Friday, June 19, 2026

Sharman appointed to development board

Danielle Sharman of Rockwood has been appointed to a three-year term on the province’s Rural Economic Development Advisory Panel.

She is a senior policy advisor at the Ontario Federation of Agriculture, specializing in agriculture and rural economic development.


She is a board director on the Greenbelt Foundation and sits on various committees for the Economic Developers’ Council of Ontario.


She is a certified economic developer with a master’s degree in local economic development.

She, her husband and three children live on a grain farm in Rockwood.


Wow! What great qualifications for this job!

Yet another lawyer appointed

The province has appointed Harouna Sidibe Saley Sidibe to a two-year term on the Animal Care Review Board.

He joins a board whose membership is already mostly lawyers. 


They deal with appeals from farmers and other animal owners who have been accused of animal abuse.


Twenty-six of the 29 members are lawyers or are employed in legal administrate systems. Their qualifications outlined in the provincial appointments registry show no experience with livestock or poultry.


Sidibe holds master’s degrees in international law and business law and a doctorate in law. 


He is currently completing a Master of Laws at Osgoode Hall Law School and holds a Certificate in Law from Queen’s University. 


He has more than 10 years of professional experience in real estate law, insolvency law, medical liability law, and insurance law, including experience with French law firms and insurance groups. He is able to work in delivers services in French and English and has basic knowledge of Spanish.

Drone spraying gets ok


 

The federal health department is granting permission to use drones to spray fields.


The permission applies to pesticides and crops already approved for aerial applications.


The permission came in the form of a letter Health Canada issued to the Canadian Agricultural Drone Association.

Health Canada – i.e. the Pest Management Review Agency – said this is an interim measure.

“Previously there were no agricultural pesticides approved by PMRA to apply by drone at all, so there was literally nothing that could be applied legally,” said Markus Weber, president of the Canadian Agricultural Drone Association.

Thursday, June 18, 2026

Alberta farmer urges ban on blood plasma

Jake Waldner, pig manager for Hartland Colony in Alberta, thinks porcine epidemic diarrhea virus can spread in blood plasma used as an ingredient for nursery pig rations.

He said he can’t be certain the Hutterite colony’s disease outbreak came from blood plasma, but said there were too many links pointing in that direction.


He was speaking at the annual meeting of Alberta Pork.


Several other producers had strong words of criticism for allowing blood plasma to continue to be a nursery feed ingredient.


One said the issue was raised 14 years ago and a number of times since.


One said it’s like playing Russian roulette.


Alberta has had only this one outbreak of porcine epidemic diarrhea virus since 2922.

Province tweaks farm machinery regs


 

The province is proposing minor changes to the Farm Implements Act and Regulation 369 to reduce paperwork.


 New farm machinery dealerships and new dealer-distributorships will no longer need to regisste3r with the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Agribusiness.

The Ministry will retain the dealer requirement  as a permit by rule, whereby a farmequipment dealer is required to notify OMAFA through the existing registration form.

The legislation provides protection for dealers from unjustified terminations of dealership agreements and buy-back requirements when the dealership agreements end. The Act also improves farm implement safety through supporting the development of farm implement safety standards.


Chick sexing technology launching soon


 

Technology that can identify the sex of chicks before they hatch is set to launch late this year.


It would reduce costs and eliminate the animal welfare issue of killing newborn males.


Canadian Egg Technologies is working with the Egg Farmers of Ontario marketing board and the Egg Farmers of Canada national supply management agency to bring technology from Denmark’s Sanova Technology Group to Canada.

 MatrixSpec Solutions of Quebec is also involved.

The group’s platform uses hyperspectral imaging, via MatrixSpec’s MSE3000 scanner, to gender-type the eggs as early as the fourth day of incubation, according to a June 17 news release. It said this is earlier than other, similar technologies.

Hatcheries will benefit by freeing up space to incubate only female-producing eggs.

Empire profits increase


 

Empire reported a 22.5 per cent increase in profits for its final quarter, a total of $212 million.


Its financial statements did not reveal revenues.


The company said it is pushing back on supplier’s surcharges for fuel costs and price hikes.


Empire owns Sobeys, IGA, Farm Boy and Costco supermarket chains.