Manitoba opposition vows fight on farm issues

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Published: April 18, 2002

Manitoba’s opposition party promises to drop the gloves when the

legislative session begins April 22.

Progressive Conservative agriculture critic Jack Penner says his party

will confront the New Democratic Party government over what it sees as

its negligent management of the farm economy.

“I’ll give them their first two years in office, because they were new,

but now there can be no excuses,” Penner said in an interview at the

legislature.

“The (agriculture) minister (Rosann Wowchuk) and her colleagues were

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very ignorant about agriculture when they were elected, but they’ve now

had time to get acquainted with it.”

Penner said the government has failed to address national and

international issues that are ravaging the Manitoba farm economy.

The government hasn’t acted strenuously enough to get the federal

government to protect Manitoba farmers from the effects of American

farm subsidies, Penner said.

The federal government needs to be prodded and Wowchuk doesn’t seem

willing to do it, he said. His party will be demanding the government

explain why it hasn’t done more to get federal action. He said his

party would have organized a national summit of provincial farm

ministers to make the issue national news. He wondered why Wowchuk

hasn’t done that.

And the provincial government hasn’t moved to capture the economic

compensation that should have come to Manitoba after the end of the

Crow Benefit transportation subsidy. Penner said livestock production

should have quickly flowed into the province because its feed grains

became cheaper. But the provincial government has not gotten Manitoba a

bigger share of the supply management pie, so there hasn’t been the

growth in eggs, broiler chicken or dairy production that there should

have been.

He said when the contentious hog barn approval issue is raised, his

party will challenge the NDP on what he says is the confusion it has

left in rural Manitoba, where municipal councils have been suffering

because of uncertainty over hog barn approvals.

He doesn’t support taking environmental approval away from

municipalities, which is something Wowchuk has said she is considering.

Penner said he will also confront the government about why it is doing

nothing to lower the taxation burden on farmland.

He also intends to shine the light on what he sees as a sneaky

government attempt to remove money from the crop insurance fund without

anyone noticing.

“They got their fingers in there, and what did they do with the money?”

Penner said.

“Is that money that they’re using to pay the increase in nurses’

salaries?”

Penner said there are many farm and rural issues that deserve

prominence in the coming legislative session.

But with Winnipeg and Brandon’s urban concerns dominating media

coverage, his party will try to link rural issues to city issues to get

some attention.

Since both cities rely on agriculture, but don’t always realize it, the

challenge will be to “make agriculture relevant” to urban voters,

Penner said.

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Ed White

Ed White

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