The Bishops have made their community and industry priorities in their farming lives.  |  Bishop family photo

Busy off the farm helping ag and community

On the Farm: Between conferences, meetings and local projects, the Bishops became award-winning farmers

BARONS, Alta. — Wide-open fields are visible in almost every direction from the Bishop family farm a few miles west of this southern Alberta village. And at a time when many prairie farmers are still struggling to harvest the last of their crops, David Bishop considered himself lucky to have only 20 acres of soybeans […] Read more

The Chuckegg Creek wildfire next to highway 58 west of High Level, Alberta May 25, 2019.  |  File photo by Chris Schwarz/Government of Alberta

Investigators fan research flames to study wildfires

When a fire is burning out of control, the usual priorities are to fight, control and extinguish it. Research is not top of mind. But there is a place in Alberta where fire research is paramount: the Pelican Mountain FireSmart Vegetation Management Research Site in northern Alberta near Sandy Lake. David Schroeder, the prescribed fire […] Read more

The payments come from $345 million in federal funds earmarked to compensate dairy farmers for market access traded to Europe through the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement and to members of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership.
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First round of dairy farmer payments unveiled

Canadian dairy farmers will be paid approximately $315 per kilogram of quota in the first year of mitigation payments that the federal government will make for concessions in two trade agreements. The payments come from $345 million in federal funds earmarked to compensate dairy farmers for market access traded to Europe through the Comprehensive Economic […] Read more


After campaigning to increase focus on farmer-led research, the provincial UCP government will undertake consultations in coming months with the goal of getting “better research outcomes for farmers.”
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Alberta to start consultations on ag research

Applied research groups are concerned about future funding availability from the province and from commodity groups

The future of agricultural research in Alberta is under review. After campaigning to increase focus on farmer-led research, the provincial UCP government will undertake consultations in coming months with the goal of getting “better research outcomes for farmers.” So said Alberta Agriculture Minister Devin Dreeshen, who plans a series of meetings with commodity associations, applied […] Read more

The Canadian Cattlemen's Association has asked the Agriculture Canada to delay enforcement of the new rules for two years so the results of livestock transport research still underway can be incorporated into the plan. | File photo

New livestock trucking regulations a concern

FORT MACLEOD, Alta. — Aspects of the new federal livestock transportation regulations, scheduled to take effect Feb. 20, continue to concern the cattle industry. The Canadian Cattlemen’s Association has asked the Agriculture Canada to delay enforcement of the new rules for two years so the results of livestock transport research still underway can be incorporated […] Read more


Provincial justice minister Doug Schweitzer said a Rural Alberta Provincial Integrated Defence Force (RAPID) will be created that will train about 400 sheriffs, fish and wildlife officers and commercial vehicle enforcement personnel to respond to 911 calls about rural crime. The idea is to reduce response times when no RCMP officers are near. | Screencap via Facebook/Doug Schweitzer

Alberta announces plans to tackle rural crime

The Alberta government plans to take a harder line against rural crime and today announced measures to begin that process. Provincial justice minister Doug Schweitzer said a Rural Alberta Provincial Integrated Defence Force (RAPID) will be created that will train about 400 sheriffs, fish and wildlife officers and commercial vehicle enforcement personnel to respond to […] Read more

Mark Tschetter, the minister at the Jumbo Valley Hutterite Colony near Granum, Alta., and others in the agriculture community welcomed news last week of charges laid against four of an estimated 35 people who entered and temporarily occupied the colony’s turkey barns. | Barb Glen photo

Farmers welcome charges in barn invasion

Four of the protesters who entered an Alberta turkey barn this fall are charged with break and enter to commit mischief

Mark Tschetter, the minister at the Jumbo Valley Hutterite Colony near Granum, Alta., has never been in court. But he will be in a courtroom in nearby Fort Macleod in late November to see what happens to people accused of a Sept. 2 break and enter at the colony’s turkey operation. Tschetter and others in […] Read more

Cultivatr founder Dan Berezan, seen here with 18-month-old son Brody, wants to take the emotion out of supply and demand.  |  Barb Glen photo

Distributor aims to replace supply-and-demand model

PINCHER CREEK, Alta. — Much of traditional agriculture involves growing as much as you can and then hoping to sell it for as much as you can. Dan Berezan figures there is a better way. “Hope is not a good business model,” said the founder and chief executive officer of Cultivatr, an online farmers market […] Read more


A fire-breathing dragon greeted visitors to the University of Lethbridge Science Commons building Sept. 13 for the grand opening of the new building.  |  Barb Glen photo

Lethbridge school opens new science facility

Building will be home to chemistry, biochemistry, biological sciences, neuroscience, physics, astronomy and psychology

There wasn’t the slightest vestige of triskaidekaphobia at the University of Lethbridge Sept. 13. Far from superstitious fears associated with Friday the 13th, luck and good fortune were on the minds of dignitaries, who officially opened the U of L’s $280 million Science Commons building, a state-of-the-art facility. The building will house the chemistry, biochemistry, […] Read more

The new Cavendish Farms potato plant in Lethbridge, which officially opened Oct. 3, is the size of seven football fields and employs 238 people. | Barb Glen photo

New Alta. potato plant opens

Gleaming equipment, pristine surfaces and the rumble of machinery are initial impressions of the new Cavendish Farms potato processing plant that officially opened Oct. 3 in Lethbridge. The $430 million plant sits on 80 acres in the city’s northeast industrial park and covers 346,000 sq. feet. It is the length of seven football fields and […] Read more