I am a member of the Nova Scotia Young Farmers Forum, but a lot of my views and what I say will come from me as a young farmer in the industry, and having a couple of friends around my age in the industry too.
I really like being part of the Nova Scotia Young Farmers Forum. As a provincial group, we try to talk to everybody and bring issues and problems from our province to the national board, then try to work together, networking to get through the problems we're facing.
I grew up on a family farm with my parents and I'm a full-time employee there now. From a young age I made a conscious decision that I loved agriculture and that I wanted to farm for the rest of my life. After university, four years ago, I came back and started farming full-time with my parents.
It's been within the last year that I've spent a lot more time in the office, kind of looking at the books and stuff, because that will have a drastic toll on my future. After sitting down with the accountant this winter and realizing that our farm last year had only generated about 3% return, that wasn't even enough money to cover the depreciation on our assets. It was really discouraging to think that at my age... I really want to have a family. I'm getting married this summer, and I want to provide the same lifestyle to my children and my family as I had growing up, and a 3% return is not going to do it.
For me to borrow the money to buy out my parents, I would struggle to even try to generate enough money to pay back that loan. My parents started with nothing, first generation, and they've put every dollar they've had into the farm, reinvesting in it, so they don't have RRSPs. The farm is their retirement and they are solely relying on me to take it over so that I can fund their retirement and our farm can continue.
One of the big problems is profitability, and it scares me, because I know I could leave the farm tomorrow, go out west, or even go down the road and drive a truck for a lot more money than I'm being paid now. But I love agriculture and I love getting up early and I love working outside. It's frustrating to feel unappreciated and kind of not understood by government and our society. They don't realize how hard we really work and the passion we have for what we do every day.
I was privileged to take part last week in the Ag Awareness program. I went into a school and read an agricultural book to a grade two class, trying to speak to the next generation. I had the opportunity to ask the class who wanted to be a farmer, and a lot of them raised their hands excitedly. But one kid to the side said, “Not me.” So I asked the young kid, “Why would you say that?” and he said, “Because there's better jobs out there”. I asked him what he meant by that, and he said, “There are jobs that make more money.”
Our society today is money-based. They want high-paying jobs and they want low-priced goods to buy. And when our product is lined up on a shelf next to an imported product at the same or lesser price, society is going to buy the cheaper product.
I think there's a problem there. We need to start to educate our public on what we do, what we grow, and to kind of support us because they're the ones who keep us going. They have to buy our product for us to make more money.
I agree with a lot of the points made by everybody else, but that was something that really bothered me, that a kid at that age already recognized that agriculture was not a profitable industry. Children, with fresh minds, if they get something like that in their minds, they'll never change. So it bothers me.
I love farming and I want to continue farming, but there needs to be more profitability or I might as well go somewhere else and make more money to provide for my family.