Search
Better Farming OntarioBetter PorkBetter Farming Prairies

Better Farming Ontario Featured Articles

Better Farming Ontario magazine is published 11 times per year. After each edition is published, we share featured articles online.


Kerr venture kaput

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

by SUSAN MANN

There may not be enough money generated from the sale of assets in Kerr Farms Sales (Chatham) Ltd., an award-winning boxed beef business placed into receivership by its bank July 7, to pay creditors.

Kerr Farms Sales had a line of credit with RBC for $360,000 along with other expenses, says shareholder Bob Kerr.

A spokesperson for receivers, BDO Canada Ltd., says only BDO partners are permitted to talk to reporters. No one from BDO returned calls by the deadline for this posting.

What’s the company worth? “Probably nothing,” Kerr says. “It’s going to leave debts unpaid.”

If there isn’t enough money generated from the asset sale to pay back the bank it will call on the personal guarantees it holds from the shareholders to cover any of the debt it is owned. “They (the bank) could call on us to pay up on the guarantees,” Kerr explains. He declined to state the value of the guarantees.
 
Kerr and three other partners, Amos Brielmann of Rainy River, Eugene Miniota (owner of meat distribution company Treeline Foods Ltd.) and Stefan Oellinger, started the business in 2006. That same year Kerr Farms Sales won a regional Premier’s Award for Agri Food Innovation Excellence. The business received the award for finding a way to bring more stability to the market for high quality beef by differentiating its product, it says on the OMAFRA web site.

But by 2008, the company was struggling to pay its producers. Producers complained to the government-run Ontario Beef Cattle Financial Protection program, which told Kerr Farms Sales to make payments or lose its license to buy cattle. The company subsequently worked out payment arrangements with producers.

Kerr, a former president of the Ontario Cattlemen’s Association and now a crop farmer who doesn’t raise cattle anymore, resigned as a director and from active management in the company in 2008 but remained as a shareholder. Kerr Farms Sales is a separate company from his farming operation. Kerr says he resigned from active participation in the company due to differences with the management (Miniota and Oellinger).

Kerr says he now regrets using the name of his ongoing business in the boxed beef business. 

Brielmann also resigned from active participation in 2008, Kerr says. Both men forgave the company their original capital investment in 2008. Kerr says he and Brielmann have decided not to publicly disclose what that amount was.

“The hope was to give them the opportunity to get the company on a good footing and raise additional capital,” he explains.

The company was established to sell and distribute beef raised without the use of hormones, antibiotics and without animal byproduct feeds. It bought cattle from farmers and arranged to have the animals custom killed and boxed then sold the meat to retailers.

But the company struggled to attract and retain customers, he says.

It’s not easy to establish a meat distribution company, Kerr explains, noting he’s disappointed the business didn’t succeed. Other businesses trying to develop a niche in the market have started up and gone out of business as well.

OMAFRA spokesperson Susan Murray says 11 farmers have made a total of $159,000 in claims to the Ontario Beef Cattle Financial Protection program due to the failed Kerr Farms Sales. The program is funded by a compulsory five-cents-a-head deduction when cattle are sold to licensed dealers. Eligible cattle sellers using a licensed dealer who defaults on a payment can make a claim. The program can compensate farmers for 90 per cent of their losses. BF



 

Current Issue

June/July 2025

Better Farming Magazine

Farms.com Breaking News

Ontario Promotes Local Food to Boost Economy and Jobs

Thursday, June 5, 2025

Ontario is celebrating Local Food Week from June 2–8, 2025, honoring the people behind the province’s strong and self-sufficient food supply. From farmers and food processors to retailers and restauranteurs, these individuals contribute to the economy and food security. The agriculture... Read this article online

Scientists at Guelph Target Avian Threat

Thursday, June 5, 2025

The University of Guelph (U of G) is activeey engaged against the spread of avian flu. Experts from a variety of departments, including virology, engineering, veterinary medicine, and computer science, are working together to stop this growing threat. “This is not just a crisis for the... Read this article online

Trouw Nutrition launches IntelEgg

Thursday, June 5, 2025

Trouw Nutrition has announced the launch of , a digital platform designed to empower layer producers with real-time insights and data-driven decision-making tools. The image above shows an demo screen. This browser-based application is set to transform how poultry farmers monitor,... Read this article online

New Precision Ag Digital Digest Coming Soon

Wednesday, June 4, 2025

The Summer 2025 Farms.com Precision Ag Digital Digest will be released on June 11. Summer is upon us! Tillage and seeding are mostly completed (…hopefully), so we are shifting focus to irrigation, baling, spraying, guidance, and harvest (among other topics and technologies). In... Read this article online

BF logo

It's farming. And it's better.

 

a Farms.com Company

Subscriptions

Subscriber inquiries, change of address, or USA and international orders, please email: subscriptions@betterfarming.com or call 888-248-4893 x 281.


Article Ideas & Media Releases

Have a story idea or media release? If you want coverage of an ag issue, trend, or company news, please email us.

Follow us on Social Media

 

Sign up to a Farms.com Newsletter

 

DisclaimerPrivacy Policy2025 ©AgMedia Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Back To Top