Flood delays milk quota exchange Wednesday, January 19, 2011 by SUSAN MANNThe opening of the February milk quota exchange has been delayed by four days because of a flood on the main floor of Dairy Farmers of Ontario head office in Mississauga.Bill Mitchell, Dairy Farmers assistant communications director, says the flood knocked out their computer and phone system for five days and forced the condensation of this month’s two-day board meeting to one day. The meeting will be held Friday to deal with essential matters only and it’s at the Egg Farmers of Ontario board office in Mississauga.The flood was caused by a water main break near the entrance to the building on Campobello Road sometime during the night on Jan. 13, he explains. By 3 a.m. on Jan. 14 there was so much flooding in the building alarms were triggered and some systems were shorted out.The quota exchange, the first one featuring administrative changes to bids and offers, was scheduled to open Jan. 20 but will now begin on Jan. 24 at 8:30 a.m. The deadline to place bids or offers with a customer service representative is 4:30 p.m. on Feb. 1, while the deadline for farmers entering bids or offers online is 11:59 p.m. on Feb. 1.Mitchell says the entire first floor of the building was flooded. Dairy Farmers doesn’t have a monetary estimate yet but the damage was considerable. There was an inch to an inch-and-a-half of water and mud in various locations.Water also gushed in to the secure room that holds the organization’s computer mainframe and servers hitting sensors and shorting out systems. Mitchell says there wasn’t any damage to the servers and mainframe but the high humidity levels made it impossible to continue operating the computers.Dairy Farmers web site wasn’t affected because it operates on an external server, Mitchell explains. Farmers could see the web site but they couldn’t get into the personal password-protected area because that needed a connection from the organization’s mainframe, which was down until Tuesday afternoon. Everything is back up and running now.Mitchell says all the carpeting, baseboard heating and first two or three feet of drywall up the wall on the first floor had to be removed and will be replaced. Restoration of the first floor is expected to take four to six weeks. Structural engineers are also assessing whether there is damage to the building’s structure. “We don’t know yet the full extent of the damage,” Mitchell says. BF Market outlook favours Canadian farmers Consumer confusion prompts push for organic labelling clarity
A Young Farmer Finds the Perfect Combine Wednesday, April 1, 2026 At Farms.com, nurturing a passion for agriculture starts early, and nothing illustrates that better than a recent heartwarming video featuring young Jared Altmann and the Farms.com Ag Buyer’s Guide. In the video, Jared can be seen carefully combing through the pages of the Ag Buyer’s... Read this article online
Ontario Soybean Acres to Rise in 2026 as Economics and Weather Shape Planting Decisions Wednesday, April 1, 2026 Ontario farmers are planning a modest expansion in total acres for 2026, with soybeans emerging as a key driver of change across the province, according to the 2026 annual Farms.com Risk Management Ontario Planting Intentions Farmer Survey. The survey, conducted between January 12 and... Read this article online
Ont. farmer Tony McQuail reflects on NDP leadership race Tuesday, March 31, 2026 Huron County farmer Tony McQuail is back at Meeting Place Organic Farm in Lucknow after vying to replace Jagmeet Singh as the leader of the federal NDP. “It was a very hopeful and positive experience for me,” he told Farms.com. “I was very pleased with what we were able to bring to the... Read this article online
Broadband Access is a Defining Issue for Rural Canada’s Future Monday, March 30, 2026 Broadband connectivity took centre stage during the Coalition for a Better Future’s Scorecard Reporting Event on March 26, as speakers emphasized that reliable, high-speed internet is now foundational to rural economic growth, community well-being, and Canada’s broader ambitions in... Read this article online
Rural Canada Is an Economic Powerhouse that Policymakers Need to Build Upon Monday, March 30, 2026 Rural Canada is a far bigger driver of the national economy than many policymakers realize, and leaders say the time has come to place a rural lens at the centre of public policy decision-making. That message was front and centre during the Coalition for a Better Future’s Scorecard... Read this article online