by SUSAN MANN
Dairy Farmers of Ontario is looking for licensed organic dairy farmers to stand for election to its new organic advisory producer committee.
The committee is being put in place to advise the Dairy Farmer’s board on matters affecting organic dairy production (such as quota policies, milk pricing, milk supply and demand) and give feedback on potential policies or programs to help existing producers increase production to align with demand. Elections will be held at three special meetings of organic producers later this fall.
Ensuring there is enough organic milk supply to meet processors’ demand has been an ongoing challenge for Dairy Farmers, and lack of supply was the reason Organic Meadow Co-operative Inc. gave for being unable to pay its bills when it sought creditor protection in April. Dairy Farmers has denied responsibility for the company’s situation; the co-op emerged from creditor protection earlier this month after striking a deal with its creditors, of which Dairy Farmers was one.
Graham Lloyd, Dairy Farmers general counsel and communications director, says the marketing board’s organic advisory committee will “provide insight for the board on any issues that may be specific to organic milk production but not processing,” including identifying what are the barriers to new producers joining organic milk production.
Asked if the committee was being put in place in response to issues raised about not enough organic milk in the system to meet demand, he said, "It's exactly that.”
The committee will be made up of: five elected Ontario licensed organic dairy farmers, three appointed members of the board and any staff deemed necessary by the Dairy Farmers’ board and senior management. The board members won’t be organic producers as there aren’t any organic farmers on the board.
Nominations are due by Oct. 12 at the Dairy Farmers’ office in Mississauga. Election meetings all begin at 8 p.m. and will be held:
- Oct. 21 in Avonmore at North Stormont Place, 16299 Fairview Drive.
- Nov. 4 in Stratford at Best Western Plus, the Arden Park Hotel, 552 Ontario Street.
- Nov. 12 in Belleville at Holiday Inn Express & Suites, 291 N Front Street.
The organic farmers at the meetings will elect the committee members from the pool of nominees. The five candidates getting the most votes after all three meetings will be declared elected, Lloyd says in a Sept. 15 letter to organic farmers.
The committee will be up and running by January 2016 or maybe sooner. It will meet once to three times a year. The members will serve two-year terms except in the first term when two members will serve a three-year term to allow for staggered elections to be held in the future.
Questions about the committee or the election process can be addressed to Lloyd at: graham.lloyd@milk.org. BF
Comments
We finally have our permit to import all dairy products from the United States of America ,Trans fat free starting Oct.1/2015 ,then we will see how fast the cookie crumbles! Not only is the Harper Government sticking it to them in the new trade deal ,by opening up the Canadian Dairy market to our trading Partners! This trade deal ,along with all the other trade agreements will finish supply management! The Canadian Consumers are the Winners ,this will open the door for legal exports from Canada at world prices, NO QUOTA costs! This is the best present the Harper Government can give to new Dairy farmers that want to get into the dairy business! It has taken us to long for a lot of farmers that were shipping milk only for export ,these two new developments will open the doors for Farmers who can compete in the World and at HOME!
While I share your sentiments on being able to start up in the business I doubt many can survive in the long run financially with just exports. The current world prices say no. Getting financing will be impossible for most average size operations. Only the Largest Producers will have a chance at making it work, unless of course Our Government steps in with some type of Support Plan, just my thoughts.
Nobody can produce milk for world prices on the spot market. Cuba is going to be a very good market.
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