There is sure some heavy debate going on at the CWB over whether or not to have a dual marketing system and follow the guidelines set out by the SPC earlier this month.
As could be expected, you have some of the board members that are dead set against relaxing the rules somewhat and others who want to at least give it a chance. The whole issue over whether we need the CWB or not has raged on for many years now.
What is the harm in seeing if a dual system will work? What are these CWB directors so afraid of? If the system were working and producers were making money, they wouldn't have a problem with it, would they?
At one point in time, the CWB maybe made sense, but like so many other things that were started during different times, they tend to have lost their effectiveness and should somehow be changed to fit the current (and possibly) future situations.
If we are making a move at the federal and provincial levels towards value-adding, how can that be done in the grain sector when there is just single desk selling and all these rules set out by the CWB? If we want producers to change their way of thinking, then the rest of the system has to change to accommodate what we want to happen in other areas. No sense in having one thing without the other - it just will not work.
Maybe the time has come to see some of these old institutions make changes that reflect the current situation and not deal with things the way they happened 30 years ago.
Not everyone will want to market their own commodity, so there will be a chance for these entities to be around...they won't have to go entirely, just deal with the new realities.
As could be expected, you have some of the board members that are dead set against relaxing the rules somewhat and others who want to at least give it a chance. The whole issue over whether we need the CWB or not has raged on for many years now.
What is the harm in seeing if a dual system will work? What are these CWB directors so afraid of? If the system were working and producers were making money, they wouldn't have a problem with it, would they?
At one point in time, the CWB maybe made sense, but like so many other things that were started during different times, they tend to have lost their effectiveness and should somehow be changed to fit the current (and possibly) future situations.
If we are making a move at the federal and provincial levels towards value-adding, how can that be done in the grain sector when there is just single desk selling and all these rules set out by the CWB? If we want producers to change their way of thinking, then the rest of the system has to change to accommodate what we want to happen in other areas. No sense in having one thing without the other - it just will not work.
Maybe the time has come to see some of these old institutions make changes that reflect the current situation and not deal with things the way they happened 30 years ago.
Not everyone will want to market their own commodity, so there will be a chance for these entities to be around...they won't have to go entirely, just deal with the new realities.
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