Loading...
The Rural Voice, 1993-08, Page 22No big gamble Len Gamble's move to the country proved to be perfect timing as closing of Ontario Stock Yards redraws the rules of livestock marketing By Keith Roulston There's plenty of capacity in stockyards across Ontario to take up the slack when the Ontario Stock Yards (OSY) closes at the end of December, says one man who has been preparing for several years for the eventual closing of the Toronto operation. As Len Gamble sits in his office at Brussels Livestock, the sprawling livestock sales yard just east of Brussels, he gives the air of a man who isn't surprised at anything in the industry. Now in his 40th year in the business, he's seen many ups and downs and knows you can never take anything for granted. 18 THE RURAL VOICE While the closure of the OSY came as a shock to many, it's something Gamble has been concerned about since 1985. As head of Gamble and Rogers, one of the large commission sales fu -ms at OSY, he started hearing the talk of the closure of the yards way back then. In 1991 he laid a foundation for life after OSY's death when he bought out Gordon Brindley at the Brussels operation. The location was perfect, in the heart of Ontario's livestock industry, and the facilities were good. Since then he's made them better, building a new barn as well as more outdoor holding pens. A year ago Gamble After 40 years in the cattle business Len Gamble made a career move, buying his own stock yards. decided it was time to concentrate on his Brussels operation and ended Gamble and Rogers' long association with OSY. Now, with capacity to handle 2500 to 3000 head of cattle at a time, he's one of those private operators who is ready to take on an added load when the producer -owned OSY shuts down. It's the presence of operations like Brussels Livestock that led the Ontario Cattlemen's Association to question the OSY board of directors' $2.5 million plan to downsize and renovate the stockyards and make it