oneoff,
Decades long before organics was even
commonly recognized as a production method,
the CWB did indeed punish organics with
unreasonably priced buybacks. There was no
such thing as a 'sweet deal' in the good old days.
Initially, the CWB openly spurned organic sales
and there was zero support or sympathy for any
farmer opening up a new maket.
Once Manitoba producers began servicing the
lucrative Warburton contract, available to only the
insiders, (much like fancy Wheat Board signs
were available to encumbents but not available to
the Manitoba-kid Penner running in a Wheat
Board election) the CWB did indeed begin to,
shall we say, quietly negotiate the price of a
buyback, under the desk.
I filed away some daily CWB trucks issued to the
corporations, and avowed I would not expose
them, ....these trucks were aka buyback pricelists
that corps had to abide by....with comparative
buyback costs for the same grade on the same
day and one could see them varying wildly....a
proven way to silence any one-time brave-bastard
who asked the CWB any of the three forbidden
buyback questions---- "Why?" or "What?" or
"Who?"
Corps and organics and conventional farmers
were essentially on the CWB enemy list. Seed
growers were not.
1.Initially.....organics couldnt export. Period.
2. Then organics exported....but with ultra high
buybacks. Sometimes they were so high, the sale
stopped.
3. Then organics exported at reduced buyback
rate, as the CWB took over marketing organics.
At every opportunity. the organic industry fought
equally for organic farmers AND conventional
farmers to enjoy the same buybackrates that seed
growers have enjoyed since seed growers began.
You see, oneoff....the seed growers have never
had to do a buyback on exported seed. Period..
Learn your history, oneoff. I had to live it. And pay
for it. Pars
Decades long before organics was even
commonly recognized as a production method,
the CWB did indeed punish organics with
unreasonably priced buybacks. There was no
such thing as a 'sweet deal' in the good old days.
Initially, the CWB openly spurned organic sales
and there was zero support or sympathy for any
farmer opening up a new maket.
Once Manitoba producers began servicing the
lucrative Warburton contract, available to only the
insiders, (much like fancy Wheat Board signs
were available to encumbents but not available to
the Manitoba-kid Penner running in a Wheat
Board election) the CWB did indeed begin to,
shall we say, quietly negotiate the price of a
buyback, under the desk.
I filed away some daily CWB trucks issued to the
corporations, and avowed I would not expose
them, ....these trucks were aka buyback pricelists
that corps had to abide by....with comparative
buyback costs for the same grade on the same
day and one could see them varying wildly....a
proven way to silence any one-time brave-bastard
who asked the CWB any of the three forbidden
buyback questions---- "Why?" or "What?" or
"Who?"
Corps and organics and conventional farmers
were essentially on the CWB enemy list. Seed
growers were not.
1.Initially.....organics couldnt export. Period.
2. Then organics exported....but with ultra high
buybacks. Sometimes they were so high, the sale
stopped.
3. Then organics exported at reduced buyback
rate, as the CWB took over marketing organics.
At every opportunity. the organic industry fought
equally for organic farmers AND conventional
farmers to enjoy the same buybackrates that seed
growers have enjoyed since seed growers began.
You see, oneoff....the seed growers have never
had to do a buyback on exported seed. Period..
Learn your history, oneoff. I had to live it. And pay
for it. Pars
Comment