HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Citizen, 2004-04-15, Page 1Spring car care Pg. 11 issue begins
Break-in
in Blyth
e Citizen
Brussels and northern Huron County
Volume 20 No. 15
Thursday, April 15, 2004
$1 (93c + 7c GST)
Inside this week
Grey hit
hard in
budget
By Andrea Hruska
Special to The Citizen
Students making a
difference
M-T residents
discuss official plan
Pg. 6
Pg. 7
P WLS gets grant
gā¢ -I money ā_ā,
Woman tells of Pg. 10 volunteering irt_
Haiti
Producers told it may be time to think small
But he did re-iterate it several
times throughout the question
period. Asked if smaller is better
why there is no premium for a
smaller carcass, Ishoy said,
"because at the packing level and
feeding level we're not listening to
the consumer, For a variety of
reasons they're saying put smaller
cuts in front of us."
That prompted someone to
suggest that should a premium to put
on smaller carcasses, the industry
would have more of these than could
be slaughtered.
Ishoy felt tttat was the wrong
outlook. "At some point in time
we're going to have to take a step
back and listen to what people are
saying."
Comparisons were made to the
pork industry and a grid. Ishoy said
he believed a grid was a good thing.
With its new processing plant,
which could be up and running by
early summer, Gencor, said Ishoy
would like to get "out of the box. We
want to get out there and figure out
why the consumers going to want
our product."
This is not to say that Gencor will
refuse to take big cattle. "A packer
in a huge plant doesn't make money
without something in there. If we
only have big cattle we're going to
keep buying them. There's
overhead. We have to turn on the
lights."
The recent crisis has brought to
light something important to the
industry, said Ishoy.
"We exported the packing
business out of this country. There
are things I think we can learn from
this (BSE crisis)."
Ishoy said competition is good,
but trading rules similar to Canada's
largest neighbour are needed.
Currently, non-NAFTA countries
can. ship into Canada, 76,000 tons of
meat. As time went by, however,
Supplementary permits were
allowed, which displaced some of
the processors.
Some packers then started to ship
into the States, so 50-60 per cent of
the processed beef was going there.
"Imported meats were coming in.
Americans were buying cattle here
and the producer got caught in the
middle."
Last year Ishoy said, 130,000 tons
of meat came in to Canada. "The
good news is, we're going back to
the 76,000 tons which means 56,000
tons extra that Canada can produce."
He noted that the value of the
hides had .also been lost because
there ā¢ was no cow plant here.
"Ontario has the best quality hides in
the world. Hides from Ontario are
some of the most sought after. They
make great seat leather for those
fancy cars."
He spoke of new technologies in
the rendering side of the industry
such as composting. "This is going
to be a reality. It will at least stop
costs."
If there could be a positive to BSE
these types of initiatives may be it.
"Out of adversity comes activity and
activity makes us stronger."
Ultimately, however, support is
needed from all levels through the
chain. "That will take time to
develop."
And it may need to start with
producers. "At the end of the day we
need to stop worrying about the
individual and think about the
whole. We have to forget about
whether the packers pay more for a
1,200 or 1,500-pound animal and
listen to the consumers."
Saying there's no "silver bullet
solution", Ishoy said change is
needed and the status quo must be
redesigned. "We will go broke with
too much reliance on one customer.
Let's try and find a way to reduce
our dependence on the U.S. market."
Not one ratepayer filled a seat last
April 6 -for the Municipality of
Huron East's public budget meeting
and the budget was passed.
Throughout Huron East, Grey
Ward, with the 2004 general taxation
increase listed as 33.03 per cent, will
be hit the hardest. Other overall
general taxation, increases are
Seaforth at 9.23 per cent, Brussels at
29.04 per cent, McKillop at 28.48.
per cent and Tuckersmith at 27.37
per cent.
, Councillor Mark Beaven
expressed concern that -"the three
rural wards are affected far more
than the two _ urban areas."
Councillor Joe Steffler pointed out
that perhaps "not so many 500-acre
farms and more homes (in that area)
would be better."
Deputymayor Bernie MacLellan.
who attended budget meetings at the
county level, explained that "this is
how things have to be to get out of
the whole we're (Huron County) in."
According to MacLellan, taxation
can only change if the province_
realizes how bad things are getting.
"These downloads may have helped
their books but they have certainly
hurt the province."
Council spent a great deal of time
discussing deficits from recreation'
and daycare facilities. In mayor Joe
Seili's absence, MacLellan shared
comments the mayor had previously
expressed about feeling
"disheartened" over the deficits.
"Whether (the facilities) are over
or not, we just pay the bill. There is
nothing to make them tow the line."
Continued on page 21
Boys play in
Czech tourney
By Bonnie Gropp
Citizen editor
A Brussels family left Monday for
10 days in the Czech Republic.
Chris and Adam Corbett, 15, sons
of Charles and Abi, competing in
the spring classic hockey
tournament in Slaney and Prague as
members of the Major Bantam
Triple A Lakers.
According to the boys' mother.
the father of a teammate is a scout -
for the Vancouver Canucks. He
knew of someone whose son had
played in the tournament last year
and mentioned it to the coaches,
players and parents of the Lakers.
"We just decided to go for it," said
Abi.
The costs are covered by the
players, who did a lot of fundraising
through the year, and the parents.
The Corbett brothers were helped
with sponsorship from both the
Brussels Optimists and the Lions.
Cost for each person is $1,600.
which, Abi said, covers everything
Continued on page 2
A break-in occurred in Blyth, this
time at Blyth Building Supplies
Ltd.
Gary Courtney said when he
arrived at work on Monday around
6:50 a.m., he realized that the
deadbolt to the door- -had been
twisted off, meaning the break-in
occurred between Sunday night and
early Monday morning.
A police report confirmed that
5200 was taken from ihe office area
and Courtney said no other damage
was clone to the building, aside from
the broken deadbolt.
Courtney said, as of Monday,
there were no leads as to who the
thief or thieves were.
They're off
A cool, but clear day allowed little ones to take part in the annual Easter egg hunt held at the
Blyth Greenway Trail on Saturday afternoon. With two having their sights, and sunny smiles
on the treasures it was a race to the end. (Vicky Bremner photo)
By Bonnie Gropp
Citizen editor
It may be time for the beef
industry to consider that bigger is
not necessarily better. Or at least not
as far as the consumer's concerned.
Mark Ishoy, GM of Gencor spoke_
at a BSE update hosted by the Huron
County Beef Producers on April 7 in
Brussels. His message was, that
industry has "consistently" heard
from consumers that they want
smaller cuts of meat.
"But we keep producing 700-800
pound carcasses. If we market 600-
pound animals for a year it would
take 15 per cent out of the market
and beef consumption may go up
because we're listening."
Farmers may take less he admits
but it would move more animals
through the system.
One producer wondered, however,
how they could make any money if
they feed down.
"I don't pretend to understand the
economics of the feedlot at this time.
but maybe they'll pay more money
if there's a happier consumer."
However, he admitted that there
were no guarantees. "Can I stand
here tonight and prove it'?
Absolutely not."