At a recent event I was talking to some out of province pulse growers and they were talking about how in their province, Manitoba (I'm from SK.) the pulse levy was less .05% and refundable while in Sask we are 1% non refundable.
some stats from their website FAQ
www.saskpulse.com
1984 voted in non-refundable checkoff
20,000 growers
1984-2004 25million in check off dollars
in 2003 study done by Richard Gray and Terry Scott(this scares me)
. How does the pulse check-off compare to our competitors?
Sask Pulse Growers: 1.0% non-refundable
North Dakota: 1.0% refundable
Idaho: 1.0% non-refundable
Washington: 1.0% non-refundable
Australia (all crops): 1.0% non-refundable
Alberta: 1.0% refundable
Manitoba: 0.5% refundable
The goals of Pulse Canada are to:
1. Explore potential markets and conduct promotional and servicing activities conducive to the expansion of pulse export markets globally.
2. Act as a network of market information and intelligence.
3. Act on international market access and trade barrier issues.
4. Provide a signal to Canadian researchers based on market demand.
5. Take a leadership role in the coordination and expansion of pulse research on a national and international scale.
6. Be the voice of the Canadian pulse industry.
7. Lead the sector in market readiness initiatives.
Now the question is is this a model for all Canadian grains? or
should I be mad about having to belong to another group that forces involvement and financial commitment IE:CWB,APAS. Does the same hold true for the Canola checkoff as well?
Sask pulse is also a member of other umbrella groups like Canada pulse and Canada special crops how many staff do I pay for?
more to follow!
Is the emoticon I picked the one that says what the H__L?
some stats from their website FAQ
www.saskpulse.com
1984 voted in non-refundable checkoff
20,000 growers
1984-2004 25million in check off dollars
in 2003 study done by Richard Gray and Terry Scott(this scares me)
. How does the pulse check-off compare to our competitors?
Sask Pulse Growers: 1.0% non-refundable
North Dakota: 1.0% refundable
Idaho: 1.0% non-refundable
Washington: 1.0% non-refundable
Australia (all crops): 1.0% non-refundable
Alberta: 1.0% refundable
Manitoba: 0.5% refundable
The goals of Pulse Canada are to:
1. Explore potential markets and conduct promotional and servicing activities conducive to the expansion of pulse export markets globally.
2. Act as a network of market information and intelligence.
3. Act on international market access and trade barrier issues.
4. Provide a signal to Canadian researchers based on market demand.
5. Take a leadership role in the coordination and expansion of pulse research on a national and international scale.
6. Be the voice of the Canadian pulse industry.
7. Lead the sector in market readiness initiatives.
Now the question is is this a model for all Canadian grains? or
should I be mad about having to belong to another group that forces involvement and financial commitment IE:CWB,APAS. Does the same hold true for the Canola checkoff as well?
Sask pulse is also a member of other umbrella groups like Canada pulse and Canada special crops how many staff do I pay for?
more to follow!
Is the emoticon I picked the one that says what the H__L?
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