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The Rural Voice, 1981-09, Page 12AN OVERVIEW The sheep industry Easter 1981. If you're an Ontario sheep farmer it was like a bad dream. It was about that time when an exporting company in New Zealand shipped about 180,000 pounds of chilled Iamb carcasses to Canada, just in time for the religuos holiday season and a waiting ethnic market in and around Toronto. The key word is chilled. For a decade New Zealand producers have provided about eighty per cent of the Iamb consumed in Canada, but always it arrived frozen. The chilled meat at Easter was in direct competition with the homegrown offerings of sheep farmers in Ontario and Quebec. And it hurt. "It did a great deal of harm to the Ontario sheep industry," says Walter Renwick, of R.R. 1 Clifford, a fulltime commercial producer and vice-president of the Canada Sheep Council. "It had psychological effects as well as monetary. People were expecting good prices for their Easter Iambs, to pay off bank loans. and it just didn't happen. There has been a reduction in the growth of the sheep business in Ontario. After Easter a lot of ewes went to market." Last Christmas, Canadian lambs were selling at between $1.80 and $2.30 a pound live weight. Farmers were anticipating about 51.95 per pound at Easter but imports from New Zealand slashed that to between $1 and $1.30 per pound. The Targe ethnic community, at which much of the Ontario product is aimed, prefers fresh (chilled) meat to frozen, and until this year that meant Canadian lamb. "The weaker prices before Easter weren't entirely due to that (the chilled imports) but it certainly aggravated it," says Grant Preston, of R.R. 1 Proton Station, another producer and president of the Western Ontario Lamb Producers. "We've been able to live with the frozen imports from New Zealand but this chilled meat could be devastating to us. It's not just the swine and beef people who are having money problems." Preston believes the sheep producers are caught in the middle of some complex international trade agreements. where commerce takes precedence over sentiment. He's not sure it will be easy for Canada to reverse the stand it took last Easter, though he's been a frontline warrior in the battle that's been raging ever since. "We've asked our (association) members to write their members of parliament," says Preston, "but our strength has by Dean Robinson been minimal because there are so few fulltime producers. We've had very little clout, but that's changing. The Canada Sheep Council made a presentation to the federal minister of agri- culture, Eugene Whelan, in May, and also appeared before the government's standing committee on agri- culture at its hearing on Bill C46 (the meat import act). In its initial brief, the CSC asked that imports of fresh lamb from New Zealand be dis- continued and imports of frozen lamb from Australia and New Zealand be held to an average of the last five years. In a second brief the council asked the federal government to implement a permit system on all imports of Iamb and mutton. Says Renwick, "We have to convince the government to put all meat imports on a permit system and monitor what is coming into the country and when. Then if we think importers are doing anything detrimental to the sheep industry we would sit down with them and try to get an agreement to smooth out the schedule of imports. We must get a handle on our destiny." Dorothy Sloan of Willowdale, secretary of the CSC, says council president Ron Gordon, of Alberta, met with Whelan in Edmonton in late July. and the minister gave assurances that there would be no repeat of what happened last Easter. Now, she says, it's a matter of wait-and-see. The bullets in the war stop well short of the supermarket meat counter, and it's unlikely many consumers even know there's a problem. It's the men in the middle making higher profits because they can buy imported lamb for a lower price than they can buy Canadian. Renwick believes the sheep producers should put another lobbyist in Ottawa. They were happy with a six-month stint by Gary Benoit (also a professional lobbyist for the cattlemen) but he has since moved to Alberta. Says Renwick, "Too often we find ourselves in the position of reacting to something that is already law, rather than having the opportunity to change something before it is legislated. This seems to be the year of the waiting game for Canadian sheep producers. Besides the ruling on New Zealand imports, they are also watching closely negotiations with the United States regarding scrapie, a disease that affects the nervous systems of sheep. PG. 10 THE RURAL VOICE/SEPTEMBER 1981