https://www.manitobacooperator.ca/news-opinion/news/in-or-out-kap-wants-to-know-pedersens-stance-on-agristability-proposal/ https://www.manitobacooperator.ca/news-opinion/news/in-or-out-kap-wants-to-know-pedersens-stance-on-agristability-proposal/
In a Jan. 22 letter obtained by the Manitoba Co-operator, Pedersen wrote to KAP and 19 other Manitoba farm groups that federal Agriculture Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau’s two proposed changes to AgriStability — scrapping the reference margin limit and boosting program coverage to 80 per cent from 70 — would not fix the flawed farm income support program.
Pedersen was responding to a Dec. 17 letter from KAP and Manitoba’s other farm groups. Their letter was sent “to strongly encourage†the Manitoba government to endorse Bibeau’s AgriStability improvements.
The federal government is offering to put up 60 per cent of the money needed to help make AgriStability a better program and provinces like Manitoba haven’t agreed to provide their 40 per cent, Campbell said.
“To jeopardize that assistance and new federal money I think really sets the tone of this (Manitoba) government’s appreciation of agriculture,†he said.
In 2019-20 the Manitoba government spent $34 million on AgriStability. Pedersen has said the proposed changes would cost the provincial government $15 million more a year. That’s just 0.1 per cent of the provincial budget, Campbell said.
In a Jan. 22 letter obtained by the Manitoba Co-operator, Pedersen wrote to KAP and 19 other Manitoba farm groups that federal Agriculture Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau’s two proposed changes to AgriStability — scrapping the reference margin limit and boosting program coverage to 80 per cent from 70 — would not fix the flawed farm income support program.
Pedersen was responding to a Dec. 17 letter from KAP and Manitoba’s other farm groups. Their letter was sent “to strongly encourage†the Manitoba government to endorse Bibeau’s AgriStability improvements.
The federal government is offering to put up 60 per cent of the money needed to help make AgriStability a better program and provinces like Manitoba haven’t agreed to provide their 40 per cent, Campbell said.
“To jeopardize that assistance and new federal money I think really sets the tone of this (Manitoba) government’s appreciation of agriculture,†he said.
In 2019-20 the Manitoba government spent $34 million on AgriStability. Pedersen has said the proposed changes would cost the provincial government $15 million more a year. That’s just 0.1 per cent of the provincial budget, Campbell said.
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