I attended the three so-called producer information meetings set up by the CWB in Medicine Hat, Camrose and Falher. Having read some of the media reports of the previous week’s meetings in Manitoba and Saskatchewan, I knew that these meetings were all about politics, and an all-or-nothing message from the CWB chair and keeping the monopoly.
Every meeting was literally a carbon copy of each other, with literally the same scripted questions, and sometimes the same people asking those questions.
In my personal view, I was embarrassed for the farmers who had come to the meetings to hear about the future, to our staff who worked hard in setting up these meetings, and senior management who attended.
Read Also

Farm equipment sales sector sees significant structural changes
Farming equipment sales have been declining for a number of years now, and one industry professional believes structural changes in the industry are needed to curb that trend.
Fact is, that the minister informed us when he visited the CWB offices back in May that this government is going to repeal the current CWB Act and replace it with a new act.
By doing that, the government then supersedes any requirement that is in the current CWB Act, therefore, making the requirement for a plebiscite invalid. Our internal counsel has advised us that the government does have the authority to do so, and also advised us that holding our own plebiscite will be non-binding on the government.
What has been missing at these meetings and the history of the CWB is respect for the producers’ opinions. Surveys show a growing percentage of farmers who are not supportive of the single desk, and the biggest group that expresses that opinion is farmers under 45 years of age. We’ve seen in all the producer surveys done since 1998 that there is not majority support for marketing barley under the single desk, yet what have we done? At the majority at these meetings, in all due respect, were well-seasoned farmers, many who even stated that they were retired, yet support the CWB monopoly and don’t want to see any changes.
Only individual farmers can decide what is best for their business. I cannot and will not tell my neighbour how to manage their farm, and what to do with their wheat and barley, and no one should feel they have the right to tell me what to do with my grain on my farm. Democracies don’t work that way.