I wrote a letter a while back to both the Alberta Beef Magazine and Cattlemen Magazine regarding the ABP and democracy. I got an enthusiastic feedback from editors and assistant editors at both papers but I am furious to see neither have in fact published it. Lack of space? maybe... I rather suspect it didn't get past their ABP proofreaders. How ironic if this bastion of freedom and free enterprise were censoring letters much like a communist regime would do. Time to wake up producers and realise what is going on with your levy dollars.
I include the letter below as at least Agriville provides an opportunity for free speech.
"The winter edition of Grass Routes, the Alberta Beef Producers magazine, arrived recently and I was annoyed to see the list of twelve resolutions passed at the Annual General Meeting in December but no list of the eight defeated resolutions. This was conveniently explained as being due to space restrictions. Perhaps in future an extra half page of black and white print could be freed up by not publishing five full colour pages of directors’ photographs - especially since half of them had their photographs in the previous edition as potential candidates. In truth I suspect the ABP were more interested in concealing the list of defeated resolutions from beef producers.
Three of the defeated resolutions centred on the issue of BSE testing but more particularly, asking potential beef customers around the world if they would consider buying our beef if it were BSE tested. Apparently, the directors of ABP don’t believe the adage "the customer is always right." Also defeated was a resolution asking that ABP install a cow/calf council to protect the interests of these primary producers, in the same manner that a feeder council was introduced in recent years to look after feedlot owners’ interests. The other defeated resolutions were fairly innocuous and centred around harmonising costs of RFID eartags between provinces and possibly reimbursing producers to switch to RFID tags on breeding females as other provinces have done.
I feel confident that most producers in Alberta would have been in favour of all these resolutions, given that they were proposed by producers in the first place. Perhaps in these times of government orchestrated plebiscites on "marketing choice" the time is right for one in the beef sector? The choice would be whether beef producers in Alberta want to continue to pay check off dollars to an organisation that appears arrogant, anti-democratic and working against producers’ interests. I’m sure having to compete with other producer organisations for their share of farmers and ranchers hard earned dollars would be welcomed by an organisation that preaches a free market philosophy."
I include the letter below as at least Agriville provides an opportunity for free speech.
"The winter edition of Grass Routes, the Alberta Beef Producers magazine, arrived recently and I was annoyed to see the list of twelve resolutions passed at the Annual General Meeting in December but no list of the eight defeated resolutions. This was conveniently explained as being due to space restrictions. Perhaps in future an extra half page of black and white print could be freed up by not publishing five full colour pages of directors’ photographs - especially since half of them had their photographs in the previous edition as potential candidates. In truth I suspect the ABP were more interested in concealing the list of defeated resolutions from beef producers.
Three of the defeated resolutions centred on the issue of BSE testing but more particularly, asking potential beef customers around the world if they would consider buying our beef if it were BSE tested. Apparently, the directors of ABP don’t believe the adage "the customer is always right." Also defeated was a resolution asking that ABP install a cow/calf council to protect the interests of these primary producers, in the same manner that a feeder council was introduced in recent years to look after feedlot owners’ interests. The other defeated resolutions were fairly innocuous and centred around harmonising costs of RFID eartags between provinces and possibly reimbursing producers to switch to RFID tags on breeding females as other provinces have done.
I feel confident that most producers in Alberta would have been in favour of all these resolutions, given that they were proposed by producers in the first place. Perhaps in these times of government orchestrated plebiscites on "marketing choice" the time is right for one in the beef sector? The choice would be whether beef producers in Alberta want to continue to pay check off dollars to an organisation that appears arrogant, anti-democratic and working against producers’ interests. I’m sure having to compete with other producer organisations for their share of farmers and ranchers hard earned dollars would be welcomed by an organisation that preaches a free market philosophy."
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