Struggling ranchers in British Columbia are considering a provincial beef marketing board as one way to halt a meltdown in the local cattle industry.
The idea of creating a board that would control beef production and set prices was discussed Wednesday at a meeting of the Kamloops Stockmen's Association.
Such a board would be the first of its kind in the country. In 1970, the B.C. beef industry rejected a marketing board.
However, beef producers have been struggling since 2004, when a case of mad cow diseases surfaced. Most ranchers thought the industry would bounce back but it hasn't yet.
"The dairy industry and the poultry industry are probably the two agricultural commodities in Canada that are doing OK," Peter Philip, president of the Kamloops Stockmen's Association, told CBC News. "The rest of us are not."
Besides being hurt by the cases of mad cow, or bovine spongiform encephalopathy, beef producers have also been hit hard by falling commodity prices and skyrocketing costs for fuel and animal feed.
Rancher Dave Chutter, a former Liberal MLA, is among those who support a marketing board that would set beef prices.
Chutter says the beef market is so bad that most ranchers have given up on the idea of passing the family farm down to their kids.
"I know I will be selling because there's no funds for retirement and there's no way any of my kids can take it on and buy it out from me or buy it out from their brothers and sisters," said Chutter.
Chutter said he believes a beef marketing board could operate without provincial assistance.
Many marketing boards exist in Canada to help agricultural producers weather wild price fluctuations. Usually, producers are required to sell their product to the marketing board, which then sells the pool of product on the open market.
In November, the Conference Board of Canada issued a report that criticized the Dairy Farmers of Canada, which regulates the price of milk, saying regulations were restricting innovation within the dairy industry.
And the Canadian Wheat Board, which sets the price of wheat produced in Western Canada, is mired in controversy, with some farmers arguing they should have the right to sell their grains on the open world m
Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/british-columbia/story/2010/02/10/consumer-bc-beef.html#ixzz0fHMYYOHE
The idea of creating a board that would control beef production and set prices was discussed Wednesday at a meeting of the Kamloops Stockmen's Association.
Such a board would be the first of its kind in the country. In 1970, the B.C. beef industry rejected a marketing board.
However, beef producers have been struggling since 2004, when a case of mad cow diseases surfaced. Most ranchers thought the industry would bounce back but it hasn't yet.
"The dairy industry and the poultry industry are probably the two agricultural commodities in Canada that are doing OK," Peter Philip, president of the Kamloops Stockmen's Association, told CBC News. "The rest of us are not."
Besides being hurt by the cases of mad cow, or bovine spongiform encephalopathy, beef producers have also been hit hard by falling commodity prices and skyrocketing costs for fuel and animal feed.
Rancher Dave Chutter, a former Liberal MLA, is among those who support a marketing board that would set beef prices.
Chutter says the beef market is so bad that most ranchers have given up on the idea of passing the family farm down to their kids.
"I know I will be selling because there's no funds for retirement and there's no way any of my kids can take it on and buy it out from me or buy it out from their brothers and sisters," said Chutter.
Chutter said he believes a beef marketing board could operate without provincial assistance.
Many marketing boards exist in Canada to help agricultural producers weather wild price fluctuations. Usually, producers are required to sell their product to the marketing board, which then sells the pool of product on the open market.
In November, the Conference Board of Canada issued a report that criticized the Dairy Farmers of Canada, which regulates the price of milk, saying regulations were restricting innovation within the dairy industry.
And the Canadian Wheat Board, which sets the price of wheat produced in Western Canada, is mired in controversy, with some farmers arguing they should have the right to sell their grains on the open world m
Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/british-columbia/story/2010/02/10/consumer-bc-beef.html#ixzz0fHMYYOHE
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