I can't say particularly for any commodity group, really; I know that in some sectors, such as the dairy goat sector, it's been crazy. I alluded earlier to someone starting into the dairy goat business. That's one in which we see tremendous growth in the area. It seems to be working very well, I think. It doesn't take as much money to get into it and there's no quota involved. It is a growing market, and Ontario is probably the prime province for that to happen, with the ethnic population we have in the GTA, Brampton, and Mississauga. Most of us would be in the vast minority there. Those people are all accustomed to drinking and eating goat products back in their home countries, so I think there's a tremendous market. I don't think it's even being tapped to its potential, by any means. So that is one area where we see growth.
From my personal perspective, we manage the Grey Bruce Farmers' Week, for example, every January. We have now gone to a full day for the goat program and we have over 100 producers, or people who want to be producers, who participate in that. There's tremendous growth there. Only three years ago we talked about having a full-day program, and they said it would never fly, but we went ahead with it anyway and it's been tremendously successful. So we see growth in that area.
I think the sheep industry—I'm sure you'll have people here sometime from the sheep industry—has done reasonably well. There's probably room for growth in that industry. One of the things I constantly hear is that there's not a constant supply of the product. I know there's one person who I will be talking to later on—in fact, in about three-quarters of an hour—who would love to be here to talk about that subject. I've see him quoted in the press recently that there's a real need for that sort of thing.
I guess the other thing I'll just throw in as well, in terms of some of the government programs you have, is Growing Forward. It's one program the ministry is really deeply involved with. I have to be a little critical of the way that program has been rolled out. It's always been seven or eight months behind; there's always delay, delay, delay. The form's supposed to be out at a certain time, and they don't come for many months after. Farmers are expected to plan ahead, and have to plan ahead, but it's hard to do. This year the funding has been cut so much that one-third of the producers in Grey County alone who applied for the cost-shared funding got a letter yesterday saying the funding has run out, and that they didn't get it. These are people who are putting in either 70% or sometimes 50% of their own money into it, but that cost-share incentive is not there to help with environmental improvements on the farm.
So I have to be a little critical of the government for that, in cutting back to the level they have. That was a win-win program for absolutely everybody. The farmer won from it, the consumer won from it, and government got lots of positive publicity from it.
I think it's an area where the government was totally wrong this time in making that cut. Usually there was enough funding to go around in the program, but this year it was really cut back, and, as I say, one-third of the applicants from Grey County alone, even though they were in with their applications within about two weeks' time after the program opened, the money was gone—and it was on a first come basis.
That's pretty difficult to swallow for many people. I know there are people in this room who were caught in that squeeze too.