September 17, 2008
LANSING - As the Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD)
investigation of Michigan's privately owned cervid (POC)
facilities continues, Michigan Department of Agriculture (MDA)
officials today announced a plan for the systematic review and
release of facilities that are not involved with any trace
investigation related to the CWD positive facility.
"As we review cervid operation records and find they are in
compliance with disease sample submissions, and and the Cervid
Act, and they are not connected to the index herd through animal
movement, we will systematically release quarantined
facilities," said Dr. Steven Halstead, State Veterinarian. "We
will contact facilities, they may not consider themselves
released from quarantine until an official document is provided
by the state. If they are Herds not in compliance with the
requirements they will remain quarantined pending further
consideration."
Those facilities participating in the state's CWD
Certification program for at least five years, and participating
in the bovine Tuberculosis (TB) Accreditation program, will be
the first facilities to be considered for quarantine release.
Another criterion for quarantine release is full compliance with
laws and standards for cervid facilities for the past five
years.
In Michigan, there are four types of cervid facility
registrations; Full, Exhibition, Hobby, and Ranch and they have
different risks associated with each of them. The Full,
Exhibition, and Hobby Registration facilities keep cervids in
pens and the animals are handled and treated like livestock.
They are quite often breeding facilities that sell to shooting
ranches and are expected to have records of movement and sales.
The hunting or shooting ranches have free-ranging cervids on
large, fenced tracts of fenced-in of land. Shooting ranches are
categorized as low, medium, and high risk and will be contacted
for discussions on release from quarantine. Shooting ranches are
also required to provide a consumer warning to clients taking
de-boned meat off the premises. Live cervids may never leave
shooting ranches.
A clarification of categories and risks is available on the
CWD page of the Michigan Emerging Diseases website at
www.michigan.gov/chronicwastingdiseasee.