Originally posted by saskcanfarmer
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Originally posted by wmoebis View PostGrading or quality control? Every country in the world has quality control. Grades are rather redundant now but we still need trained people to be able to assess quality or even run the equipment that assessed it for us. Unless we think customers are going to buy damaged and diseased product the same as they will be there quality.
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Originally posted by saskcanfarmer View PostShould farmers pay CGC triple or more for them to do something that numerous other companies use can do?
How about bonding?
Is your job based on having the GGC antiquated grading system around? Or is that job over?
https://www.ams.usda.gov/publications/content/official-grain-inspection-weighing-system
And no I have no dog in the fight but I do know the value of our quality control system.
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Originally posted by wmoebis View PostHow does your biggest competition (USA) handle quality control? Not a whole lot different only thing they don't have grades they still have visual inspection but they also have universal training.
https://www.ams.usda.gov/publications/content/official-grain-inspection-weighing-system
And no I have no dog in the fight but I do know the value of our quality control system.
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Originally posted by saskcanfarmer View PostTechnology/AI can virtually eliminate any and all human contact with the sample.
If farmers want to wait until every sample goes to a lab for quality assessment that is fine. Not sure we have the lab system set up to handle all those samples or the trained staff to run them but I'm sure it is doable. And I'm not against it but who runs and pays for these the labs?
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Originally posted by bucket View Postsaskwheat hired some former CWB guy to write something about the CGC / canada grain act...
https://www.ourcommons.ca/Content/Committee/391/AGRI/Reports/RP2564356/agrirp05/agrirp05-e.pdf
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The bit about the CGC being in conflict because it is both a regulator and a service provider is misdirection from the grain companies. The service it supplies is to the producer and the buyer, and only incidentally to the terminal company. To them it does not have to be seen as anything other than a regulator.
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Originally posted by CptnObvious View PostThe bit about the CGC being in conflict because it is both a regulator and a service provider is misdirection from the grain companies. The service it supplies is to the producer and the buyer, and only incidentally to the terminal company. To them it does not have to be seen as anything other than a regulator.
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