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