January 14, 2014
Foster Farms poultry plant remains closed despite approval to reopen

Despite being given the go signal to reopen, Foster Farms poultry facility will stay closed voluntarily over food safety concerns, its owner said.
Foster Farms said its 250,000-square-foot plant in central Livingston would stay closed for the time being while workers address a cockroach infestation inspectors from the USDA spotted five times since last summer, the (Portland) Oregonian reported.
The decision came after USDA inspectors who shuttered the plant, then gave Foster Farms permission to reopen, saying the company had produced adequate plans to deal with the problem.
The company decided on its own, however, to hold off on reopening.
"The company is exercising vigilance and choosing to dedicate additional time to ensuring its preventative plan is fully realised with the most effective technology and treatments available," the company said in a statement. "Foster Farms expects this closure to be brief, lasting several days, but does not at this time have a definitive date for resuming operations."
Last summer, the Livingston plant and two other Foster Farms facilities in Fresno were implicated in a salmonella outbreak that sickened 416 people.
The Livingston facility operates around the clock and slaughters more than 500,000 birds per day brought in from farmers across the region when running at full capacity, making it one of the world's largest poultry facilities.










