OTTAWA — A union representing Canadian Food Inspection Agency employees says the federal government is delaying a plan to shutter a food allergy testing lab in Quebec by two years.
The Agriculture Union said the Longueuil laboratory in Quebec was set to cease operations at the end of April. It said the Canadian Food Inspection Agency said it now intends to shut the lab by 2028.
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency said in a statement that it continues to plan for the closure of its Longueuil laboratory in 2028 as part of a “government-wide effort to ensure efficient and cost-effective operations.”
“What has changed is the timeline for employees,” the statement read. “We have adjusted their status to allow more time to support a responsible transition—for both staff and the work they perform.”
The statement said critical functions currently performed at the Longueuil laboratory, including allergen testing and food safety analysis, will continue within CFIA’s broader laboratory network.
“Employees will remain in their current roles while transition planning is finalized,” said the statement. “Science remains the foundation of CFIA’s mandate. Our laboratory network will continue to provide the expertise needed to protect the safety of Canada’s food, animals and plants.”
Milton Dyck, national president of the Agriculture Union, said the decision is a “significant victory” for all Canadians who care about safe and healthy food, and especially anyone with a food allergy.
“The Longueuil lab is the CFIA’s only lab capable of using advanced technology to verify nutrition labels and detect allergens,” he said in a news release. “They also do testing on shellfish for marine toxins.
“Over three million people in Canada suffer from food allergies. If the government shuts this lab, they remove an essential protection for them all. This was a reckless move.”
The union said the plan to shut down the lab is going forward on the sidelines of a “looming food safety crisis” in North America.
It said accelerating climate change is multiplying food safety risks and U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration has “gutted” the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, throwing the quality of American food imports into doubt.
“The Longueuil lab isn’t just a budget line,” said Dyck. “It is a promise to keep families safe. And our members are proud to do that work.”
The union said all 17 of the employees of the CFIA Longueuil lab received letters at the end of January stating that their positions had become “surplus,” meaning they were no longer needed.








