Ontario Pork halves delegate numbers Wednesday, January 12, 2011 by KRISTIAN PARTINGTONThe number of Ontario Pork delegates elected over the coming weeks by Ontario’s pork producers is set to drop by half as part of Ontario Pork’s governance restructuring. These changes will be implemented as pork producers from across the province participate in 22 separate county association annual meetings. In February the 110 new delegates will elect a board that will also be visibly trimmed from 14 down to nine directors.Mary-Ann Hendrikx, the organization's vice chair, says the 2011 changes better reflect the ratio of producers in the province to delegates and board members at Ontario Pork.“Back in 1995 when we put the current structure in place there were about three times as many producers as there are now,” said Hendrikx. “Really, it was getting difficult in some places to find enough representation to fill the councillors’ (now known as delegates) spots.” “We need to have all the views represented from across the province and we feel that by cutting the number of delegates in half we can do that,” she added.The declining number of producers may be attributed to a growing proportion of large-scale producers filling the roles once held by many smaller operations, said Hendrikx, as well as the fact that “in the last two or three years Ontario has taken a disproportionately high share of the sow-cull program. We’ve lost more producers to that program than we might have lost had it not been offered.”Hendrikx said Ontario Pork has been focused on restructuring the governance model for several years and the new model will allow for more equitable representation from across the province. She anticipates some financial savings will also be realized as a result. BF New hog industry committee has a job list Pork industry wants feds to cut a Korean trade deal
GIFS at USask CEO applauds transparent, science-based approval of gene-edited pig Friday, February 13, 2026 The CEO of the Global Institute for Food Security (GIFS) at the University of Saskatchewan is applauding Health Canada, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA), and Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) following the regulatory approval of the PRRS-resistant pig, which was developed... Read this article online
Recall against Alberta ag minister likely to fail Thursday, February 12, 2026 The recall against Alberta’s minister of agriculture is likely to fail. With only nine days remaining to collect signatures, organizers in Minister RJ Sigurdson’s riding of Highwood have only secured 807 of the 15,788 (5.1 per cent) signatures required to recall the minister, according to... Read this article online
Possible measles exposure at Manitoba Ag Days Wednesday, February 11, 2026 Health officials in Manitoba are asking anyone who attended Ag Days in Brandon and the surrounding area to monitor symptoms of measles. “Possible exposures may have occurred in the city on the event days, on the days leading up to it and the days following it…,” Manitoba Health said in a... Read this article online
Former ag minister Ritz remembers working with Prime Minister Harper Wednesday, February 11, 2026 On the heels of former Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s official portrait unveiling in Ottawa on Feb. 3, Farms.com connected with his agriculture minister Gerry Ritz about working with Canada’s 22nd prime minister. Ritz, who in 2020 was elected reeve for the Rural Municipality of Mervin in... Read this article online
Bonnefield joins Canadian Agriculture Investment Coalition Wednesday, February 11, 2026 Bonnefield Financial Inc. announced its participation in a new investment coalition focused on strengthening Canada’s agriculture and food industry. The coalition, brought together by Farm Credit Canada, includes more than 20 investment organizations. Together, they are prepared to invest... Read this article online