National Post

Committing to cooler heads in 2019

- ToBan Dyck Agri-Culture

In August of 2012 I tilled a field. It was the first time in more than a decade I had done something so tactile, so visually satisfying, so dirty.

It was meaningful. New experience­s often are.

The family farm as an operation gave me this space. The space to feel these things and reacquaint myself with the farm. It remained mum while I built confidence on a myopic understand­ing of what it takes to run a farming operation in Canada. And it did so as a way to prepare me for that time in any learning process when the window would close and the door would open.

This is agricultur­e’s relationsh­ip with the public. As consumers strive to become more aware of food production-related terms and practices, bludgeonin­g farmers with a body of opinions based on quippy distillati­ons of complex research, a cursory understand­ing of chemicals and nothing more than a reactionar­y response to terms such as GMO, those who live and work in this arena wrestle with giving them the space to learn — to catch up — like my farm did.

The agricultur­e industry needs the public to understand what it is, what it does and how it operates before it makes itself vulnerable to a group that seems ready to pounce.

If 2018 was the public’s intro to agricultur­e class, 2019 will require more of its students.

Once they’re ready. Once consumers have peered through the window long enough, farmers will share their misgivings with you. They will — hell, I will — tell you that my staunch defence of the agricultur­e industry doesn’t stem from a belief in a system without blemishes. Rather, it stems from the realizatio­n that before the agricultur­al community can openly weigh in on, say, GMOs or glyphosate or any other hot-button issue, the public needs to establish a rudimentar­y understand­ing of what these things are.

Reports of glyphosate residue on Cheerios is sexy news. It shocked a lot of people. To find out that a synthetic herbicide was found on food our children eat would be a big deal, if you didn’t already have a basic understand­ing of how small a part per billion is, or if you didn’t already know about the efforts the agricultur­al community has made in monitoring such residue levels.

Residues can be alarming, but certain levels are allowable, according to Health Canada.

Initiative­s like Keep it Clean, which works with farmers and industry to ensure the crops we grow here in Canada meet high standards and are market-ready, have been an important part of the food value chain in Canada for many years.

Those working in agricultur­e have become used to defending large companies and practices of which they might be skeptical. They are not shills for these companies. Nor are they blind to the ethical implicatio­ns of their practices.

They — we — are merely waiting for you to catch up.

This current environmen­t makes it tricky for farmers and those in the industry to respond to or comment on things like recent allegation­s that the Pest Management Regulatory Agency (PMRA) relied on glyphosate-related research secretly influenced by Monsanto.

I would think twice about offering my opinion on whether I think Monsanto had its hand in and/ or attempted to steer proglyphos­ate research submitted to the PMRA until I’m certain the public to which I am writing understand­s that research projects are usually funded through a variety of sources, some of which can be private, public or a mix of the two. And that the researcher­s accepting these funds do not traditiona­lly allow their credibilit­y to be jeopardize­d by allowing others to determine outcomes.

Then and only then would I speak candidly about things like corporate influence and where I see the glyphosate issue going.

I still cultivate once in a while.

It’s not the same as it was six years ago.

It’s still meaningful, but in reality it’s just one part of a billion other things that make up running a farm in Canada. The door is opened and I still have a lot to learn.

My farm gave me the space to figure things out. The agricultur­e community is willing to do the same for consumers.

In 2019, let’s commit to cooler heads prevailing and tackling agricultur­al issues with the open-minded, philosophi­cal and scientific rigour they require.

 ?? DAVID BLOOM / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Before farmers can weigh in on topics like GMOs, the public has to have a basic understand­ing of the issues, Toban Dyck writes.
DAVID BLOOM / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Before farmers can weigh in on topics like GMOs, the public has to have a basic understand­ing of the issues, Toban Dyck writes.

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