Hershey chocolate plant reopens next week
After a closure of almost a month, the Hershey chocolate factory inSmiths Falls, Ont.,is scheduled to reopennext week.
The plant, about 60 kilometres southwest of Ottawa, was shut down Nov. 9 after a routine inspection detected salmonella, a type of bacteria that causes food poisoning.
Twenty-six ofthe factory'sproducts were later recalled, including various sizes of Oh Henry! chocolate bars, Reese Peanut Butter Cups and Hershey Chipits chocolate chips.
Company spokeswoman Stephanie Moritz saidHershey was contacting the plant's 500 employees Fridayand many of them will be back on the job Monday. The rest will be back later in the week, but their start day will depend on their shifts and jobs. The chocolate shop attached to the plant will also reopen Monday.
Moritz said the plant will beginproduction next week usinga newsupplierof soy lecithin, the ingredient the company found to be the source of the contamination during its internal investigation. Soy lecithin isan emulsifying agent used to help chocolate flow during the manufacturing process.
Garfield Balsom,who is with the office of food safety and recall at Canadian Food Inspection Agency, said the agencycompleted its investigation of the contamination and agreesthat the soy lecithin was the cause.
Moritzsaid the company worked closely with the agency during the shutdown in order to clean the plant.
"All of the equipment and production lines at the plant were sanitized, just to ensure that our facility meets our high-quality standards," she said.
Many of the employees temporarily laid off were brought back to help with the cleaning.
Symptoms of salmonella poisoning include high fever, severe headache, vomiting, nausea, abdominal pain and diarrhea.