A posting from the steamroller site, i realize most real farmers who tried posting some facts can not see all the posts, don't ask how i was able to copy this:
Vanessa Hamilton
We need Prime Minister Harper out now. And it's people power that can kick him out. He is not obeying the law. He is removing the Oppositions' presence and power from Parliament. He is muting Canadians' voices and he is cutting us from the rest of the world. He is a dictator and he needs to be stopped. I'm not sitting around and watching our country become Syria. It's the start of the Occupy Revolution.
http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.thestar.com%2Fnews%2Fcana da%2Fsteveharper%2Farticle%2F825809--travers-changing-canada-one-backward-step-at-a-time&h=TAQGkznL4AQE1g-s6gpl8maALyE8BA-jOQ9kbKubT0rN7kA
http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/steveharper/article/825809--travers-changing-canada-one-backward-
www.thestar.com
.
Like · Comment · Yesterday at 8:20am · .Susan Lintott Korneychuk and Cindy Woods like this..
David Falk So you wanna start a revolution now vanessa, your lucky you live in a free country where you can make your outrageous statements. You say you fight for democracy yet you want to force well over 20,000 farmers to sell their grain to one buyer (cwb ) when there are many buyers out there. Democracy when it suits you eh? Step back and look at the big picture, your losing all credibility.
Yesterday at 9:52am ·
1.Vanessa Hamilton David, as I get more involved in this I am prepared to be backlashed, labelled, name called, bullied etc. I feel so strongly about this that it doesn't bother me. I am looking at the bigger picture. What kind of government do we have when the Opposition doesn't have any respect for them? Last week we had a Liberal MP stick up for a NDP MP by calling Peter Kent a piece of shit.
Yesterday at 9:58am · 4.Frank Oslo I'm just glad I live in a country where I can make any statements! Our government is the farthest thing from a dictatorship that you will find.
Yesterday at 1:03pm · 1.Grant Williamson The government has declared itself above the law. The judge called Minister Ritz's actions "an affront to the rule of law". This is very serious. The goverment must obey the law in a democratic system. When it does not obey the law it is setting a very anti-democratic and dangerous precedent.
Yesterday at 1:31pm · 3.Cindy Woods Really? Then why did the government remove the elected directors of the Canadian Wheatboard without a democratic vote? That flies directly in the face of your last comment. We have a government run amok, and no-one seems able to stop the insanity. It's time to stand up!
Yesterday at 1:35pm · 3.Mylo Ross Been following this site for a while but never posted. Vanessa, if the conservatives were removed from parliament, who should govern this country?
Yesterday at 4:39pm.Grant Williamson It's not a question of who should govern the country. Anyone governing the country must respect the rule of law. That is just what the Conservatives are NOT doing.
Yesterday at 5:44pm · 3.Mylo Ross Grant, it may not be your question, but it is mine. Also i was asking Vanessa.
Yesterday at 6:41pm.Vanessa Hamilton The new government will represent the People and not corporations. This a fundamental reason why I am supporting the CWB. The CWB ensures that the power doesn't go to large corporations like Cargill. Second, the new government will look at redefining our monetary policy, meaning putting the money and power back to the People. (This also has to occur in other countries like the USA and countries in Europe.) Harper is not respecting the rule of the law. He's ruining our country. Check out the Occupy Canada page on Facebook.
22 hours ago · 1.Frank Oslo I require more information. Does this law eliminate the CWB? I was under the impression it just made it voluntary in certain parts of the country so it is the same all across canada now.
22 hours ago.Mylo Ross From what i understand the CWB only lost its legislation to be the only buyer of wheat of western cdn farmers. Single desk as its called. The CWB as a corp remains exactly as before.
21 hours ago.Grant Williamson That's not quite accurate. The single-desk means that the CWB was sole dealer (seller) of western Canadian wheat and barley - not a buyer. It was really a collective bargaining agent. Without the single-desk it's nothing but another broker. The CWB as a corp is fundamentally changed by the legislation.
The "new CWB" has lost the single-desk which is its principle value. Also, it is no longer controlled by a farmer elected board of directors and it has lost the authority to order rail cars for the use of farmers. That means everything is on a bid system which means the 2 railways will determine what it costs to move grain and who gets to move it when. Without the CWB individual farmers will be forced to negotiate directly with the railways. That's a huge loss of bargaining power for farmers - going from the group of the CWB to an individual. The alternative for farmers is to have a grain broker or handling company do their negotiating for them but that comes a price.
Brokers and the private trade have to take money out for their profits and shareholders. By law the CWB could not do this, so after it covered its operating cost it still returned more than 98% of sales revenue to farmers. That's gone now. The "new CWB" does not even have to provide an audited statement to farmers.
The only thing Ritz's transition panel got right was when it acknowledged that market power will be taken from farmers and given to other players in the system.
9 hours ago · 3.Mylo Ross Not my words, Wiki's. Perhaps you need to edit the opening paragraph for the CWB's wiki entry which says this:
The Canadian Wheat Board (French: Commission canadienne du blé) was established by the Parliament of Canada on 5 July 1935[1] as a mandatory producer marketing system for wheat and barley in Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and a small part of British Columbia. Although it is often called a monopoly, it is actually instead a monopsony since it is the only buyer of wheat and barley.
When it comes to selling, they are one of many, including right here in Canada. I find this quite interesting. So how did this benefit those farmers out there in the west if they still had to compete with all the sellers of the world?
9 hours ago.Grant Williamson Wiki simply has it wrong. The CWB is not a buyer.
The CWB is the only entity on the world market selling on the basis of quality to industrial scale processors. It's our niche market. But without the single-desk, that's gone. Australia used to sell based on quality when it had its own Wheat Board but their Wheat Board was removed. Now Australian grain isn't a reliable quality and the price premiums Australian farmers used to get are lost.
The benefit to western farmers of having a single-desk on the world market is that our CWB as the exclusive dealer is able to capitalize on our unique brand of grain and build a good reputation for it. It had the resources to do marketing and customer relations on a large scale in 70 countries. Something the individual just can't do (costs, time required, etc.) and something the private trade does not do because they are only interested in margins.
We produce about 20% of the world's grain and the CWB was able to meter that into the market so prices were not collapsed with more supply than the market could handle without lowering prices. This benefited western farmers directly and every other grain producer in the world indirectly by helping to keep prices stable (not great for speculators however).
8 hours ago · 1.Frank Oslo I'm still confused a little. If the CWB was the sole seller of Western Canadian barley and wheat wouldn't it have to be the sole buyer? Isn't part of the argument that all wheat and barley had to be sold to them?
I was under the impression that the elevator companies would be able to ask for trains like they do with canola, am I mistaken?
As far as my math goes Grant 2% on a $250 /tonne commodity means $5.00/tonne cost using the CWB to broker grain. Friends of mine are telling me that they use private brokers to sell grain outside of the board and are charged in the range of $2.00 /tonne.
I guess if you are saying that being able to market huge chunks of wheat into the world market at a time may provide an advantage to the buyers of that wheat I kind of get it.
8 hours ago.Grant Williamson The CWB is a sales agent. It sells grain on behalf of western farmers. It's a contract between myself, as a farmer, and the CWB as my sales agent. The CWB is not really buying my grain.
As to the cost per bushel or per tonne 14 international trade tribunals have examined that question and all of them have found that the CWB returns more money to farmers than the private trade does. This makes sense because the private trade must make a profit for its shareholders. The only shareholders in the CWB are farmers so they get all the profits returned directly to them. A broker doesn't return everything to farmers and they have to deal with the private grain handling companies and railways. They have less bargaining power than the single-desk CWB had.
All companies can ask for trains but it's a question of when and if they get them and their power to negotiate rates. The power to negotiate rates comes from the number of cars the company is ordering. The CWB had a lot of negotiating power because it moved so much grain. Now that power is going to be spread across the every grain handler so they all have less power and farmers aren't represented at all.
It's an advantage to both the seller and the buyer to be able to move large volumes of grain at a time. The buyer pays a premium to get a large quantity of grain that is a consistent quality - that's the quality premium the CWB got for farmers. Without the single-desk that's gone.
7 hours ago · 2.David Falk Hmm, seems that i've been blocked also
2 hours ago.Grant Williamson I can see your posts and you're still commenting. Obviously you haven't been blocked.
2 hours ago.Mylo Ross What do you mean blocked? Are people actually blocked? Come to think of it, it has been kinda one sided for a while now. Why aren't farmers from out there in the west posting?
Grant, over time here many have posted a lot of graphs and discussion about how the CWB averages far less than an open market price. Have they been wrong?
about an hour ago.Mylo Ross If a miller in canada can buy wheat from anyone in the world, how can you possibly say the CWB is the only seller?
about an hour ago.Grant Williamson The CWB is the only seller of high quality western Canadian grain. It's sold based on a certificate of quality and is the only seller to do that. That's why farmers get a quality premium from CWB sales and customers are assured that Canadian grain in their grain product like beer, pasta, bread, etc. is the best quality.
49 minutes ago.Grant Williamson I am a farmer from western Canada and I have used the CWB for many years.
The graphs you mention have all been from private brokers who stand to profit if the single-desk CWB is gone. More importantly, the graphs compare US spot prices with Canadian pooled prices. That's like comparing apples and orange. A spot price is a single price and point in time. A pooled price represents the full the value of the full crop over the year - that takes into account the high prices and the low prices. For me, as a farmer, it means I get the full value of my grain because it is part of a pool that is sold over the whole year. I get to benefit from all the high prices over the whole year. With canola, or other non-board grains, I only get one price one time - I don't get the value over the whole year like I do with a pooled price.
44 minutes ago.
Vanessa Hamilton
We need Prime Minister Harper out now. And it's people power that can kick him out. He is not obeying the law. He is removing the Oppositions' presence and power from Parliament. He is muting Canadians' voices and he is cutting us from the rest of the world. He is a dictator and he needs to be stopped. I'm not sitting around and watching our country become Syria. It's the start of the Occupy Revolution.
http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.thestar.com%2Fnews%2Fcana da%2Fsteveharper%2Farticle%2F825809--travers-changing-canada-one-backward-step-at-a-time&h=TAQGkznL4AQE1g-s6gpl8maALyE8BA-jOQ9kbKubT0rN7kA
http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/steveharper/article/825809--travers-changing-canada-one-backward-
www.thestar.com
.
Like · Comment · Yesterday at 8:20am · .Susan Lintott Korneychuk and Cindy Woods like this..
David Falk So you wanna start a revolution now vanessa, your lucky you live in a free country where you can make your outrageous statements. You say you fight for democracy yet you want to force well over 20,000 farmers to sell their grain to one buyer (cwb ) when there are many buyers out there. Democracy when it suits you eh? Step back and look at the big picture, your losing all credibility.
Yesterday at 9:52am ·
1.Vanessa Hamilton David, as I get more involved in this I am prepared to be backlashed, labelled, name called, bullied etc. I feel so strongly about this that it doesn't bother me. I am looking at the bigger picture. What kind of government do we have when the Opposition doesn't have any respect for them? Last week we had a Liberal MP stick up for a NDP MP by calling Peter Kent a piece of shit.
Yesterday at 9:58am · 4.Frank Oslo I'm just glad I live in a country where I can make any statements! Our government is the farthest thing from a dictatorship that you will find.
Yesterday at 1:03pm · 1.Grant Williamson The government has declared itself above the law. The judge called Minister Ritz's actions "an affront to the rule of law". This is very serious. The goverment must obey the law in a democratic system. When it does not obey the law it is setting a very anti-democratic and dangerous precedent.
Yesterday at 1:31pm · 3.Cindy Woods Really? Then why did the government remove the elected directors of the Canadian Wheatboard without a democratic vote? That flies directly in the face of your last comment. We have a government run amok, and no-one seems able to stop the insanity. It's time to stand up!
Yesterday at 1:35pm · 3.Mylo Ross Been following this site for a while but never posted. Vanessa, if the conservatives were removed from parliament, who should govern this country?
Yesterday at 4:39pm.Grant Williamson It's not a question of who should govern the country. Anyone governing the country must respect the rule of law. That is just what the Conservatives are NOT doing.
Yesterday at 5:44pm · 3.Mylo Ross Grant, it may not be your question, but it is mine. Also i was asking Vanessa.
Yesterday at 6:41pm.Vanessa Hamilton The new government will represent the People and not corporations. This a fundamental reason why I am supporting the CWB. The CWB ensures that the power doesn't go to large corporations like Cargill. Second, the new government will look at redefining our monetary policy, meaning putting the money and power back to the People. (This also has to occur in other countries like the USA and countries in Europe.) Harper is not respecting the rule of the law. He's ruining our country. Check out the Occupy Canada page on Facebook.
22 hours ago · 1.Frank Oslo I require more information. Does this law eliminate the CWB? I was under the impression it just made it voluntary in certain parts of the country so it is the same all across canada now.
22 hours ago.Mylo Ross From what i understand the CWB only lost its legislation to be the only buyer of wheat of western cdn farmers. Single desk as its called. The CWB as a corp remains exactly as before.
21 hours ago.Grant Williamson That's not quite accurate. The single-desk means that the CWB was sole dealer (seller) of western Canadian wheat and barley - not a buyer. It was really a collective bargaining agent. Without the single-desk it's nothing but another broker. The CWB as a corp is fundamentally changed by the legislation.
The "new CWB" has lost the single-desk which is its principle value. Also, it is no longer controlled by a farmer elected board of directors and it has lost the authority to order rail cars for the use of farmers. That means everything is on a bid system which means the 2 railways will determine what it costs to move grain and who gets to move it when. Without the CWB individual farmers will be forced to negotiate directly with the railways. That's a huge loss of bargaining power for farmers - going from the group of the CWB to an individual. The alternative for farmers is to have a grain broker or handling company do their negotiating for them but that comes a price.
Brokers and the private trade have to take money out for their profits and shareholders. By law the CWB could not do this, so after it covered its operating cost it still returned more than 98% of sales revenue to farmers. That's gone now. The "new CWB" does not even have to provide an audited statement to farmers.
The only thing Ritz's transition panel got right was when it acknowledged that market power will be taken from farmers and given to other players in the system.
9 hours ago · 3.Mylo Ross Not my words, Wiki's. Perhaps you need to edit the opening paragraph for the CWB's wiki entry which says this:
The Canadian Wheat Board (French: Commission canadienne du blé) was established by the Parliament of Canada on 5 July 1935[1] as a mandatory producer marketing system for wheat and barley in Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and a small part of British Columbia. Although it is often called a monopoly, it is actually instead a monopsony since it is the only buyer of wheat and barley.
When it comes to selling, they are one of many, including right here in Canada. I find this quite interesting. So how did this benefit those farmers out there in the west if they still had to compete with all the sellers of the world?
9 hours ago.Grant Williamson Wiki simply has it wrong. The CWB is not a buyer.
The CWB is the only entity on the world market selling on the basis of quality to industrial scale processors. It's our niche market. But without the single-desk, that's gone. Australia used to sell based on quality when it had its own Wheat Board but their Wheat Board was removed. Now Australian grain isn't a reliable quality and the price premiums Australian farmers used to get are lost.
The benefit to western farmers of having a single-desk on the world market is that our CWB as the exclusive dealer is able to capitalize on our unique brand of grain and build a good reputation for it. It had the resources to do marketing and customer relations on a large scale in 70 countries. Something the individual just can't do (costs, time required, etc.) and something the private trade does not do because they are only interested in margins.
We produce about 20% of the world's grain and the CWB was able to meter that into the market so prices were not collapsed with more supply than the market could handle without lowering prices. This benefited western farmers directly and every other grain producer in the world indirectly by helping to keep prices stable (not great for speculators however).
8 hours ago · 1.Frank Oslo I'm still confused a little. If the CWB was the sole seller of Western Canadian barley and wheat wouldn't it have to be the sole buyer? Isn't part of the argument that all wheat and barley had to be sold to them?
I was under the impression that the elevator companies would be able to ask for trains like they do with canola, am I mistaken?
As far as my math goes Grant 2% on a $250 /tonne commodity means $5.00/tonne cost using the CWB to broker grain. Friends of mine are telling me that they use private brokers to sell grain outside of the board and are charged in the range of $2.00 /tonne.
I guess if you are saying that being able to market huge chunks of wheat into the world market at a time may provide an advantage to the buyers of that wheat I kind of get it.
8 hours ago.Grant Williamson The CWB is a sales agent. It sells grain on behalf of western farmers. It's a contract between myself, as a farmer, and the CWB as my sales agent. The CWB is not really buying my grain.
As to the cost per bushel or per tonne 14 international trade tribunals have examined that question and all of them have found that the CWB returns more money to farmers than the private trade does. This makes sense because the private trade must make a profit for its shareholders. The only shareholders in the CWB are farmers so they get all the profits returned directly to them. A broker doesn't return everything to farmers and they have to deal with the private grain handling companies and railways. They have less bargaining power than the single-desk CWB had.
All companies can ask for trains but it's a question of when and if they get them and their power to negotiate rates. The power to negotiate rates comes from the number of cars the company is ordering. The CWB had a lot of negotiating power because it moved so much grain. Now that power is going to be spread across the every grain handler so they all have less power and farmers aren't represented at all.
It's an advantage to both the seller and the buyer to be able to move large volumes of grain at a time. The buyer pays a premium to get a large quantity of grain that is a consistent quality - that's the quality premium the CWB got for farmers. Without the single-desk that's gone.
7 hours ago · 2.David Falk Hmm, seems that i've been blocked also
2 hours ago.Grant Williamson I can see your posts and you're still commenting. Obviously you haven't been blocked.
2 hours ago.Mylo Ross What do you mean blocked? Are people actually blocked? Come to think of it, it has been kinda one sided for a while now. Why aren't farmers from out there in the west posting?
Grant, over time here many have posted a lot of graphs and discussion about how the CWB averages far less than an open market price. Have they been wrong?
about an hour ago.Mylo Ross If a miller in canada can buy wheat from anyone in the world, how can you possibly say the CWB is the only seller?
about an hour ago.Grant Williamson The CWB is the only seller of high quality western Canadian grain. It's sold based on a certificate of quality and is the only seller to do that. That's why farmers get a quality premium from CWB sales and customers are assured that Canadian grain in their grain product like beer, pasta, bread, etc. is the best quality.
49 minutes ago.Grant Williamson I am a farmer from western Canada and I have used the CWB for many years.
The graphs you mention have all been from private brokers who stand to profit if the single-desk CWB is gone. More importantly, the graphs compare US spot prices with Canadian pooled prices. That's like comparing apples and orange. A spot price is a single price and point in time. A pooled price represents the full the value of the full crop over the year - that takes into account the high prices and the low prices. For me, as a farmer, it means I get the full value of my grain because it is part of a pool that is sold over the whole year. I get to benefit from all the high prices over the whole year. With canola, or other non-board grains, I only get one price one time - I don't get the value over the whole year like I do with a pooled price.
44 minutes ago.
Comment