Tories to introduce legislation to end wheat board monopoly
Winnipeg Free Press
Published: Tuesday, January 29, 2008
OTTAWA -- Federal Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz plans to introduce legislation to end the Canadian Wheat Board's monopoly on prairie barley sales.
Mr. Ritz made the announcement Tuesday after a meeting in Ottawa with wheat board officials and barley industry representatives, which the minister called very productive.
The Conservative government has long said that farmers in Western Canada should have the right to sell grain on their own, without the board, which currently has a monopoly on the sale of barley.
The move has been harshly opposed by supporters of the current system. Last summer, a federal court ruled that Ottawa could not change the wheat board's mandate without a full vote of Parliament.
On Tuesday, Mr. Ritz sent the wheat board back to Winnipeg with orders to take what they heard before the board of directors later this week.
He said he's hoping the board will produce a plan to introduce marketing choice for barley producers.
He said the wheat board will support the legislation "if they purport to really represent producers" but said he will introduce legislation regardless, with a view to implementing marketing choice on Aug. 1.
He acknowledged the wheat board's support "would help take the opposition parties' stinger away."
Winnipeg Free Press
Published: Tuesday, January 29, 2008
OTTAWA -- Federal Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz plans to introduce legislation to end the Canadian Wheat Board's monopoly on prairie barley sales.
Mr. Ritz made the announcement Tuesday after a meeting in Ottawa with wheat board officials and barley industry representatives, which the minister called very productive.
The Conservative government has long said that farmers in Western Canada should have the right to sell grain on their own, without the board, which currently has a monopoly on the sale of barley.
The move has been harshly opposed by supporters of the current system. Last summer, a federal court ruled that Ottawa could not change the wheat board's mandate without a full vote of Parliament.
On Tuesday, Mr. Ritz sent the wheat board back to Winnipeg with orders to take what they heard before the board of directors later this week.
He said he's hoping the board will produce a plan to introduce marketing choice for barley producers.
He said the wheat board will support the legislation "if they purport to really represent producers" but said he will introduce legislation regardless, with a view to implementing marketing choice on Aug. 1.
He acknowledged the wheat board's support "would help take the opposition parties' stinger away."
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