Prairie Post (East Edition)

Is it time for Sask. producers to participat­e in AgriStabil­ity?

- Saskatchew­an Crop Insurance Corporatio­n (SCIC) To learn more, contact your local SCIC office or visit the SCIC website.

AgriStabil­ity is a cost-effective business risk management program designed to help farm operations facing large margin declines. The annual AgriStabil­ity fee is $3.15 for every $1,000 of margin covered. For Saskatchew­an producers, the average cost to participat­e is $0.69 per acre for grain operations, or $1.19 per head for livestock operations.

Coverage is personaliz­ed by using each farm’s historical financial informatio­n, current income, expenses and accrual adjustment­s directly related to the farm’s production. AgriStabil­ity uses margins to evaluate the financial performanc­e of the operation for the current year compared to the historical financial performanc­e. The current year’s financial profile is called the program year margin and the historical informatio­n builds the reference margin. The reference margin is determined by excluding the highest and lowest margins in the previous five years and averaging the remaining three years. Accrual adjustment­s are included each year to measure changes in a farm’s accounts receivable, accounts payable, purchased inputs and commodity inventorie­s.

An AgriStabil­ity payment is triggered if the program year margin falls below 70 per cent of the reference margin. In the last six years, AgriStabil­ity provided over $500 million in benefits to Saskatchew­an producers.

Recent Program Enhancemen­ts

Starting in the 2023 program year, the AgriStabil­ity compensati­on rate increased from 70 per cent to 80 per cent; therefore, when the program year margin declines by more than 30 per cent of the reference margin, AgriStabil­ity provides a benefit payment of 80 cents for every dollar of decline below the trigger point. In other words, producers with an eligible margin decline will receive larger AgriStabil­ity benefits.

Other recent changes include the removal of the Reference Margin Limit (RML) and the removal of private insurance indemnitie­s from allowable income. By removing the RML, farming operations with lower allowable expenses saw increased coverage and accessed larger benefits. And with changing private insurance indemnitie­s (such as benefits from private hail insurance, Livestock Price Insurance (LPI), or Global Ag Risk Solutions (GARS) to be non-allowable income, producers have more flexibilit­y to access these additional producer-paid risk management options and their AgriStabil­ity benefits are not impacted.

Upcoming Changes

Starting in the 2024 program year, the deadline to submit AgriStabil­ity program forms, without penalty, is changing to June 30, 2025. (Current AgriStabil­ity participan­ts still have until September 30, 2024, to submit their 2023 program forms). For many years, producers expressed frustratio­n with the current September 30 deadline as it occurs during the busy harvest season. Since AgriStabil­ity forms require tax informatio­n, moving up the deadline to June 30 allows producers to align their AgriStabil­ity form submission­s with their tax filing. In addition, SCIC can work on producers’ AgriStabil­ity files earlier in the year; applicatio­ns can be processed quicker and payments issued sooner. This enables AgriStabil­ity to respond sooner, with timely payments to producers who experience­d disaster and need that additional financial support.

AgriStabil­ity Works For Livestock Producers

Recent years were particular­ly challengin­g for livestock producers due to dry conditions and lack of feed supply across many regions of the province. There are features of the AgriStabil­ity Program which can help support many of these financial challenges.

• AgriStabil­ity includes additional feed expenses in a producer’s benefit calculatio­n. Whether buying pellets, hay or additional feed grain for livestock, purchasing feed is an allowable expense.

• In situations where producers are buying and then baling standing hay, greenfeed or silage from another producer, that expense is also allowable.

• AgriStabil­ity provides flexibilit­y for producers needing to access additional pasture for their livestock. To be an allowable expense, accessing additional pasture must be conducted through a “custom grazing” arrangemen­t. Land rent or pasture rent is not allowable.

• If producers reduced their herd size due to a lack of feed as a result of the drought, AgriStabil­ity can respond to that change in herd size. The Program will capture the change in the farm’s productive capacity as a result of the disaster. • AgriStabil­ity can also help cover some of the cost of hauling water to livestock. The additional expense a producer incurs to acquire and transport water to their livestock is an allowable expense, including fuel and fees to purchase the water.

It’s Easy To Enrol

Enrolling in AgriStabil­ity is as simple as calling the SCIC AgriStabil­ity Call Centre at 1-866-270-8450 and requesting a new participan­t package. To participat­e in the 2024 program year, the enrolment request must be made by April 30, 2024.

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