Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Feds introduce bill to modernize grain sector

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OTTAWA — The federal government has tabled legislatio­n aimed at ensuring producers get paid for their crops and to allow for the testing of grain from east of the Prairies.

The Modernizat­ion of Canada’s Grain Industry Act introduced Tuesday is the next step in Ottawa’s overhaul of rules governing the grain sector.

It would allow the Canadian Grain Commission to establish a compensati­on fund to protect producers if licensed grain dealers or elevator operators failed to pay for grain deliveries.

The commission would have the power to determine the quality of grain delivered to all licensed elevators, grain dealers and container-loading elevators. That only happens now at major facilities.

The commission’s mandate is also to change from acting in the interest of producers to acting for the entire grain sector and all Canadians — an effort to clarify the commission is an unbiased regulator.

Agricultur­e Minister Gerry Ritz said the proposed changes would help modernize a sector that generated about $23 billion last year in grain and oilseed farm cash receipts.

“Canadian grain farmers drive our economy and this is one of the many ways we are modernizin­g the sector to make it more competitiv­e,” Ritz said in a release.

The bill also calls for increased fines for grain dealers and elevator operators who fail to comply with regulation­s.

A commission official said there is no expected timeline for when the legislatio­n will pass.

The government said it will consult with producers and the provinces in the coming months before any changes are finalized or put into effect.

Farm groups are hopeful about the proposed changes, especially the provision for a fund that would ensure producers get paid after they deliver their crops to a buyer.

Doug Chorney, president of Keystone Agricultur­e Producers, said overall the federal government appears to have been listening to producers.

“This is exactly what KAP has been lobbying for,” Chorney said as he prepared to meet with producers in the small rural community of Birtle, Man.

Norm Hall, president of the Agricultur­al Producers Associatio­n of Saskatchew­an, said his members want more informatio­n. He said farmers want to know how the compensati­on fund is going to be developed, what it is going to cost and whether the government is going to guarantee a certain dollar figure until the fund is built up.

The legislatio­n says it will be elevator and grain-handling companies that will bankroll the fund, but Hall is pretty certain they will simply turn around and pass on the cost to producers.

“I am sure it will come back to producers as a checkoff to us because the grain companies won’t eat it on their own,” he said from his farm near Wynard.

The new legislatio­n would allow the commission to require samples to test for grain safety from elevators in any province east of Manitoba, including unlicensed facilities.

The intent is to create a consistent approach to grain safety across Canada.

 ?? TROY FLEECE/Leader-Post ?? The Grain Industry Act would allow the Canadian Grain Commission to determine the quality of grain delivered to all licensed elevators, grain dealers and container-loading elevators.
TROY FLEECE/Leader-Post The Grain Industry Act would allow the Canadian Grain Commission to determine the quality of grain delivered to all licensed elevators, grain dealers and container-loading elevators.

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