Ontario Agriculture

The network for agriculture in Ontario, Canada

Canadian Federation of Agriculture (CFA) have compiled the party platforms for agriculture and developed key messages for Canadian Farmers. 

 

Click here for the Platform Comparison Table: http://www.cfa-fca.ca/sites/default/files/Party%20Platform%20Compar...

 

Click here if you are interested in the messaging CFA has provided.  http://www.cfa-fca.ca/media-centre/election-2011 .

Views: 172

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Actually, the CFA have done nothing of the kind. Some of the columns seem to spell out party platforms quite clearly, while others are missing altogether. This applies to all parties for specific issues, but the column that made me suspicious was for the 'Greens': only 4 positions listed out of a total of 17 headings! Now, I'm not voting for the Green Party, but I had to imagine that they had something to say about agriculture.

So I took a look at the Green Party Platform by following the link that the CFA put at the bottom of their Platform Comparison Table... and in short order easily found policies explicitly dealing with each of the headings except "Young Farmers". Some of those policies are almost identical to planks from other parties - they weren't hard to spot.

Now, I'm a naturally suspicious and cynical person, so I contacted the CFA 10 days ago, and even included the results of my search, helpfully listed by heading, for someone to cut and paste into the chart on the website. Even if they were equally suspicious (and they should be, in their position), it would have taken two minutes to check that these positions were in fact listed in the Green Party Platform.

Jessica Goodfellow, Director of Communications at the Canadian Federation of Agriculture, has insisted that "Yes, certainly the chart is meant to be helpful to CFA members. If we missed parts, we apologize." 

Well, an apology only cuts it for so long. Given that she said this 10 days ago, the election is now only 4 days away, and the chart remains unchanged, the only conclusion is that the objective of the chart is not actually to help CFA members compare party platforms. Which is a shame, because it seemed like the CFA were doing something useful. Do annual payments go towards the CFA trying to influence the voting practices of its own membership?

Phil Mount,

Guelph, Ontario

Canada has an entrenched Soverign food security law with entrenched domestic marketing rights and obligations.

 

Not one party has acknowledged those facts.

 

Not one party will acknowledge that domestic farmers have rights, duties and obligations to the domestic peoples which are entrenched in our Constitution.

 

Not one party speaks to entrenched "property" rights.

 

If the different parties will not acknowledge publicly the entrenched foundational rights of our country to protect the public in regards to all things "of" the soil, then all other matters will become inconsequential.

 

Matters of agriculture must not be esoteric. 

 

All Sovereign licenses to trade and sovereign licenses to production must be brought forward for public acknowledgment.

 

How many are there and who has them?

 

Once we understand the very foundation of agriculture, then and only then can we effectively move forward with meaningful policy.

I hope everyone takes time to vote.
Unfortunately with only 2 percent of the voters involved in agriculture, we don't appear to be very important to the politicians.
We need to do what we can to play our part in this election.

Joe

Reply to Discussion

RSS

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

Pulse Market Insight #289

Big Risks Dampen Price Signals for 2026 Crop This is the time of year when new-crop bids for pulses usually start showing up, but not always. It’s not just the actual price that signals how urgently buyers are looking to lock in acres; the timing of new-crop bids is also an indicator. For example, I recall years when new-crop bids for peas or lentils already started to show up in October, almost a year before the next crop is harvested. That happened when pea and lentil supplies were very short and importers wanted to ensure they would have access to next year’s crops. In general though, the first new-crop bids are often seen in late December or early January. One rule of thumb some people use is the Saskatoon Crop Production Show in mid-January as the “real start” of the contracting season. But this year, it seems that new-crop bids are even scarcer than usual, with a few possible reasons. The first is that overseas buyers aren’t very concerned about locking in next year’s supplie

CN Marks Record December, Annual Grain Movement

Canadian National Railway set a new benchmark for grain movement in December, capping off a record-breaking year. The railway said Friday it moved more than 2.82 million tonnes of grain from Western Canada in December, marking its fourth consecutive monthly record and surpassing the previous December high set in 2020 by more than 80,000 tonnes. The strong December performance also helped CN establish a new annual record for grain shipments in 2025. In Western Canada alone, CN moved over 31.3 million tonnes of grain during the year, exceeding the previous record of 30.9 million set in 2020. Across all of Canada, total grain volumes across CN’s network reached more than 32.7 million tonnes, breaking the prior record of 32.25 million established in 2024. CN attributed the record volumes to a combination of large Canadian grain crops and steady execution throughout the supply chain. Janet Drysdale, CN’s executive vice-president and chief commercial officer, said consistent operat

ROI announces the Community Well-being Dashboard in Ontario’s two official languages

The Rural Ontario Institute (ROI) is pleased to announce the Rural Community Well-Being Dashboard and supporting factsheets will be made available in Ontario’s two official languages in the spring of 2026.

Chicago Close: Little Changed in Pre-Report Positioning

Corn, wheat, and soybean futures were little changed on Thursday as traders continued to position ahead of key USDA reports to be released on Monday. 

GFO Rejoins Grain Growers of Canada

Almost six years after parting ways, Grain Farmers of Ontario has rejoined Grain Growers of Canada, marking a renewed push for a more unified national voice as Canada’s grain sector navigates mounting economic and policy pressures. 

© 2026   Created by Darren Marsland.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service