Drought cuts into checkoff income

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Published: August 22, 2002

Prairie farm organizations that rely on commodity checkoffs to fund

research projects and market development may be in serious trouble this

year as much of the crop that they take their funding from withers in

the field.

Roy Button, executive director of the Saskatchewan Canola Development

Commission, said he’s run about 20 versions of the upcoming year’s

budget, but the numbers don’t look good in any of the scenarios.

The canola crop is not in the bin yet, but he’s estimating 40 to 50

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percent less revenue than a normal year.

“It’s quite a huge reduction,” Button said.

“The drought affects us the same as the farmers.”

Many grain and livestock associations on the Prairies are funded by

checkoffs on each tonne of grain sold and each animal that changes

hands. They use the money to target research, create new markets or

raise awareness of their product.

Button said the commission managed to squeak through another year by

dipping into a contingency fund. Even so, it will only fund research

projects to which it has already committed money.

Its budget was $1.8 million two years ago. This year it is hoping to

reach $600,000 or $700,000.

It’s the same in Alberta, said Days-land farmer Ed Gaudet, president of

the Alberta Canola Producers Commission.

He estimated that Alberta’s canola crop will be less than half the

normal production, which means the commission’s normal $1 million

budget will also be cut in half.

“We’re really in a difficult financial position.”

Because this is the second and third year of dry weather in parts of

Alberta, the canola group has already used up much of its contingency

fund.

“As a commission we’re in trouble. We had a nice contingency fund but

we’ve burned it up.”

Because it has been operating on a shoestring budget for so long, the

commission plans to double the checkoff to $1 a tonne from 50 cents a

tonne at next year’s annual meeting.

“We’ll survive, but we’ve sure had to cut.”

Garth Patterson, executive director of Saskatchewan Pulse Growers, said

his group may be luckier than most because its checkoff is based on

value, rather than the more common volume-based checkoff. With this

year’s drought, the volume may go down, but the value of the crops will

rise.

“Anyone with a volume-based levy is going to be very concerned,” he

said.

Clif Foster with the Alberta Barley Commission said it’s too early to

tell yet how the drought will affect the group’s budget. Recent rain

may boost some barley crops from poor to fair.

“It’s a crap shoot.”

Foster said it is likely the commission will be forced to substantially

reduce its budget, which had already been shrunk in recent years from

$1.2 million to $1 million to $800,000 this year.

Maureen Duffy of the Alberta Sheep and Wool Commission estimates half

of Alberta’s 113,000-head flock will be sold this year, making a

drastic dent in the money collected through its $1 a head checkoff.

In a unique twist, the sheep commission may not suffer as much because

of a change in the way the checkoff is collected.

In the past, it relied on dealers, auction markets and producers to

submit the checkoff when an animal was sold, which resulted in revenue

“slippage” because not everyone submitted the checkoff.

This year the checkoff will be collected when the Canadian Cattle

Identification Association sheep tag is bought. Duffy expected this

will help the commission maintain the $140,000 it collects.

Duncan Porteous, general manager of the Canadian Hereford Association,

said his organization will likely feel the effects of the dry weather

next year.

With cattle going to slaughter, there will be fewer people registering

or transferring ownership of purebred animals. The Hereford association

doesn’t collect a checkoff from animals. Instead, it gets its main

funding from 2,000 members across the country, registrations of 100,000

purebred cows and ownership transfers.

A massive herd sell off will mean little demand for breeding bulls from

purebred breeders.

“There won’t be an opportunity to sell bulls if you don’t have cows to

breed.”

Greg Conn, chair of the Alberta Cattle Commission, said at the last

board meeting, the group estimated cattle sales would drop from five

million head a year to four million head. With a checkoff of $2 a head,

that means the commission’s $10 million budget drops to $8 million.

“It’s affecting us big time,” Conn said.

The commission is already feeling the effects of the drought because

animals change hands fewer times.

During preliminary discussions, the group has said it won’t send $1

million to the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association next year. It will rely

on its $4 million surplus for the rest of its budget.

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