Thursday, February 21, 2013

Chicken farmer blasts CFO


Glenn Black, a small-flock chicken farmer on Manitoulin Island, has sent a blistering letter of complaints about the chicken marketing board to the Ontario Farm Products Marketing Commission.

Black says small-flock owners market only 0.033 per cent of the chicken in Ontario, yet the Chicken Farmers of Ontario marketing board treats them like a threat to their market.

It also imposes unfair biosecurity standards, he says, arguing that the threat from diseases is far greater on a “mega farm” and “monoculture” operation.

He also notes that the marketing board had a seven-year cycle to audit its quota holders for compliance with food-safety protocols, recently reduced to a three-year cycle, but still, Black says, far short of standard industry practice of meeting standards, such as ISO, within one year.

He says the large farms also pose greater biosecurity risks because there are more industry specialists visiting their barns, there are shared resources and common sub-contractors each working at a number of different farms , and some of the largest operations involve “multiple staff members and distributed authority, jobs, and extended lines of communication, thereby lowering the probability of timely detection of biosecurity issues and disease outbreak.”

Black wrote the commission that “contrary to CFO’s concerns, it is the chicken production factories that place the small flocks at greatest risk, for many small flocks are just 1.6 k km away from these
disease powder kegs of the megafactory chicken producers.”

He says “CFO’s regulations, training, auditing, and enforcement action on these chicken
disease powder kegs of the quotabearing chicken production factories appears to
be diluted, delayed, glacially slow in its implementation, incomplete and mediocre.”

He also cites Canadian Food Inspection Agency data to complain that there is a far higher rate of condemnations for Ontario-grown chickens than in Atlantic Canada.

“Where is CFO’s sciencebased proof that the Ontariowide weighted level of current
compliance by small flock chicken farmers to accepted industry practices is more
hazardous that the Ontariowide weighted level of current compliance by quotabearing
mega chicken factory producers?”

He complains that Manitoulin Island is ignored by chicken board policies.

Were a quota holder to set up there, his chickens would have to be trucked hundreds of kilometers south to the nearest processing plant, then the processed chicken has to make it north again to satisfy local consumer demand.

This complaint is familiar to the commission because a Manitoulin-Island producer who runs a government-inspected and licensed packing plant was unable to get a break from the chicken board to produce fo the local market. He was told two years ago that he would need to buy quota from an existing producer and he said the prices made that an impossible business proposition.

But Black takes a different tack, arguing there are small-flock owners on Manitoulin Island and across Northern Ontario who are denied any vote or voice on marketing board policies and programs.

Because they are left out by the CFO, he argues that the commission ought to exempt them from marketing board controls.

If they are, however, to continue to be included under CFO controls, then the commission needs to insist that the CFO include them in its development of policies and programs.

Black complains that the small-flock chicken farmers can’t even get into the annual general meeting of the chicken board.

He argues that the chicken board has failed in its responsibilities to the public, especially the large segment of the population deemed relatively poor.

He says that as the cost of production and chicken prices have risen, so has the profit margin for producers. That, he argues, is not fair to the public.

He recommends that Ontario marketplace be divided into three categories – one for mega-farms, a second for smaller-scale operations and a third for imports.

He says allocations from the national agency ought to be shared between the two local producer categories according to their performance in meeting quality and food-safety standards.

In the event of a marketplace crisis, he says the category for imports could be shut down first before production cuts are required and imposed on the other categories.

A new general farm organization, Progressive Farmers of Ontario, has also taken up the issue of CFO treatment of small-flock owners.

The proposals it presented to the CFO have been rejected by the board of directors.

Sean McGivern, leader of that organization, has said they plan to file an appeal with the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food Appeal Tribunal. So far no date for a hearing has shown up on the tribunal’s website listing of appeal hearings.