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Ritz to Sask Ag Hall of Fame

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    Ritz to Sask Ag Hall of Fame

    His weak trade deals have gained us nothing and the end of the CWB has cost us $2/bushel. No single person has done as much harm to Sask agriculture as Gerry Ritz. Even goofy's C tax only costs 5 cents/bu.

    #2
    Maybe if they opened the books to see where all the money went. It sure wasn’t returned to the farm.

    Comment


      #3
      2 bucks a bushel? Where is your proof? Or maybe you enjoyed sitting with binfulls of wheat, and selling it in ten cent increments over 18 months?

      Comment


        #4
        If Gerry Ritz had any vision at all with agriculture ....farmers wouldn't be in the position of begging again....when the programs don't work...

        His own office bureaucrat that is now the Alberta AG Minister is asking the federal government to review BRMs that he and Ritz phucked up....

        Anyone that thinks Yerry Ritz belongs in the Hall of Fame anywhere is blinded by ideology...because he had zero vision for agriculture....

        read the article about a young guy with proven results that hit a rough spot....

        The answer can't always be """"too bad so sad"""".

        Comment


          #5
          If the only claim to fame of Yerry is getting rid of the CWB ...not sure its should be a qualifier for Hall of Fame...

          There is still plenty he didn't do with regards to the "open" market...

          1. Reporting
          2. Transparency.
          3. Regulations
          4. Accountability

          He did nothing of that....nor was he listening to those that asked for it...

          And he had the opportunity to put in place BRM programs that would have covered off the current crisis...he had no vision...

          He is a poor excuse for an inductee and makes the others look stupid by association...

          It downgrades the Hall of Fame...

          Comment


            #6
            It costs about $1.30/bu to get wheat from pit to train to ship. SaskWheat says the basis is from $3.20 to $3.60, depending on grade. That's $2/bu going to the industry that used to come to us. Also....when the CWB was here all my wheat was gone by April, now I still have grain in August.

            Comment


              #7
              Farmers give weekly reports from May 1st to the end of November every year....

              Where is an easy sight to find published freight rates from point A to the port?

              Where is the vessel reports?

              Where are the sales reports past present and future?

              These are simple things Ritz and co. didn't even consider....no brainer...

              Lisa Raitt couldn't get a penny from the railways back in 13/14...

              And no government agencies will put a performance standard on the railways....just rubber stamp the indexed increases to freight rates...

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by CptnObvious View Post
                It costs about $1.30/bu to get wheat from pit to train to ship. SaskWheat says the basis is from $3.20 to $3.60, depending on grade. That's $2/bu going to the industry that used to come to us. Also....when the CWB was here all my wheat was gone by April, now I still have grain in August.
                Oh wow, it sounds like the CWB was an efficient grain mover and added $2 per bushel to your profit margin.

                Why have the wheat acres increased since the removal of the CWB?

                Comment


                  #9
                  Ritz cracker vision of agriculture was to gut all farm programs so he could find a nice corporate board job down south. His vision of agriculture also included ostrich farming and we know how that went. He was pretty much a puppet for Harper.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by CptnObvious View Post
                    It costs about $1.30/bu to get wheat from pit to train to ship. SaskWheat says the basis is from $3.20 to $3.60, depending on grade. That's $2/bu going to the industry that used to come to us. Also....when the CWB was here all my wheat was gone by April, now I still have grain in August.
                    I guess when you are an organic farmer it doesn't take too many 3 bu quotas to get it all hauled by April.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Ritz did one thing - dismantled the CWB and gave away the farmers’ assets. Did some one say forward-thinking? Oh yeh, the thought process of a reptile. Both grain marketing systems should have gone on into eternity, but no, farmers were thrown from one monopoly to a stronger oligopoly with no regulations, no grain commission, no transparency, no railroad clout. We bought it - we got it.

                      Maybe Hall of Shame
                      Last edited by sumdumguy; Jan 10, 2020, 10:18.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by CptnObvious View Post
                        It costs about $1.30/bu to get wheat from pit to train to ship. SaskWheat says the basis is from $3.20 to $3.60, depending on grade. That's $2/bu going to the industry that used to come to us. Also....when the CWB was here all my wheat was gone by April, now I still have grain in August.
                        Not again. Use your common sense.

                        Canada sells wheat on the world market for more per tonne than any other country that exports over 1 mmt per year. So we are sure not going to make any more from the export market are we?

                        So we need to find 2 dollars a bushel in the domestic grain handling industry.
                        That would be over 1.672 billion for the 2018-19 crop year just for wheat and durum.
                        Open to suggestions....

                        Comment


                          #13
                          An opinion piece last year by Ian Robson.

                          Prime Minister Harper said he “would make Canada unrecognizable.” His Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz certainly did his part to make Canadian agriculture and food unrecognizable. Minister Ritz’s destructive record speaks for itself. Does Toronto’s Royal Agricultural Winter Fair really want to damage its reputation by inducting former Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz (2007 – 2015), into Canada’s Agriculture Hall of Fame? Consider just a small part of Minister Ritz’s destructive legacy.

                          Under Mr. Ritz’s watch over 15% of farmers went out of business. Farmers now number a mere 193,000 and our collective debt level has ballooned to over $102 billion dollars.

                          Weighing both the costs and benefits is fundamental to successful farming and public policy, but Minister Ritz failed to do this during his tenure. He is responsible for dismantling the farmer-directed Canadian Wheat Board single desk marketing agency. He must have known the CWB had strong support since he refused to give farmers a vote. He ignored hard facts and the history of how well the CWB served farmers and Canada as whole. Destroying the CWB continues to cost farmers billions of dollars every year.

                          Minister Ritz then took the many hard assets of the Canadian Wheat Board including thousands of grain cars, office buildings, grain ships, and a substantial amount of cash, and transferred them all to a joint venture between the Government of Saudi Arabia and the giant multinational Bunge under so-far secret terms. All of those millions of dollars of assets were paid for by farmers, yet Minister Ritz still spent millions to shut down the CWB, including tax dollars. Farmers are still in court seeking restitution for their money and assets. The tax payers of Canada may never receive a proper accounting.

                          Almost immediately after Gerry Ritz killed the CWB, our premium customers started to complain of quality and delivery problems. Prairie wheat, which once consistently traded at a premium to US wheat, now sells for much less. Lower grain prices and poor relations with end-use buyers have become the norm because private elevator companies cannot match the CWB’s marketing sophistication. Since 2012, farmers have lost an increasing share of our grain’s value to the elevator companies. The companies are using this extra money to pay for mergers and the overbuilding of handling facilities.

                          Thanks to Minister Ritz the Port of Churchill and the rail line serving it was rendered uneconomic—and Ottawa is now spending tax dollars to pick up the pieces.

                          Gerry Ritz is also responsible for bringing in UPOV ’91 Intellectual Property Rights legislation, which increased the price of seed and laid the groundwork to allow multinational seed companies to charge royalties on our harvested crops.

                          Ritz accelerated the previous government’s cuts to crop research stations and plant breeding, turning them and the rights to public research results over to agribusiness. These actions shift yet more costs onto already cash-pressed farmers.

                          Input suppliers and commodity buyers were the winners under Minister Ritz’s agenda, while farmer numbers and their economic viability went down. How is this good for the future? Under Gerry Ritz’s watch Canada’s meat inspection regulations were weakened, leading to 22 deaths from listeria poisoning. Ritz did not take this tragic event seriously, instead he made fun of the situation, joking about the deaths and even degrading public dialogue by suggesting he wished the PEI resident who died was Liberal MP Wayne Easter.

                          Minister Ritz attacked farmer livelihoods and hampered Canada’s ability to fight climate change when he cut the PFRA Community Pastures program in spite of its decades-long success in soil research, providing shelterbelt trees, water management knowledge, and natural grasslands preservation.

                          Let’s not forget that Minister Ritz changed the Ag Stability and Ag Invest farm safety net programs making them much less useful to farmers.

                          The major concessions he made in the Trans Pacific Partnership trade agreement demonstrate he had little respect or understanding of how our supply management system benefits farmers, processors and consumers. Minister Ritz inherited a system where almost all the dairy, eggs, and poultry were from Canadian farmers and when he left supply management was very much weakened.

                          The Canadian Agriculture Hall of Fame does not have the prestige of a Nobel Prize, but it should seek to do much better. Perhaps a “Hall of Infamy” award would be a better fit for Gerry Ritz in recognition of the damage he has done to Canadian agriculture and Canadian farmers.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Wheat acres have gone up because of weak performance from barley, oats, canola, an especially pulses( trade barriers, low demand, etc).

                            101, I know exactly where that $2/bu. is. In the hands of the grain companies. There is no way they will give that extra profit up unless commanded to by a legal authority. You know, like the CWB.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Mr ritz is for sure, 100% responsible for high farm debt levels. And all the other problems with agriculture as we know it is harpers fault. None of it is ours, that’s for darn certain!

                              Comment

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