Dairy post disturbs buyers

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Published: October 10, 2002

The appointment of former dairy farmer leader John Core as chair of the

Canadian Dairy Commission is likely to sharpen divisions between the

supply managed dairy sector and its industrial customers.

On Oct. 3, agriculture minister Lyle Vanclief announced that former

Dairy Farmers of Canada president John Core from Wyoming, Ont., will be

the new CDC chair.

He joins former DFC president Louis Balcaen from Manitoba on the

three-member board.

There was no official comment on the appointment from the Canadian

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Restaurant and Foodservices Association, which is the most powerful

lobby against the price-fixing powers of supply management and its

influence over the dairy commission, which sets minimum prices for

industrial milk products.

Privately, a member of the lobby for industrial buyers of dairy

products said the appointment was troubling. “It appears to put the

dairy farmer lobby in charge of the entire system, while the dairy

commission was supposed to be the arbiter between suppliers and buyers

in the industry.”

Current Dairy Farmers of Canada president Leo Bertoia from Langham,

Sask., said in an interview the appointment is a good one because “John

knows all sides of the industry and he will be fair to all sides.”

It was a view echoed by Vanclief: “John Core is no longer a dairy

farmer and even when he was president of Dairy Farmers of Canada, he

was seen as very balanced.”

Core replaces two less-than-successful CDC chairs, from a federal point

of view.

Guy Jacob, a former senior Quebec bureaucrat who was replaced in 2001,

broke ranks with the federal Liberals by insisting publicly that Ottawa

had signed the death warrant for supply management in the 1994 world

trade agreement.

His replacement, former Quebec agriculture minister Michel Pagé, got

into trouble in his first speech to dairy farmers last January by

promising he would begin to increase dairy prices last August.

It was not government policy and Pagé quickly retracted the promise,

but his credibility with Ottawa and the dairy farmer lobby never

recovered.

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