USDA will no longer accept older format identification for pig exports as of November 1, 2014

Friday October 10, 2014/ Manitoba Pork/ Canada.
http://manitobapork.com

15-Oct-2014 (11 years 7 months 22 days ago)

Pig identification on live exports must be fully compliant with the national pig traceability standards set by the Canadian Pork Council’s (CPC) PigTrace Canada program. As of November 1, 2014, USDA will no longer accept former methods of identification; specifically, CFIA-allocated site identification numbers and metal Health of Animals (H of A) tags. PigTrace offers two forms of pig identification that are acceptable for live exports:

The requirement to begin using PigTrace identification for export came into effect on July 1, 2014 when the amendment to the Health of Animals Regulation came into force, mandating pig traceability in Canada. CPC negotiated a transition period with USDA and CFIA to allow Canadian pig exporters time to switch to PigTrace identifiers. November 1, 2014 was the agreed upon transition deadline.

USDA border services agents estimate that less than 50% of the pigs currently exported from Canada to the U.S. have the proper PigTrace identification. Changes must take place immediately to avoid having loads rejected U.S. entry due to improper identification.