Your Reading List

Turkey processing resumes at Lilydale plant

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: December 10, 2009

Revised, Dec. 10 –– A fire that briefly halted production at the processing plant handling over 90 per cent of the turkeys raised in Alberta remains under investigation.

Edmonton-based meat processor Lilydale said Tuesday it expects “relatively minor” damage to its facility after a fire that morning in a shed housing compressors for its refrigeration units.

The plant specializes in “retail ready” tray-pack turkey products and whole-body turkey sales, both wet chill and air chill.

Production stopped Tuesday but resumed as of Thursday morning with “some constraints in capacity,” according to spokesperson Connie Smart. Shipping operations resumed Tuesday.

Read Also

Larvae of the screwworm fly, collected from infected cows, are observed at the COPEG sterile fly production plant, which fights the spread of the cattle screwworm, in Pacora, Panama, June 11, 2025. REUTERS/Enea Lebrun/File Photo

Mexico sees 32 per cent jump in flesh-eating screwworm cases since August as cases move north

Mexico recorded 6,703 cases of animals infested with New World screwworm as of September 13 since the start of the outbreak in November of last year. That was compared to 5,086 confirmed cases during the previous period, which ended August 17.

Lilydale’s north Edmonton site on 127th Avenue, which also houses the company’s head offices, employs a total of 350 people, processing fresh and frozen turkey for the retail and food service market.

A Lilydale employee taken to hospital for smoke inhalation earlier Tuesday and was released “shortly thereafter,” the company said in its release Tuesday.

The company’s only other dedicated turkey processing facility is at Abbotsford, B.C. Lilydale also makes sausage and other products at a separate Edmonton facility, and runs chicken processing plants at Calgary, Wynyard, Sask. and Port Coquitlam, B.C.

explore

Stories from our other publications