In our province, you have to look at the makeup of the industry. We have 80% supply managed in our province; agriculture is doing well. We also have huge amounts of growth in all other commodities. It doesn't mean.... If you're at the bottom of the heap, you have nowhere else to go but up, to say the least.
On the problems in the last number of years under Growing Forward and APF, they put huge sums, millions of dollars, into the program. Plus, they had their own programs to help new people buy equipment and clear land, and those are the two major expenses that you have in getting into agriculture. They're even talking about now putting in a proposal--and it's gone in to the government on the AgriFlex program--of developing huge tracts of land, of clearing the land. It's probably costing them about $2,800 an acre to clear land in our province.
This proposal is about getting it ready for production, about clearing vast tracts of land and then saying to a young person, “Here's a hundred acres, or a hundred and fifty acres, it's clear land, ready to go into production, and you will sign some type of an agreement to go forward”. That's what we're seeing in our province, to say the least, so you are seeing opportunities for younger people to get in and stay there.
But you're also seeing hindrances like those you hear about the input costs, and that's there for everybody. The fact is that we only have one federally inspected plant, which is the chicken plant in our province. Most of the beef that's killed is in local production and is killed under the local regulations, so you can't ship it outside the province. That's another issue you have to deal with.
You also have the fact that we're getting down to three major buyers, the supermarkets, if you want to call them that: the Dominions, the Sobeys, and the Colemans of the world. Fourth, there's Wal-Mart. So we end up being price-takers; we're not price-setters. They'll give you what they figure is fair, whether they get it from south of the border or any other place in this country. You have to deal with those issues.
When it comes from south of the border, those farmers south of the border don't have to pay for all the things that we have to endure here; we need to have free education in our country and free medical services in our country. We look at the fact that we have to endure the costs of food safety and all of these other programs that the governments and the public deem to be necessary to grow food in this country, so that puts hardship on the older people and on the young people trying to get into farming.
I don't know if that answered your question or not.