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Agriculture is still the engine that drives the Saskatchewan economy The Ag Scene

For anyone who pauses for even a couple of minutes to reflect on what drives Saskatchewan the answer is quite obviously agriculture.

The same is largely true for the rest of the Prairies too.

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Yes today the economies are more diverse, oil and gas, and potash being examples, but take away agriculture and the region would be a mere shadow of what it is today.

In that regard it was interesting to attend a recent Arbor Week event held at the old brick mill location in Yorkton.

During the event it was noted how the mill was once a hub of activity locally. Farmers would bring wheat in and take home flour and the time spent at the mill made it a place to share stories and create friendships.

The rather unassuming box-like building that

Calvin Daniels

has stood for decades hardly looks like it could have been so integral to the early days of Yorkton, but it was.

People populated the area to farm, and a flour mill was an important market which helped Yorkton in its path to being an agricultural service centre.

Flash-forward to today and that has not changed.

As was pointed out, the city is very much a farmservice hub albeit more diverse than a wheat flour mill.

We know the importance of canola crushing in the city, and how major expansion to both the

Richardson and Louis

Dreyfus crush facilities are impacting the local economy in a major way through construction jobs and ultimately new plant jobs.

“We’re ecstatic,” said Yorkton Mayor Mitch Hippsley regarding the LDC expansion announcement.

Hippsley said the city will get a short-term construction boost and then long-term jobs when completed.

“It will add all kinds of new lifeblood to the city,” he said, adding construction will be a two-tothree-year process and that means construction