The agenda for the meeting is outlined in the first post in this thread.
Adrienne Waller speaking on legal action, the latest on RFID tagging,
information on CCA activities (bluetongue, anaplasmosis, CCA jaunts to the NCBA convention in Texas), brief reports on committee activities like GPS pasture tracking systems, tweaking Grass Routes, results of food service initiates in Alberta and so forth.
What the producers want to hear is updates on new packer capacity being built in the province, how producers can participate in the packing plants and progress on new packer proposals the ABP/CCA is spearheading. That is noticeably absent from the agenda.
If this meeting was being held in Quebec, Atlantic Canada, B.C. or Manitoba packing plants would be first on the list. While increased packing capacity is given lip service by the Alberta industry reps, in reality it is not even on the radar screen as the ABP focuses on legal action in their never ending quest to open the border to live cattle.
Legal action is a low percentage game in my opinion as it has to be played on the American’s home turf with American judges. The Americans are very good at litigation, in fact they invented the game and the rules. The Americans will open the border to live cattle when it suits the Americans, not before, and time has shown there is little we can do to influence that.
Building packing plant capacity is something that we can do here at home in Canada. There is nothing the Americans can do to stop it, we are in control. The benefits are long term, costs are minor compared to other solutions like subsidies. And while I have heard remarks to the effect that as soon as we get the packing plants built the Americans will open the border I say great. If that is what it takes lets get right on it. If the alternative is ongoing legal challenges that are forecast to drag out for 9 to 18 months and possibly longer then the obvious course is not legal action but immediate action on packing capacity.
But our industry cannot bury its head in the sand and expect the free market will achieve its goals for it. We are in a non-functioning market, the free market is not working. That non functioning market is controlled by American interests, even caused by American interests. In Canada, where we have seen action on the packer front, the respective provinces and their industry leaders have taken a proactive stance to seeing real action take place. If we don't step out of the box in Alberta and take decisive steps to do the same we cannot expect that enough progress will take place soon enough to prevent widespread producer collapse.
And while I think the meeting should be orderly, it is understandable if producers present are impatient as they are sitting through a presentation on RFID tags when they are wondering where is the packing plant that is going to take their cows and pay them a fair price.
It is high time Alberta got past the ideology and saw the immediate need for dramatic action on the packing plant front.
Adrienne Waller speaking on legal action, the latest on RFID tagging,
information on CCA activities (bluetongue, anaplasmosis, CCA jaunts to the NCBA convention in Texas), brief reports on committee activities like GPS pasture tracking systems, tweaking Grass Routes, results of food service initiates in Alberta and so forth.
What the producers want to hear is updates on new packer capacity being built in the province, how producers can participate in the packing plants and progress on new packer proposals the ABP/CCA is spearheading. That is noticeably absent from the agenda.
If this meeting was being held in Quebec, Atlantic Canada, B.C. or Manitoba packing plants would be first on the list. While increased packing capacity is given lip service by the Alberta industry reps, in reality it is not even on the radar screen as the ABP focuses on legal action in their never ending quest to open the border to live cattle.
Legal action is a low percentage game in my opinion as it has to be played on the American’s home turf with American judges. The Americans are very good at litigation, in fact they invented the game and the rules. The Americans will open the border to live cattle when it suits the Americans, not before, and time has shown there is little we can do to influence that.
Building packing plant capacity is something that we can do here at home in Canada. There is nothing the Americans can do to stop it, we are in control. The benefits are long term, costs are minor compared to other solutions like subsidies. And while I have heard remarks to the effect that as soon as we get the packing plants built the Americans will open the border I say great. If that is what it takes lets get right on it. If the alternative is ongoing legal challenges that are forecast to drag out for 9 to 18 months and possibly longer then the obvious course is not legal action but immediate action on packing capacity.
But our industry cannot bury its head in the sand and expect the free market will achieve its goals for it. We are in a non-functioning market, the free market is not working. That non functioning market is controlled by American interests, even caused by American interests. In Canada, where we have seen action on the packer front, the respective provinces and their industry leaders have taken a proactive stance to seeing real action take place. If we don't step out of the box in Alberta and take decisive steps to do the same we cannot expect that enough progress will take place soon enough to prevent widespread producer collapse.
And while I think the meeting should be orderly, it is understandable if producers present are impatient as they are sitting through a presentation on RFID tags when they are wondering where is the packing plant that is going to take their cows and pay them a fair price.
It is high time Alberta got past the ideology and saw the immediate need for dramatic action on the packing plant front.
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