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Sask. eases farm licence plate rules

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Published: September 5, 2002

The number of farmers in Saskatchewan may be declining, but that

doesn’t mean there will be fewer farm vehicles on the province’s roads

next year.

Saskatchewan Government Insurance, the province’s compulsory vehicle

insurance program, announced this month that eligibility criteria for

farm vehicle registrations will be relaxed in an effort to ease the

financial burden on retiring farmers and farm operators whose annual

gross incomes dip below $10,000.

Until now, Saskatchewan residents did not qualify for farm plates

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unless they owned, leased or rented a minimum of 74 acres of cultivated

farmland or had gross farm receipts of more than $10,000 a year.

Under the new criteria, retiring farmers will automatically qualify for

farm plates for one year after they quit farming or scale down their

operations.

Farmers whose gross receipts dip below $10,000 must apply to SGI for an

extension of their farm plate eligibility. SGI will assess each

income-related case individually and issue a letter of authorization to

farmers who qualify.

In announcing the changes, Saskatchewan agriculture minister Clay Serby

said the province is responding to a changing agricultural climate.

“By expanding access to farm plates, SGI is lifting a financial burden

from farmers who are either shutting down or diversifying their

operation,” he said in a News release

news.

SGI officials did not offer an estimate on how much the changes would

save farmers or cost SGI.

According to census of agriculture statistics, there were 50,598 farms

in the province in 2001.

Of those, about 6,200, or 12.4 percent, had gross farm receipts below

$10,000.

Last year, there were a total of 140,000 light and heavy farm vehicles

registered in the province, including about 63,000 pick-up trucks.

About the author

Brian Cross

Brian Cross

Saskatoon newsroom

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