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    If there's a need will this fill it?

    Articles on Growing Forward 2 and Agristability from The Western Producer


    BY KAREN BRIERE
    REGINA BUREAU
    AgriStability still works for most
    Canadian farmers, even if they
    don’t think so, says a farm income
    program expert.
    And where it doesn’t work, it’s
    because of a poorly understood
    change made in 2013, said Steve
    Funk, farm income programs
    technical director at MNP in Lethbridge.
    Many critics of the changes made
    to Growing Forward 2 focused on
    dropping the payment claim trigger
    from 85 percent of a farm’s
    reference margin to 70 percent,
    suggesting fewer would qualify
    for payments from a program that
    is supposed to help during margin
    declines.
    However, a more complex change
    was made at the same time. Reference
    margins were limited to
    using either the lower of a farm’s
    historic reference margin or
    allowable expenses from the years
    used to calculate that margin.
    This is called reference margin
    limiting and it flew under the
    radar, Funk said.
    That’s where many are getting
    caught, including grain farmers,
    pollinators and maple syrup producers.
    He said farmers could see their
    reference margins were limited
    when they received their assessment
    notices for 2013 AgriStability,
    but don’t really know why.
    “Even with the limiting of reference
    margins, it’s still the first
    program to kick in when there’s
    some type of whole farm disaster
    for a lot of producers,” Funk said.
    “But there are some cases where
    the producers’ margins have been
    limited to such a great extent that
    the program doesn’t kick in in a
    reasonable time.”
    Grain farmers seem to be most
    affected because they have low
    allowable AgriStability expenses
    relative to their reference margins,
    he said.
    MNP uses a computer model to
    show producers how they benefit
    from crop insurance, AgriStability
    and private insurance providers
    such as Global Ag Risk Solutions
    and when each type of coverage
    would kick in.
    The company’s Ag Risk Management
    Projector plugs in the numbers
    for individual operations and
    calculates how the programs
    would work for them.
    The model generally predicts
    AgriStability will provide benefits
    in most situations of low to moderate
    reference margin limiting
    and even in some cases of severe
    margin limiting.
    However, Funk said the margin
    limiting is so severe for some that
    the program won’t work at all.
    Governments changed AgriStability
    because they believed the
    program was “paying into profitability”
    rather than helping farmers
    stabilize their income.
    Even with the changes, it still
    pays into profitability for some
    and moved others who hadn’t
    been close into the profitable category.
    Funk said the 2013 changes
    made a great program only good.
    It pays out first, remains the
    cheapest form of insurance and
    the benefits are still likely to
    exceed costs. However, farmers
    are dropping out because of the
    negativity toward it.
    “I see that as a huge problem.”
    Funk would like to see the issue
    resolved soon.
    Organizations such as a Manitoba
    task force have already
    begun reviewing Growing Forward
    2 and planning for Growing
    Forward 3, and a formal review is
    to begin next year.
    Funk has met with federal agriculture
    minister Gerry Ritz, the
    Canadian Federation of Agriculture
    and others to demonstrate
    the model and plans further discussions
    with federal agriculture
    officials.
    An Agriculture Canada spokesperson
    said it’s too early to assess
    the full impact of reference margin
    limiting because processing of
    2013 applications is just finishing.
    “However, it is clear that AgriStability
    continues to play an important
    role in risk management for
    producers with over $324 million
    in payments to date since the
    introduction of the new suite for
    the 2013 year,” the spokesperson
    said an emailed statement.
    Ottawa administers AgriStability
    in Manitoba, where payments
    in 2013 were $21.5 million. Saskatchewan
    and Alberta administer
    their own programs and paid out
    $71.8 million and $52 million,
    respectively.
    Funk said producers and their
    organizations have to let the federal
    government know what they
    think about programs.
    Federal officials generally analyze
    data in aggregate and need to
    be aware of how the programs
    affect individual farmers.
    “They need to come to the table
    with their position and some way
    of demonstrating whether or not
    the program is meeting their
    objectives,” he said.
    “They need a voice to adequately
    explain this to the government.”
    The negativity toward reference
    margin limiting has likely caused
    some to drop out.
    “Even though there is a drought,
    they’re not going to be getting a
    payment,” Funk said. “For those
    that stayed in, it is going to be a big
    test for the program this year.”
    karen.briere@producer.comBY KAREN BRIERE
    REGINA BUREAU
    AgriStability still works for most
    Canadian farmers, even if they
    don’t think so, says a farm income
    program expert.
    And where it doesn’t work, it’s
    because of a poorly understood
    change made in 2013, said Steve
    Funk, farm income programs
    technical director at MNP in Lethbridge.
    Many critics of the changes made
    to Growing Forward 2 focused on
    dropping the payment claim trigger
    from 85 percent of a farm’s
    reference margin to 70 percent,
    suggesting fewer would qualify
    for payments from a program that
    is supposed to help during margin
    declines.
    However, a more complex change
    was made at the same time. Reference
    margins were limited to
    using either the lower of a farm’s
    historic reference margin or
    allowable expenses from the years
    used to calculate that margin.
    This is called reference margin
    limiting and it flew under the
    radar, Funk said.
    That’s where many are getting
    caught, including grain farmers,
    pollinators and maple syrup producers.
    He said farmers could see their
    reference margins were limited
    when they received their assessment
    notices for 2013 AgriStability,
    but don’t really know why.
    “Even with the limiting of reference
    margins, it’s still the first
    program to kick in when there’s
    some type of whole farm disaster
    for a lot of producers,” Funk said.
    “But there are some cases where
    the producers’ margins have been
    limited to such a great extent that
    the program doesn’t kick in in a
    reasonable time.”
    Grain farmers seem to be most
    affected because they have low
    allowable AgriStability expenses
    relative to their reference margins,
    he said.
    MNP uses a computer model to
    show producers how they benefit
    from crop insurance, AgriStability
    and private insurance providers
    such as Global Ag Risk Solutions
    and when each type of coverage
    would kick in.
    The company’s Ag Risk Management
    Projector plugs in the numbers
    for individual operations and
    calculates how the programs
    would work for them.
    The model generally predicts
    AgriStability will provide benefits
    in most situations of low to moderate
    reference margin limiting
    and even in some cases of severe
    margin limiting.
    However, Funk said the margin
    limiting is so severe for some that
    the program won’t work at all.
    Governments changed AgriStability
    because they believed the
    program was “paying into profitability”
    rather than helping farmers
    stabilize their income.
    Even with the changes, it still
    pays into profitability for some
    and moved others who hadn’t
    been close into the profitable category.
    Funk said the 2013 changes
    made a great program only good.
    It pays out first, remains the
    cheapest form of insurance and
    the benefits are still likely to
    exceed costs. However, farmers
    are dropping out because of the
    negativity toward it.
    “I see that as a huge problem.”
    Funk would like to see the issue
    resolved soon.
    Organizations such as a Manitoba
    task force have already
    begun reviewing Growing Forward
    2 and planning for Growing
    Forward 3, and a formal review is
    to begin next year.
    Funk has met with federal agriculture
    minister Gerry Ritz, the
    Canadian Federation of Agriculture
    and others to demonstrate
    the model and plans further discussions
    with federal agriculture
    officials.
    An Agriculture Canada spokesperson
    said it’s too early to assess
    the full impact of reference margin
    limiting because processing of
    2013 applications is just finishing.
    “However, it is clear that AgriStability
    continues to play an important
    role in risk management for
    producers with over $324 million
    in payments to date since the
    introduction of the new suite for
    the 2013 year,” the spokesperson
    said an emailed statement.
    Ottawa administers AgriStability
    in Manitoba, where payments
    in 2013 were $21.5 million. Saskatchewan
    and Alberta administer
    their own programs and paid out
    $71.8 million and $52 million,
    respectively.
    Funk said producers and their
    organizations have to let the federal
    government know what they
    think about programs.
    Federal officials generally analyze
    data in aggregate and need to
    be aware of how the programs
    affect individual farmers.
    “They need to come to the table
    with their position and some way
    of demonstrating whether or not
    the program is meeting their
    objectives,” he said.
    “They need a voice to adequately
    explain this to the government.”
    The negativity toward reference
    margin limiting has likely caused
    some to drop out.
    “Even though there is a drought,
    they’re not going to be getting a
    payment,” Funk said. “For those
    that stayed in, it is going to be a big
    test for the program this year.”
    karen.briere@producer.com


    BY KAREN BRIERE
    REGINA BUREAU
    CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I. —
    Canadian agriculture ministers
    and farm leaders are turning their
    attention to what a new agricultural
    policy framework should contain.
    It’s not yet clear how changes
    made to business risk management
    (BRM) programs for the
    2013-18 Growing Forward 2 program
    have affected farmers.
    However, there is widespread
    discontent with AgriStability and
    many farmers claim they have no
    hope of payments because of cuts
    to the program in 2013.
    A Manitoba BRM task force is
    gathering information from farmers
    in that province and the Canadian
    Federation of Agriculture has
    a committee working on it as well.
    CFA president Ron Bonnett said
    he is curious to see how AgriStability
    performs for those affected by
    drought this year.
    Federal agriculture minister
    Gerry Ritz said officials continually
    analyze data from AgriStability as it
    comes in but it’s too soon to say
    exactly how the changes affected
    farmers. A more formal review of
    the policy framework begins next
    year.
    He said crop insurance is the first
    line of defence and AgriStability is
    there to cover drops in five-year
    average incomes.
    While many focus on the reduction
    in the payment trigger from 85
    percent of the five-year reference
    margin to 70 percent, Ritz said they
    don’t talk about the improvement
    in negative margin coverage.
    “That’s the most important for
    guys that got caught in a flood or a
    drought and now a drought on top
    of a flood,” he said. “That’s where
    they’ll really do an analysis.”
    Ritz also said there is about $2 billion
    in AgriInvest that farmers can
    access if they need immediate help.
    “If they need to buy feed or whatever,
    they’ve got that pool of money
    there,” he said. “We’ve eased up on
    the triggers and what it takes to trigger
    that money out.”
    The minister added that constant
    analysis of GF2 will lead to a clearer
    picture of what GF3 should look
    like.
    Saskatchewan agriculture minister
    Lyle Stewart, who was unhappy
    with the 2013 changes, said the
    weather challenges of 2015 will test
    the program and get more people
    thinking about the future.
    “I had to accept the fact that other
    governments were not prepared to
    fund AgriStability at its previous
    level,” Stewart said.
    “Clearly the coverage won’t be
    what it would have been before
    those changes were made. I didn’t
    like it at the time and I might still
    not like it but it’s the new reality.”
    Stewart said everyone gets a vote
    on the programs, including provinces
    where agriculture might not
    be as important to the economy as
    it is in Saskatchewan.
    “We’ll do the best we can and try
    to have the programs in place that
    will serve the needs of our producers,”
    he said.
    Bonnett said programs will always
    need fine-tuning to deal with
    changing market conditions or climatic
    events, but having frameworks
    in place has alleviated the
    stress of asking governments for ad
    hoc payments to deal with crises.
    Farmers no longer stage tractor rallies
    or protests to get help.
    “With the five-year windows, at
    least you know what the rules are,”
    he said.
    CFA says programs should stabilize
    income, provide disaster assistance,
    provide production insurance
    and offer companion programs.
    Ritz said that’s what farmers have.
    “The trick with BRM programming
    is one will never do it. It takes
    a suite of programming and we
    have that.”
    karen.briere@producer.com


    Articles from "The Western Producer" August 13, 2015 Edition.

    #2
    It works for mnp because they designed it for the federal government.

    Because it's just too hard to calculate your average gross income off a quarter of land over X number of years and expect a reasonable support program.

    Comment


      #3
      My apologies for the hard to read format. Just copied and pasted and that's what I got.

      Sorry.

      Comment


        #4
        Who is collecting. They are claiming that they paid out for the 2013 year but for most that was the best crop ever. Who is collecting and how? The other questions is how much money do those payouts represent relative to premiums collected?

        Comment


          #5
          Could be some who did not have a good crop and chose to sell at very worst time.
          Still hearing that western grain farmers lost five billion over lack of movement.
          Take it with a grain of salt.

          Comment


            #6
            Hopalong. I don't think it matters when people decided to sell. Isn't it Producer's production multiplied by the "program's" value for the commodity when they do the calculations for the margin?

            I know of no one who has recieved benefits. What about the flooded out guys?

            Comment


              #7
              Hard to imagine that anyone would qualify for 2013 2014. Likely to get it all clawed back when error is found. Now I can see this year, a probability of a payment in areas with 6 bushel crops where reference margins are high. Should trigger, if it's anykind of program, but then take out the income from crop insurance, hail insurance and your calf-crop and voila figus mockem for you.

              Comment


                #8
                MNP the accounting firm that sent out CWB ballots to dead farmers thinks that everyone should hire them to enroll in Agristability. Shocking. In other news, water is still wet. Hope those articles were printed on soft paper at least.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Even this year, I don't think it is bad enough here to trigger. I'd rather make it on my own anyway but would be grateful if I needed it badly enough it was there to do some good. I think a producer has to be in a REAL world of hurt for this to trigger.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    My question is. Does your accountant really have to cost the same per hour as your lawyer??
                    2016 will tell if agstability pays.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Tucker, if you know anything about elections or lotteries etc this list is provided by the company, not the firm that sends out the ballots or tabulates the results.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Richard, I know they would not have made those lists. That voter list was obviously fraudulent and a reputable company would have refused to be involved with that joke of a referendum. MNP will NEVER get my business because of that.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Tucker, you have that right and I sure don't care what MNP does, but why hold this firm accountable for a list that may be fraudulent as you are stating?

                          How would they know who has passed on or not?

                          You know as well as I do that permit number can be inactive for a number of years. Mine is a good example. Never sold any grain through the wheat board for a number of years prior to this election or removal of the board monopoly.

                          If the post office agent puts someones mail in your box do you switch post offices?

                          Stars, children's wish and roughrider lotteries had sent addressed mailings for tickets to my deceased parent for a couple years. Doesn't mean I don't support them going forward

                          But maybe for you its different

                          Comment


                            #14
                            So tell me why Ritz says it works the sask minister knows its horseshit and yet nearly every post on here has no idea what to expect and people are still worried if they do get a drivvling they may have to pay it back.

                            The only thing bankable about GOING BACKWARDS programs is we have an ag minister that either is misleading everyone or is a complete retard. imo
                            but hey elect them again right? and changes for the better will happen, how much has rail bullshit elevator grain seed bullshit cost all of us.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              AgStability easy to fill out yourself. Who needs an accountant?

                              Comment

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