Ontario Agriculture

The network for agriculture in Ontario, Canada

Bette Jean Crews announcement on not seeking re-election. Who will be the next OFA president?

Ontario Federation of Agriculture President Bette Jean Crews announced this morning she won’t seek re-election to the president’s position in November, citing a need to concentrate her efforts on her family farm. Here’s the text of the message she sent:

:

Dear friends and colleagues,

By way of this message, I am informing you that I will not be seeking re-election as OFA president.

I am returning to a more active role in the operation of our family farm business. I am announcing this now, because I want to be fair to OFA members who may be considering putting their name forward for an executive position at the OFA AGM November 21-22, 2011. 

I will complete my term as President with the same commitment and energy as I have given since first elected in 2009.  I am proud of the OFA’s accomplishments during the terms in which I have had the privilege and trust to be your President. 

For me, there have been many highlights.  In this past year alone we have accomplished the Risk Management Program and the united voice of OASC. The National Food Strategy,  a proposal initiated by OFA, was presented to Federal and Provincial Ag Ministers. A new market-value based schedule for wildlife damage to livestock. A cervid management plan was created that enables farmer control of problem elk and an elk hunt this fall. Farmers realized a three-year exemption under bobolink preservation regulations and a joint industry-government committee to design protection policy that will work for agriculture. And finally, OFA’s role in the Open for Business consultation has already reduced regulations by nearly 30 per cent and put a new process in place for regulation development, interpretation and enforcement. 

All of this, and more, demonstrates the farm community’s ability to work together. It shows how we can achieve success when we take an active role in designing solutions.  Well-articulated, well-defended positions supported by a unified sector can bring results.

I have enjoyed my years of service to the Ontario farm community as part of the OFA Executive committee for the past 11 years.  I have the immense privilege of meeting hundreds of hard working Ontario farmers and their families.  That is the real joy of the work and memories that I will always treasure.  I have also had the privilege of working with OFA general manager Neil Currie and his staff members who are outstanding and a credit to OFA.  Thank you all.

I will continue to serve the farmers of Ontario on the OFA Board as Zone Director for Northumberland, Hastings, Prince Edward and Lennox and Addington counties.  When elections are held this year I will be past president, and in that portfolio I intend to use the experience of the past 11 years to further advance the issues affecting Ontario agriculture. 

Thank you to Ontario farmers for the years of confidence and support.

Bette Jean Crews,

President and Zone 12 Director

Views: 389

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Has anyone heard who is running?

Some one told me Wayne Black was considering it.

 

Phillip Shaw Endorses Wayne Black.

 

Watching the LIVE Ontario Federation of Agriculture  convention video feed here today, Monday Nov 21, 2011 at http://www.ofa.on.ca/convention-video.aspx

Reply to Discussion

RSS

Agriculture Headlines from Farms.com Canada East News - click on title for full story

TELUS and L-SPARK launch Sovereign AI Accelerator to propel Canadian startups onto the world stage

TELUS and L-SPARK today announced a first-of-its-kind program designed to enable high-potential Canadian startups and scaleups to build, train and deploy advanced AI solutions on Canada's fastest and most powerful sovereign AI supercomputer. The TELUS Sovereign AI Accelerator will usher in a new wave of Canadian innovation by accelerating the go-to-market strategies and investment readiness of select businesses. The inaugural cohort includes ambitious Canadian companies developing breakthrough AI solutions across retail, healthcare, robotics, enterprise software and industrial automation: Airy3D  Airy3D's DepthIQ™ IP delivers simultaneous 2D images and 3D depth maps from a single passive image sensor – providing a compact, power-efficient, and cost-effective solution for use in robotics, automotive, industrial automation and consumer devices. Codalio  is an AI-driven product and application development platform that empowers startups and companies to launch MVPs and build scalable, e

DJI Agriculture Reveals Global Adoption of Agricultural Drones Cuts 51Mt in Carbon Emissions and Saves 410Mts of Water for Farmers Globally

DJI Agriculture, the global leader in innovative agricultural drone technology, today unveiled its fifth annual Agricultural Drone Industry Insight Report (2025/2026) at Agrishow 2026 in Ribeirão Preto, Brazil. The report highlights how global policies are trending toward liberalization, standardization, and strategic integration. Meanwhile, DJI Agriculture strengthened its network of 3,500 service and repair centers worldwide while advocating for standardized drone operations. By the end of 2025, over 600,000 DJI agricultural drones were already in use globally by more than 600,000 trained operators. The adoption of this technology has saved approximately 410 million tons of water--equivalent to the annual drinking water consumption of 740 million people--and cut carbon emissions by 51 million tons, equal to the annual carbon absorption capacity of 240 million trees. "Agricultural drones are no longer a novelty – they are essential farm equipment worldwide. In Brazil, DJI Drones are

Farmland Rents Lag Land Values

FCC’s latest economic analysis shows farmland rental rates are not keeping pace with rising land values, influencing how producers approach growth and investment.

Thank you for attending our Earth Day Farm Tours!

Thank you to everyone who joined us for our Earth Day farm tours in Prince Edward County. Celebrations like these are always more meaningful when shared.

“Too Much on the Line” campaign launched as new study reveals the cost of supply chain disruptions

A new economic analysis finds a single week of rail and port disruptions during peak export season costs Canada’s grain sector up to $540 million, largely in unrecoverable export sales.

© 2026   Created by Darren Marsland.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service