Etobicoke meat processor expands facility Thursday, July 14, 2011 by SUSAN MANNAn Ontario meat processor is one of three companies getting a portion of more than $8 million in funding announced Thursday as part of the federal government’s Slaughter Improvement program.St. Ann’s Foods Inc. of Etobicoke received almost $3 million to expand its facility to include value-added production lines for steak cuts, meatballs, burgers and meat loaves.The other two companies getting funding were Montpak International of Laval, Quebec, which received more than $3 million and Les Viandes du Breton of Rivere-du-Loup, Quebec, receiving $2 million.The money comes from the $60 million Slaughter Improvement program, part of Canada’s Economic Action Plan. The slaughter program provides federal repayable contributions to companies with sound business plans, it says in an Agriculture Canada press release. The program is aimed at reducing costs, increasing revenues and improving the operations of Canadian meat packers and processors.“By successfully improving their operations these meat facilities will make an important contribution to increase the profitability of our livestock sector,” federal Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz says in a press release. Representatives from St. Ann’s couldn’t be reached for comment.The program is designed to strengthen the red meat industry’s competitiveness by providing interest-free, conditionally repayable funding for companies to improve and modernize their slaughter operations and enhance slaughter capacity in regions with a demonstrated regional gap that is constraining sector growth, it says on Agriculture Canada’s website.Companies are able to get up to 50 per cent of their eligible costs and the money must be repaid in 10 years or less. The program isn’t accepting applications at this time, it says on Agriculture Canada’s website. BF Egg grader shut down Canada-wide milk pooling under discussion
When Grain Stops Moving Rail and Port Delays Cost Canada Up to $540 Million Monday, May 11, 2026 A new economic analysis commissioned by the Agriculture Transport Coalition has found that just one week of rail and port disruptions during peak export season can cost Canada’s grain sector up to $540 million. The majority of these losses stem from missed export sales that cannot be... Read this article online
Severe May 9 Storm Batters Farms and Rural Infrastructure Across Ontario Monday, May 11, 2026 A fast-moving but powerful storm system swept across large portions of Ontario on Saturday, May 9, 2026, leaving farms and rural communities dealing with damaged infrastructure, delayed fieldwork, and localized crop losses during one of the most important periods of the spring growing... Read this article online
Are we Seeing the Top of the Commodity Markets with Corn Above $5 and Soybeans at $12? Monday, May 11, 2026 Grain markets delivered another volatile yet bullish week as corn climbed above $5 per bushel, soybeans topped $12, wheat traded near $7, and canola approached $750, according to the latest for the week of May 4 to 8, 2026. Experts Farms.com Moe Agostino, chief commodity strategist... Read this article online
Inside the Collapse of Monette Farms and What It Signals for Big Agriculture Friday, May 8, 2026 The restructuring of Monette Farms is raising hard questions about how large is too large in modern agriculture—and whether today’s risk tools are keeping up. (Read the article: Monette Farms Seeks Court Protection as Mega-Farm Restructures Amid Financial Pressures) For years, Monette... Read this article online
Ontario Grain Farmers Open 2026 Legacy Scholarship Friday, May 8, 2026 Applications are now open for the 2026 Grain Farmers of Ontario Legacy Scholarship which supports students pursuingpost-secondaryeducation related to the future of Ontario’s grain andagrifood industry. The program aims to encourage education and leadership development among young people... Read this article online