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The Rural Voice, 2001-11, Page 47PERTH 11T County Pork Producers NEWSLETTER Jim Van Herk, President 519-595-4863 • The Rural Voice is provided to Perth County Pork Producers by the PCPPA. In support of a round table for Ontario Any opinions expressed herein may not necessarily reflect the views of the Perth County Pork Producers' Association. I'll be finishing my third year on Perth County Pork Producers' Communications Committee this year. I started at the end of 1998 and we all know what 1998 was like. In the fall of 1998, meeting halls were packed with producers wondering what was happening to their market and trying to figure out what to do about it. In 2000 and 2001 we as live hog producers have had the longest, consistently high price for live hogs that I have ever experienced. Consumer demand for pork worldwide must be very strong. I just read that Japan is increasing consumption of pork at the expense of beef in the wake of Mad Cow Disease concerns. It seems that we, as live hog producers, are producing what the consumer wants right now. I would like to see a competitive market maintained to send the right signals up and down the supply chain based on supply and demand. The potential for profit is what drives almost every business. If that profit comes about by hard work and good management then it is well earned, but if it is increased at the expense of others in the supply chain, then this is where friction will develop. All segments of the•pork supply chain should have an opportunity to make a profit to maintain optimism and productivity. The Round Table format being promoted currently here in Ontario is a step in the right direction I believe. It should be a place of interaction among all the segments of the pork supply chain. It could be made up of representatives of government, processors, and producers to start off with; maybe later others could be brought in gradually such as retailers, university extension people, swine breeders, feed suppliers, veterinar- ians, labour unions, etc. For it to work to everyone's satisfaction the different players around the table should view each as needing the other. I hope that an "inclusive" vision would develop. If one player dominates the outcome of any plan or agreement or refuses to participate unless talks go only their own way, it will undermine the Round Table concept. The meetings should be scheduled on a regular basis with the same time elapsing between meetings, so that they don't wait until some crisis has occurred. I wouldn't rule out having emergency meetings but it is important to meet on a regular basis in order to maintain good working relationships. In early 1999 a delegation of pork producers from Perth and other counties visited Quebec to observe how their pork industry operates. They brought back information for Ontario producers. Quebec has a Round Table. It is probably the centrepiece of their cohesive pork industry. They seem to go ahead increasing production at a steady pace, regardless of what the marketplace is paying for hogs. They have been increasing production at a steady five per cent per year, although I read that it was two per cent this past year. Their pork processors are aggressively market- ing pork into the Ontario and U.S. marketplace. They don't seem to have wild swings in production. they seem to have brought all players together in co-operation so that all will prosper. Quebec's pork producers enjoy the highest stabilization of any province in Canada as far as I know. Their packing plants, too, have strikes by their workers from time to time but they seem to be very short induration and a settlement is reached fairly quickly. I am told that all of their hog packing plants are double -shifted, further increasing their efficiency. They seem to be able to negotiate with one another and find some "middle ground" that everyone can live with. The threat of "it's my way or else" will doom any talks. All the players sitting around this Round Table in Quebec deem it to be very important to be there. I don't think for a moment that all the talks are harmonious at all times, but they keep talking until they have hammered out an agreement that all • can live with. At some point, though, the market would be at a saturation point. I have • also read recently that Quebec has had the sharpest increase in land prices on average of all the provinces in Canada, so their safety -net pack- ages plus environmental concerns driving the need for enough land to spread manure m.ay have had an effect. I think that the Ontario pork industry should embark on a course along similar lines as the Quebec pork industry, but we should go ahead carefully and with as much wisdom as possible. The end result will probably be a little bit different than in Quebec but I think that the formation of a Round Table here in Ontario is a very important first step.° — Submitted by Gerald H. Kolkman PERTH COUNTY PORK PRODUCERS' PORK PRODUCTS • Smoked Pork Chops • Fresh Pork Chops • Stuffed Loin Chops • Smoked Sausage • Smoked Cheddar Sausage • Bacon Burgers • Teriyaki Pork Steaks • Vittorio's BBQ Sauce AVAILABLE FROM: Steve Hulshof (Kinkora) 348-8167 Martin van Bakel (Dublin) 345-2666 Walter Bosch (Monkton) 356-9000 Ted Keller (Mitchell) 348-9836 NOVEMBER 2001.45