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COUNTRY LIFE IN BC • JANUARY 2017
Marketing board reviewing dairy quota Frustrated dairy farmers press board at AGM for quick action on how quota is allocated
by DAVID SCHMIDT
VANCOUVER – The BC Milk Marketing Board is beginning another review of its quota and solids-non-fat policies, producers were told at the BCMMB annual meeting and producer meeting in Vancouver on December 2. The review is intended to address production shortages and an unhealthy butterfat to solids-non-fat ratio.
BCMMB member Jeremy Wiebe noted 15,000 to 20,000 kgs of butterfat “fall off the table” each month due to
underproduction. He added the production is not lost completely as “we give it back to you in incentive days.” BCMMB member Tom Hoogendoorn admitted incentive days are a “stop- gap” measure and a more permanent solution is required.
BCMMB member Dick Klein Geltink said the Farm Industry Review Board-mandated review could take up to a year to complete but producers indicated they want action much sooner.
“We need to get milk to
market today, not a year from now,” one producer said, clearly reflecting the mood of the entire audience.
Backward step
Stan van Keulen, an often outspoken critic of BCMMB quota policies, said the board needs to go back to
approaches used in the 1970s and 80s.
“We didn’t make the system fair (in those days); we made the system produce to the market. We need to allow those producers who can produce the milk to produce
The perfect tractor, now in the perfect size. the milk.” Several producers
suggested the board look at other ways to allocate quotas rather than the pro rata system it currently uses. They pointed out that some producers do not have the cows, buildings and/or equipment to produce the extra 7% allocation they were given in 2016 and are therefore swapping it out or just not producing it. They suggested farmers who do not produce the additional allocation should not receive future allocations.
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They stressed that selling the extra quota is not an option as the 10-10-10 LIFO (Last-In, First Out) assessment means sellers lose all the quota they have received in the past year. “10-10-10 stifles the movement of quota,” one producer said in a comment reflecting the views of most producers. They encouraged the board to ask FIRB to change the assessment to a First-In, First-Out basis (which would reduce withholdings on most partial sales to the base 10%) or a system based on the average age of a producer’s quota holdings.
Organic quota
Another option is to extend the system currently used to allocate organic quota to the entire system. Organic producers are given a “sleeve” each quarter. Those who produce the full sleeve in a quarter then receive a portion of that sleeve in the form of a quota allocation in the following quarter.
That has worked well in the organic sector which saw 11% growth in the past year. That growth allowed the BCMMB to add four new organic producers in the past dairy year and bring in four more new organic producers this dairy year.
Producers noted it should work just as well in the conventional market, which has also been experiencing a huge increase in demand. However, it would not work at all should the situation change and markets shrink in future.
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Producers also discussed what to do about butterfat, since that is where all the demand is coming from. Many urged the board to change its component pricing to put more money on butterfat and less on protein so producers will be encouraged to produce milk more suited to current market demands. That seemed to resonate with the board, with Hoogendoorn noting “producers respond to financial incentives.
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