Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Manitoba wants $130 million for hog farmers


Keystone Agricultural Producers, Manitoba’s equivalent of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture, is wants governments to offer hog farmers $130 million worth of loans to tide them over to a return to a better balance between feed costs and market prices.

They’re losing about $40 to $50 a head at current sky-high feed costs and some of the nation’s biggest producers are already in bankruptcy protection from their creditors.

Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz made no promises, pointing to his move to set up a Hog Industry Task Team to monitor the situation.

Keystone president Doug Chorney said the situation is so bad that farmers are selling breeding stock because they can’t afford to feed them.

He said the bankruptcy of Puratone Corp., which has 40 hog farms in Manitoba, is indicative of what is happening at other farms.

He said family farms will be bankrupted and hundreds of jobs will be lost, including jobs in related industries, if help fails to come right away.