Under quota egg farmers crying foul

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Published: March 21, 2002

Larry Motz of Glidden, Sask., wants to make a good living off his egg

production, but says he is held back by the number of birds he can

raise without quota in Saskatchewan.

Motz and Curtis Jensen of Milden recently took their concerns to the

Saskatchewan Agri-Food Council. It oversees the six-member Saskatchewan

Egg Producers board, which is responsible for allotting quota.

In separate meetings with the council in late February, the two farmers

recommended that the number of birds that a family unit can raise

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without buying quota and paying levies to the board be increased to

1,000 from 299.

“That would allow a person to derive an income to pay for the bare

necessities,” Motz said.

Their other concerns focused on the amount of quota held by board

members, how quota moves and the length of time spent on waiting lists

to get quota.

Motz, who has been on the waiting list for 12 years, said that while

the 299 bird limit on unregulated flocks hasn’t changed in years, the

ceiling of 30,000 birds on regulated flocks was raised in 1998.

That change could lead to monopolies and a conflict of interest for

board members, who are also large egg producers, he said.

Motz also told the council that quota was being bought and sold,

contrary to legislation governing the egg industry.

“In my opinion, the board is contravening its authority,” Motz said.

The Saskatchewan Commercial Egg Producers’ Marketing Plan states that

“no remuneration shall be paid or received by any person in the

consideration of the allotting or fixing of quota and no quota may

either directly or indirectly be bought, sold or leased.”

According to Agri-Food Act regulations, quotas are the property of the

marketing board and “no person shall assign, purchase, sell, lease or

otherwise transfer or offer to assign, purchase, sell, lease or

otherwise transfer those quotas…”

Saskatchewan Egg Producers manager Dave Mackie said the group has two

waiting lists, one for those with quota and one for those without.

Priority is given to those with quota.

In practice, most interested producers seek out others wishing to

relinquish their quota, and then ask the board to approve the transfer,

he said.

“You look around and find somebody retiring and strike up a deal,”

Mackie said.”The option is always there if you want to get in right

away.”

Bert Harman, chair of the group’s board, said producers are permitted

to deal with others for production units and to advertise quotas.

“We haven’t had any conflict with any of that to this point,” he said.

It is the board’s responsibility to oversee the transfer and ensure

levies are paid and all requirements are met.

Mackie said the board asked the council for changes in the 1980s after

finding the process of acquiring quota too cumbersome.

“As long as no value was shown on quota, the board would approve the

transfer of that quota,” he said. The producers buy the business value

so it does not get into the cost of production and keeps value away

from quota, he added.

Mackie said all farmers, whether they have regulated or unregulated

flocks, benefit from the supply managed system.

“If there was no supply management, we’d be back to where we were

before, where we got eggs at 50 cents a dozen or less,” he said.

Harman said the board has a legislated mandate to enforce the legal

limits by counting birds.

Saskatchewan’s Court of Queen’s Bench ruled last December that egg

producers had the power to carry out inspections to ensure quota

compliance, but it said the legislation does not authorize forcible

entry.

The decision came after Motz challenged the agri-food act and the

legality of an inspection carried out at his barns. He has admitted to

keeping more than 299 birds in the past. He argued the legislation

contravened his rights as guaranteed under the Charter of Rights.

Harman said the egg producers board would oppose any move by the

council to raise the 299-bird limit.

“It would have a detrimental effect on the industry.”

He said the amount compares favourably with limits in neighbouring

provinces, where non-quota limits are as low as 100.

Increasing non-quota flocks would affect farmers with quota because

there is a finite number of birds that each province is allowed to

raise.

Garf Stevenson, chair of the Saskatchewan Agri-Food Council, said his

committee is considering information presented by Mackie, the egg

producers board, Motz and Jensen.

“We’ve got to study it a bit further,” he said. “It has to be dealt

with fairly but responsibly as well.”

“The council has the responsibility to make sure marketing boards are

operating within the act and regulations and make fair and good

decisions,” said Stevenson.

About the author

Karen Morrison

Saskatoon newsroom

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