What about the young guys?
As an inbred institution, the CWB seems only intent upon birthing out a new generation of adherents focused on shipping out wholesale grain to third world countries for less than the cost of production.
There are 40% minority-voice Choice farmers who have pushed hard for change, and for whom the Government institution Wheat Board could care less about and won't give the time of day.
These farmers, especially a lot of the younger ones, have doggedly pursued change, any change...asking for even a set number of bushels out of the monopoly/year, or a producer signout guarantee for five years (or forever), or x number of producers out the singledoor per year, first come first serve, but they are met with nothing except a Board that is absolutely hostile to any single-desk change.
What are we doing to our young farmers?
The CWB has been willing to accomodate feed mills,and large corporations, but unwilling to listen to over 40% of the farmers in the DA, and meantime, the meetings proliferated with Wheat Board hats pulled firmly down over hearing aids crying for the days when their fathers hauled grain in the old wagon to the elevator, are having an effect on the young people in, or looking at, farming.
It's not enticing. And not to the wives either. How many young men and women have left the farm?
Three things can happen that you might want to think about:
1. New faces will simply not enter.
2. Fresh entrants will exit.
3. New entrants will confront and force change through civil disobedience, incivility, and hostility.
None wll make your land prices soar.
The CWB as an institution is not prepared to make one iota of change. Their masked changes, all mean one thing...continue selling to the CWB so they can hire more staff,and so the accredited agencies can run more volumes of Board grains through their systems to make their payroll.
What about our own?
We need the brightest and the best entering farming, but in order to attract them, old farmers have to bite the bullet, and bite their tongue, and move over and let the young folks in the door.
The CWB as an institution has proven they are not up to change, the future, or moving forward, so it is up to the pension-generation to help our own childern move towards the future, and not force them to live in the past.
Give young farmers some tools to work with. Give them a little choice.
Parsley
As an inbred institution, the CWB seems only intent upon birthing out a new generation of adherents focused on shipping out wholesale grain to third world countries for less than the cost of production.
There are 40% minority-voice Choice farmers who have pushed hard for change, and for whom the Government institution Wheat Board could care less about and won't give the time of day.
These farmers, especially a lot of the younger ones, have doggedly pursued change, any change...asking for even a set number of bushels out of the monopoly/year, or a producer signout guarantee for five years (or forever), or x number of producers out the singledoor per year, first come first serve, but they are met with nothing except a Board that is absolutely hostile to any single-desk change.
What are we doing to our young farmers?
The CWB has been willing to accomodate feed mills,and large corporations, but unwilling to listen to over 40% of the farmers in the DA, and meantime, the meetings proliferated with Wheat Board hats pulled firmly down over hearing aids crying for the days when their fathers hauled grain in the old wagon to the elevator, are having an effect on the young people in, or looking at, farming.
It's not enticing. And not to the wives either. How many young men and women have left the farm?
Three things can happen that you might want to think about:
1. New faces will simply not enter.
2. Fresh entrants will exit.
3. New entrants will confront and force change through civil disobedience, incivility, and hostility.
None wll make your land prices soar.
The CWB as an institution is not prepared to make one iota of change. Their masked changes, all mean one thing...continue selling to the CWB so they can hire more staff,and so the accredited agencies can run more volumes of Board grains through their systems to make their payroll.
What about our own?
We need the brightest and the best entering farming, but in order to attract them, old farmers have to bite the bullet, and bite their tongue, and move over and let the young folks in the door.
The CWB as an institution has proven they are not up to change, the future, or moving forward, so it is up to the pension-generation to help our own childern move towards the future, and not force them to live in the past.
Give young farmers some tools to work with. Give them a little choice.
Parsley
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