Ontario Agriculture

The network for agriculture in Ontario, Canada

Toronto Overlooks Local Food Production. Do they care or just want the lowest prices? Should Ontario farmers be concerned?

Canada’s Largest City Overlooks Local Food Production


By Bette Jean Crews
President
Ontario Federation of Agriculture


As Canadians celebrate our nation’s 144th birthday this weekend, it’s an appropriate time to consider what it means for each of us to be Canadian.

As farmers, it doesn’t matter what day of the year it is, we are never more proud than when our fellow Canadians enjoy the produce and food grown right here at home. This Canada Day long weekend farmers everywhere are especially grateful for Canadian consumers choosing to feed their families with locally-grown food.

Unfortunately not everyone shares that same pride and social responsibility. In fact, a City of Toronto committee recently refused to adopt a policy that would direct City staff to buy local food, when appropriate, instead of imported food that may come from thousands of miles away. A final decision on the policy will go to Toronto City Council in two weeks for further debate.

This decision is an example of why the development and implementation of a National Food Strategy is so important. Canadians, and certainly the City of Toronto, need a long-term strategy to preserve the existing contributions agriculture and the agri-food industry makes, while maintaining the production of safe, healthy and affordable food. Future generations of Canadians may not have the same healthy and accessible benefits local food provides if our industry and governments don’t take action now to adopt a National Food Strategy.

Ontario’s agri-food industry contributes $33 billion to the provincial economy every year and provides jobs for 700,000 people. Much of that economic contribution comes from the agri-food industry, specifically the food processing sector in the Greater Toronto Area. In fact, Toronto is home to a large cluster of food processing facilities that contributes significantly to the Toronto economy. Toronto is also surrounded by some of the best farm land in Canada – a logical source for local food when you consider that every one of Ontario’s 60,000 farmers can produce enough food to feed 120 people every year, local food has never been more plentiful or available.

The decision by a City of Toronto committee not to source local food was made with limited vision and reinforces why developing a National Food Strategy is so important. Canadians need to be able to source and enjoy local food; they need the economic contributions made by the agriculture and agri-food industry to continue and most of all we all need a safe, sustainable food system because that’s one of the many reasons we are all proud to be Canadians.

Happy Canada Day from the Ontario Federation of Agriculture and our 37,000 farm family members, we are proud to be Canadian farmers providing the freshest, safest, healthiest and most affordable food in the world.

Source: OFA

Views: 115

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Here is an interview we did regarding local.

 

 

 

 

Reply to Discussion

RSS

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

Pulse Market Insight #300

Indian Monsoon Outcome Key for Pulse Outlooks We think it’s important to not react too quickly to weather events, and particularly forecasts. For example, the crop outlook in western Canada has already made a number of sharp U-turns, and it’s only mid-June. As we get further into the growing season, outcomes will become more certain and the outlook will become clearer. Even though we don’t want to bet too much on weather forecasts, there is a potential situation in India that certainly bears watching. Recently, the Indian Meteorology Department lowered its rain forecast for the southwest monsoon season to 90% of the long-term average, based on the potential for a large El Niño event. This was the lowest IMD monsoon forecast in at least 20 years. The actual monsoon performance doesn’t always line up with the IMD forecast, but the accuracy of its forecasts seems to be better in recent years. While there’s plenty of uncertainty in the forecast, it’s worth noting that back in 2014/15 an

Chicago Close: Lower Ahead of U.S. Juneteenth Holiday

Corn, wheat and soybean futures all finished lower on Thursday as traders adjusted positions ahead of the long U.S. holiday weekend. Chicago markets will be closed Friday for the Juneteenth federal holiday. Corn futures weakened despite generally supportive export news. The USDA confirmed private sales of 285,775 tonnes of corn to Mexico for delivery during the 2026/27 marketing year. Meanwhile, today’s weekly USDA export sales report showed about 1.16 million tonnes of old-crop corn and 519,035 tonnes of new-crop supplies. Old-crop sales were within trade expectations, while new-crop bookings fell short of the upper end of forecasts. July corn lost 3 ½ cents to $4.17 ½, and December dropped 4 ¾ cents to $4.44. A stronger U.S. dollar added pressure across the grain complex after the Federal Reserve’s policy meeting on Wednesday reinforced expectations for higher interest rates. A rising dollar makes U.S. agricultural commodities more expensive for overseas customers. Wheat futu

Saskatchewan Crop Conditions Slip but Still Strong

Saskatchewan crop conditions generally weakened through the first half of June but remain strong overall. Thursday’s crop report pegged the Saskatchewan canola crop at 76% good to excellent as of Monday, down 13 points from the province’s initial 2026 rating of 89% on June 1. Spring wheat was rated 82% good to excellent as of Monday, down from 90% on June 1. Durum slipped just 1 point to 89%, while winter wheat fell 6 points to 79%. Conditions also deteriorated for most feed grains. Oats declined 8 points to 80% good to excellent, and barley dropped 6 points to 83%. Among pulse and specialty crops, peas fell 6 points to 85% good to excellent, while chickpeas declined 3 points to 93%. Mustard dropped 4 points to 88%, and soybeans were down 6 points to 70%. Flax was unchanged at 87%, and lentils were down 9 points at 86%. Canaryseed was one of the few crops to improve, edging up 1 point to 88% good to excellent. Saskatchewan seeding advanced slowly over the past week, hitting

Fertilizer Canada supports Mercosur trade deal

Canadian policy must enhance potash competitiveness, the group said

Canadians pay $224 per year for supply management, a new report says

A think tank compared product prices in Canada with those in the U.S.

© 2026   Created by Darren Marsland.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service