sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Company that processed plant-based milk linked to listeria permanently closes plants

TORONTO 鈥 The Canadian company that processed plant-based milk linked to a deadly listeria outbreak has permanently closed all four of its plants.
0c3e7345af1d7922fcaf2a92618f58ae67a908300e45ef1393181c1882c20808
Signage for Joriki Beverages is seen in Toronto on Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2025. The Canadian company that processed plant-based milk linked to a deadly listeria outbreak has permanently closed all four of its plants. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Cole Burston

TORONTO 鈥 The Canadian company that processed plant-based milk linked to a deadly listeria outbreak has permanently closed all four of its plants.

A spokesperson for Toronto-based Joriki said the closures meant the majority of Joriki's employees were laid off when it shuttered its two plants in Ontario, one in sa国际传媒 and one in Pennsylvania owned by a subsidiary.

The spokesperson said that as the company is pursuing creditor protection, it doesn't have the finances to maintain operations and does not plan to reopen the plants.

Joriki has filed for creditor production and says it plans to restructure its business.

Its filings listed more than 100 organizations that Joriki owes over $200 million, including $775,000 in unpaid wages.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency said the company's Pickering, Ont. plant was the source of a listeria outbreak that led to three deaths between August 2023 and July 2024. The outbreak infected at least 20 people in Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia and Alberta.

Several plant-based milks including almond, oat, and coconut under the Silk and Great Value brands that Joriki packaged were part of the recall. (Great Value is Walmart sa国际传媒's store brand.)

A spokesperson for Danone sa国际传媒, which makes Silk products, previously said that production from the affected facility was moved elsewhere in its North American network.

Danone is listed as one of the creditors, with claims totalling more than $200,000.

Termination notices obtained by The Canadian Press show hundreds of workers were laid off between the four plants. Employees were told they would receive outstanding wages earned and accrued.

The spokesperson said the company has faced significant challenges after the product recall, including loss of business and liquidity issues.

The termination notices said that Joriki has been trying to sell some or all of its business, and one of them said that a potential buyer had pulled out of a planned transaction on Dec. 23.

Proposal trustee Alvarez & Marsal sa国际传媒 said in the letter to creditors that Joriki is not bankrupt but hopes to 鈥渃reate a stabilized environment鈥 and give the company 鈥渂reathing room while it evaluates its strategic alternatives.鈥

Joriki, Danone and Walmart sa国际传媒 are also named in a class-action lawsuit launched in Quebec over the listeria outbreak which has not been certified.

The Joriki spokesperson said the company is exploring potential transactions that would see its facilities acquired, and which could lead to the purchasers offering former employees new jobs. They said the company made every reasonable effort to reach an outcome that would have protected jobs.

Rajendran Arumugam, who worked at Joriki鈥檚 Scarborough branch for more than three years, says he was getting ready for New Year鈥檚 Eve when the termination notice landed in his inbox.

鈥淚 was mentally very depressed and I don't have any mood to celebrate the new year when we get this news,鈥 Arumugam said.

鈥淚t is very tough because suddenly after losing our jobs, we don't have any plan."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 9, 2025.

Canadian Press health coverage receives support through a partnership with the Canadian Medical Association. CP is solely responsible for this content.

Hannah Alberga and Rosa Saba, The Canadian Press