Ottawa- March 4, 2009- The CWB in a news release on March 3 claims that they can set the record straight on the losses that occurred last year. However,<b>the only thing that the CWB managed to prove with their release is that farmers can not afford to have the CWB do their marketing.</b>
The CWB again reminded farmers that they lost nearly $90 million from their Producer Payment Option programs and $226 million more from other discretionary trading activity. The ugly reality is that farmers lost over a quarter of a billion dollars due to the CWB’s risk management practices last year. That is on top of the $30 million lost the year before.
The more farmers learn about these losses the more it is starting to look like the CWB uses the contingency fund like a carnival shell game. A grand total of $38.7 million in other CWB revenue was shuffled into the contingency fund including interest from the pool accounts. Apparently $25.5 million of the $38.7 million was taken from the CWB pool accounts and shifted directly into the contingency fund. It does not matter how slickly the CWB shuffles the shells, the bottom line is they lost farmers’ money.
These losses need to be fully investigated. The CWB must allow the Auditor General to conduct a full and comprehensive investigation of their disastrous trading activity.
David Anderson, M.P. (Cypress Hills—Grasslands), Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Natural Resources and for the Canadian Wheat Board
The CWB again reminded farmers that they lost nearly $90 million from their Producer Payment Option programs and $226 million more from other discretionary trading activity. The ugly reality is that farmers lost over a quarter of a billion dollars due to the CWB’s risk management practices last year. That is on top of the $30 million lost the year before.
The more farmers learn about these losses the more it is starting to look like the CWB uses the contingency fund like a carnival shell game. A grand total of $38.7 million in other CWB revenue was shuffled into the contingency fund including interest from the pool accounts. Apparently $25.5 million of the $38.7 million was taken from the CWB pool accounts and shifted directly into the contingency fund. It does not matter how slickly the CWB shuffles the shells, the bottom line is they lost farmers’ money.
These losses need to be fully investigated. The CWB must allow the Auditor General to conduct a full and comprehensive investigation of their disastrous trading activity.
David Anderson, M.P. (Cypress Hills—Grasslands), Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Natural Resources and for the Canadian Wheat Board
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