Mbc 2

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Ag Ex expands

One Welfare Human and animal welfare linked » PG 9

Finals Rodeo and cattle shows added » PG 8

CHECK OUT OUR FIRST ANNUAL

Fall Female Buyer’s Guide

Western Canada’s Fall Female Source IN THIS ISSUESEE SEE PAGE 36

SERVING MANITOBA FARMERS SINCE 1925 | Vol. 74, No. 40 | $1.75

October 6, 2016

Manitoba government seeking solutions to tax shift to highvalue farmland Tax increases may affect industry stability

manitobacooperator.ca

Latin America no longer a sure market As the region’s population grows, so do the opportunities for Canadian wheat sellers

BY ALLAN DAWSON Co-operator staff

T

he Manitoba government and Association of Manitoba Municipalities are aware of a shocking rise in property taxes facing some Manitoba farmers. Both are exploring what can be done, but officials didn’t provide any potential solutions when interviewed last week. “Yeah, it is causing concern without a doubt,” Eileen Clarke, minister of indigenous and municipal relations, said in an interview Sept. 27 in response to a Manitoba Co-operator story last week. “I think we recognize that it is a challenge across the province when (land) values change and when they change dramatically,” Association of Manitoba Municipalities (AMM) president and Steinbach mayor, Chris Goertzen said Sept. 29. “The system is not really a perfect system and especially when you have education tax on property.” Farmers in the Municipality of Ste. Rose face a 40 per cent hike in See FARM TAX on page 7 »

Anel Ferrera Rodríguez checks out fresh pasta at Cigi.   Photo: Shannon VanRaes

BY SHANNON VANRAES Co-operator staff

Publication Mail Agreement 40069240

L

atin American markets are continuing to expand and Canada wants a piece of not just the pie, but breads, pasta and crackers too. “We have been there for many years, the market knows how good we are, but we have to create and keep that fidelity to the Canadian brand,” said Juan Carlos Arriola, head of milling technology at the Canadian

International Grains Institute, better known as Cigi. With that in mind, the institute has just wrapped up a program with 16 millers and grain purchasers from Latin America, including representatives from Colombia, Cuba, Venezuela, Mexico, Chile, Peru and Ecuador. Arriola added that creating and maintaining fidelity in the Cuban market is of particular importance for Canadian growers and grain sellers. As that country moves towards a

return to the open market, Canadian grain may face competition from other countries such as the United States. “Cuba still has the unique system, and in that unique system the government is the only one that can buy wheat, cereals and whatever,” he said. “So for us, it’s like thinking ahead... so that when the market opens they hesitate to try something new that is not going to be as good as we are — See LATIN AMERICA on page 6 »

In Photos: The Manitoba Plowing Match » PAGE 18


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Mbc 2 by Farm Business Communications - Issuu