Disposal of Deadstock (O. Reg. 105/09). Country/Territory Canada Territorial subdivision Ontario Document type Regulation Date 2009 (2020) Source FAO, FAOLEX Subject Livestock, Waste & hazardous substances Keyword Animal production Animal by-products Transport/storage Authorization/permit Data collection/reporting Enforcement/compliance Waste disposal Waste management Waste non-domestic sources Geographical area Americas, Arctic, Asia and the Pacific, East Pacific, North America, North Atlantic Abstract The present Regulation enforces the Food Safety and Quality Act, 2001 (S.O. 2001, c. 20). In particular, the Regulation governs the disposal of deadstock in the possession of a custodian and the disposal of any dead animal collected by a collector or received by a disposal facility. The Regulation generally applies to specified farmed food animals that are dead, were not slaughtered for food and are not disposed of under any other legislation. Deadstock animals are alpacas, bison, cattle, deer, elk, goats, llamas, sheep, yaks, horses, ponies, donkeys, pigs and other porcine animals and ratites. The carcasses of poultry and rabbits also are included as deadstock if the custodian at the time of their death had more than 300 rabbits, or 50 turkeys or 300 poultry other than turkeys, whether dead or alive. Hybrids of any of these animals are also deadstock. The text consists of 88 sections divided into 9 Parts as follows: Interpretation (I); General rules: prohibition against sale for human food, rules re fallen animals (II); Disposal of deadstock (III); Transporting deadstock and other material (IV); Licences (V); Operational requirements (VI); Composting (VII); Records (VIII); Emergencies (IX). Full text English Website www.gov.on.ca References - Legislation Implements Food Safety and Quality Act, 2001 (S.O. 2001, c. 20). Legislation | Canada | 2001 (2019) Keyword: Basic legislation, Food quality control/food safety, Agricultural commodities, Marine fishes, Freshwater fishes, Milk/dairy products, Fraud, Inspection, Standards, Offences/penalties Source: FAO, FAOLEX