I would like to openly question Tom on the volume of feed grain being shipped off of the prairies and into the US through this agreement. My understanding of the EMF agreement is that it allows an Export Licence to be filled out, by the shipper, without reference to volume of grain sold or price. In contrast, an individual farmer has to disclose that information to the CWB when engaging in a buyback to export to the US.
Secondly, the enforcement and regulation of this agreement concerns me.The terms of the agreement under section "(e)" require the feed company to retain samples for 3 months after shipping. CWB reps can inspect those samples on request. Not to imply that anyone is cheating but.... there is no mechanism here to guarantee the sample provided is the product shipped. How is the CWB controlling slippage in this instance ? Are inspections of shipment and samples being taken at ports of entry? How often does the CWB actually check to verify the qualification of feeds being shipped?
Tom you have indicated that farmers are eligible for "this as well". Please clarify, is "this" referring specifically to the EMF? My understanding of the EMF is you have to be a licenced feed processor registered with Agriculture Canada to qualify.Am I wrong?
You have not giving proper justification for implimentation of this agreement. Farmers are questioning why this agreement has been in place since 1996 and is only now coming into the publics' eyes.Until last summer, even directors were uncertain of this deals existance and purpose. Please rest our fears!
Finally, there is some confusion out there as to whether or not the grain exported under the EMF has to go through the buyback process. Some adamantly believe that this grain enters the pooling account. My understanding, is the EMF replaces the need for a buyback and on the export licence "As per EMF" appears in lieu of buyback terms. Am I right, or just another farmer that doesn't understand?
Secondly, the enforcement and regulation of this agreement concerns me.The terms of the agreement under section "(e)" require the feed company to retain samples for 3 months after shipping. CWB reps can inspect those samples on request. Not to imply that anyone is cheating but.... there is no mechanism here to guarantee the sample provided is the product shipped. How is the CWB controlling slippage in this instance ? Are inspections of shipment and samples being taken at ports of entry? How often does the CWB actually check to verify the qualification of feeds being shipped?
Tom you have indicated that farmers are eligible for "this as well". Please clarify, is "this" referring specifically to the EMF? My understanding of the EMF is you have to be a licenced feed processor registered with Agriculture Canada to qualify.Am I wrong?
You have not giving proper justification for implimentation of this agreement. Farmers are questioning why this agreement has been in place since 1996 and is only now coming into the publics' eyes.Until last summer, even directors were uncertain of this deals existance and purpose. Please rest our fears!
Finally, there is some confusion out there as to whether or not the grain exported under the EMF has to go through the buyback process. Some adamantly believe that this grain enters the pooling account. My understanding, is the EMF replaces the need for a buyback and on the export licence "As per EMF" appears in lieu of buyback terms. Am I right, or just another farmer that doesn't understand?
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