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Just a Reminder of things the CWB did to Farmers!

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    Just a Reminder of things the CWB did to Farmers!

    Glen Pizzey, who not only grew various grains on his 1,500-acre farm, but also ran a milling operation making flour and cereals. He won't mill wheat or barley, though, because if he wanted to use his own wheat from his own bins, he couldn't do it without first selling the grain to the board, then buying it back at a premium. To make matters even more absurd, under board rules, he couldn't just take the grain 30 metres from his bins to his mill; he had to put it in trucks, drive it 15 kilometres to the nearest grain elevator, sell it to the board, pay the elevator company a processing fee, then drive it 15 km back.

    And if the board wasn't buying the kind of grain Pizzey wanted to mill that week, he would have been prevented from using it, even if his granaries were stuffed full of it.

    The board later relaxed some of these rules, but only reluctantly. It never fully supported the idea of farmers using their own grain in their own mills.

    Then there was the predawn raid on Norm and Edith Desrochers' Baldur, Man., farm. Operating on a tip that the Desrochers planned to drive a load of their barley to a mill in North Dakota without first seeking the CWB's permission, five Mounties and 10 customs agents crashed into the Desrochers home, disconnected the family phone, tossed Norm and his son Clayton into a police cruiser (despite having no warrant to do so) and proceeded to look high and low for the contraband grain. In Canada! Over the right to sell crops!

    But perhaps the most famously abusive treatment was of Lyleton, Man., barley farmer Andy McMechan. For the crime of hauling 50 bushels of his own grain to the United States - the supposedly sinister "American grain corporations" were paying nearly $6 a bushel at the time, while the board was paying $1.52 - Mr. McMechan spent 155 days in jail, 47 days in court and was strip-searched nearly 50 times. For his court appearances, he was often led into the courtroom in handcuffs and shackles.

    Admittedly, these are all older cases now. But they nonetheless illustrate the mentality of those who would maintain the CWB monopoly. Under this view, the practice of lashing all farmers to the same mast so that good and bad ones get the same price for their grain is so sacred that it must be enforced with SWAT teams.

    #2
    We can be thankful that all those years of shame have finally come to an end.

    The only positive outcome of these heinous acts was that they galvanized the opposition to the CWB monopoly and gave them the energy to see this thing through to the end.

    Comment


      #3
      I call bullshit

      Comment


        #4
        Truth hurts but yes this is what they did to western canadian farmers. Not real criminals but farmers guys just like you and me. This is a black mark on Canadian Agriculture.

        Comment


          #5
          Yea the more time passes the more Exageratted the legend Becomes. LOL

          Gee Saskfarmer are you sure they weren't drawn and quartered and had their heads put on the CWB towers.
          lol

          Comment


            #6
            Mustard explain how this is exagerated.
            Did it not happen. Yes
            Was it not the Gov of the day plus the CWB that did it. Yes.
            Again show me how the CWB made me money. No

            Comment


              #7
              And the best part of the CWB legend is that ALL participants in their operation and most of their customers were EVIL too. Tools of communism and enemies of Canada and were all plotters against their neighbours who wanted an open market. Oh God, how could we have tolerated that for 76 years?

              Gawd bless PM Harper for saving us from this evil beast...amen brother...amen.

              Comment


                #8
                Wilagro,

                This started largely because the CGC, CWB and Crop insurance told wheat growers to burn fusarium infected wheat in the early 1990's.

                The only problem was that the US grain buyers would pay almost as much... or in some cases more... than the CWB/CGC were paying for top quality wheat.

                When Goodale got back in power in 1993... he persecuted growers who tried to eek out a living from their farms... and folks who would DARE to help their nieghbour get a decent price for their desease ravaged crop.

                Perhaps you didn't know what was behind Andy's 'Waxy Barley' or him helping others with wheat marketing to get a decent return?

                Comment


                  #9
                  I can't believe some people have their heads so far in the sand..........

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Willy, a little sugar for your sour g****s?

                    Comment


                      #11
                      The socialist state strip searched Andy McMechen dozens of times because he was a threat to "orderly marketing"what ever that was.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Andy was strip searched so often because of poor communication. When some guards heard what he was in for, they thought they heard he was in for exporting weed, when it was wheat. lol

                        Comment


                          #13
                          saskfarmer I still call bullshit show
                          me the proof. Tom since when does the
                          CGC buy grain?

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Notaredneck,

                            The CWB couldn't buy one kernel of grain... without it being graded by the CGC. The grades determined the CWB value. If the CGC said the wheat was not fit for human/feed consumption... that was final.

                            Words and expressions

                            CWB Act:

                            2(2) Unless it is otherwise provided in this Act, words and expressions used in this Act have the same meaning as in the Canada Grain Act, except that where in any definition of any such word or expression contained in that Act the word "elevator" is used, it has the meaning given to it under subsection (1).

                            Comment


                              #15
                              haha Wow Tom, every single time we've sold board grains, it's the grain companies that determine what grade we're paid for. I have yet to see a CGC employee grading or buying grain. You're not making any sense.

                              Comment

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