Monday, August 12, 2013

Chicken board allows Francophones to export


The ban on selling live chickens across the Ontario-Quebec border has sprung a big leak.

The Chicken Farmers of Ontario marketing board, after losing a long court battle, has announced it is changing its policies to allow Francophone quota holders in Eastern Ontario to market their birds to processors in Quebec.

Those that were persistently marketing to Quebec processors are now allowed to continue.

Those Francophone chicken producers who want to join them might be granted CFO approval, provided they are “qualified producers” with “qualified quotas” for an “opening phase”.

Meanwhile, Ontario processors who want to serve the kosher and Hong Kong dressed markets can’t buy chicken from Ontario quota holders. All of the chickens they produce must go to processors approved by the chicken board.

The board controls where chickens are sold because the province is short of supply and needs to ration birds among processors.

Under federal and provincial government supervision, the marketing boards are supposed to ensure that market demand is satisfied, but the marketing board leaders have been unable to fully satisfy all processors in all provinces.

Alberta is so disgruntled it has served notice it’s leaving the national system, effective next year.