Much is being made recently about the failures of 3 special crop dealers recently.
As a consultant for the CGC I spent Hundreds upon Hundreds of hours trying to work this situation into a reliable one for farmers but the gov. will was not there to get the job done.
The Insurance system that was proposed, didn't assure any more payment to farmers than the CGC bond does now...
The same basic accounting system was to be used as is used now for reporting liabilities, so there was no benefit there for coverage assurance.
If the amount the dealer had approved in business liabilities was exceeded, then everyones coverage was pro-rated... down till everyone got a little...
Delivery rules were basically the same as for the bond, so insurance didn't make things simpler regarding how long the farmer had to get a cheque and cash it...
All the voluntary system did was down load the cost of bonding directly to those farmers who were in the insurance program.
The farmers who were not in the insurance program had all the benefits of CGC supervision of all the dealers, but didn't have to pay a cent for it... and on top could just demand cash and be paid or not deliver the next load..., or just deal with a large stable company...
These are the reasons the voluntary insurance system was not implemented:
1. The gov. would not backstop the producer for 100% of covered insured deliveries, and neither would the Insurer EDC.
2. The paper work involved was no less demanding than it was for bonding now, and still demanded a high level of finacial information from the dealer, as the bonding system now.
3. An extra level of fees were going to be charged dealers for licensing in the program, to cover the increased administration the new and expanded CGC licensing and financial reporting depts. there were to be created to administer this new program.
The Legislation was past for the insurance system, and it could have easily been changed to solve the above listed problems but...
The Canadian government didn't find this issue of enough importance to fix it and give farmers reasonable protection...
I hope this adds a little light to the subject, as obviously some farmers have been really hurt by the present system, and just because the Canadian gov. doesn't care...
As a consultant for the CGC I spent Hundreds upon Hundreds of hours trying to work this situation into a reliable one for farmers but the gov. will was not there to get the job done.
The Insurance system that was proposed, didn't assure any more payment to farmers than the CGC bond does now...
The same basic accounting system was to be used as is used now for reporting liabilities, so there was no benefit there for coverage assurance.
If the amount the dealer had approved in business liabilities was exceeded, then everyones coverage was pro-rated... down till everyone got a little...
Delivery rules were basically the same as for the bond, so insurance didn't make things simpler regarding how long the farmer had to get a cheque and cash it...
All the voluntary system did was down load the cost of bonding directly to those farmers who were in the insurance program.
The farmers who were not in the insurance program had all the benefits of CGC supervision of all the dealers, but didn't have to pay a cent for it... and on top could just demand cash and be paid or not deliver the next load..., or just deal with a large stable company...
These are the reasons the voluntary insurance system was not implemented:
1. The gov. would not backstop the producer for 100% of covered insured deliveries, and neither would the Insurer EDC.
2. The paper work involved was no less demanding than it was for bonding now, and still demanded a high level of finacial information from the dealer, as the bonding system now.
3. An extra level of fees were going to be charged dealers for licensing in the program, to cover the increased administration the new and expanded CGC licensing and financial reporting depts. there were to be created to administer this new program.
The Legislation was past for the insurance system, and it could have easily been changed to solve the above listed problems but...
The Canadian government didn't find this issue of enough importance to fix it and give farmers reasonable protection...
I hope this adds a little light to the subject, as obviously some farmers have been really hurt by the present system, and just because the Canadian gov. doesn't care...
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