Good morning. I'm Warren Henry, a third-generation cattle rancher from Patricia, Alberta.
The family's entire cow herd has been quarantined, along with neighbours', cousins', and friends'. We were all carrying on business as usual early this fall. In September we sold our steer calves, half the annual calf crop, by contract through an Internet sale. The buyer expected those steers to be delivered the first week in November. Then we normally make our annual payments, but not this year so far.
However, all changed when we got a call from the CFIA on October 14 telling us the whole herd was quarantined. No animals would be leaving or going anywhere pending the investigation. That's not to mention the people who phoned and couldn't speak English, so it was really difficult to understand. It took two people before we could actually get the gist.
Usually all the calves are weaned on the same day. The first week of November, the steers get on a truck and are weighed on a scale at home, and then they're delivered to the feedlot. The heifer calves are hauled to their home place, and are backgrounded until spring, when we pick out the replacement heifers and sell the balance of the heifer calves.
After weaning, the cows are trailered to their winter fields, where they utilize pasture and grazing corn that we grow over the summer. This year they had to be hauled, also causing more stress on them, especially as all had to go through the chute two times for this testing process. We'll see this spring if our aborted calf numbers are higher than usual due to this extra stress.
We are prepared each fall to put up feed for the heifer calves to use up over the winter, but not for the steer calves that we have on hand right now.
We got a call from the CFIA that they would be coming out to test the herd on November 15, so the calves were weaned on the 14th to be ready for the team to test. This is two weeks later. The pasture where the cows were to go until testing was grazed out, so we had to start feeding the cows and calves the feed that was meant for the heifer calves later on, at a cost of about $600 a day.
The steers were supposed to get on the truck on November 1, and we were supposed to get our calf cheque.
We had to change our pasture plan around to accommodate twice as many calves as usual, but we need to buy the feed for them. We don't have calf cheques to buy feed with because we can't sell the steers. No one can tell us how long we'll have to keep them, how much feed we need, or what we need to buy. Those heifer calves were brought home, and they'll be fed and cared for as usual, but we've already started using the feed that was intended for them.
Also, when you bring all these animals into an area that is meant for half those numbers, you're crowding them, which causes stress, and they're more likely to get sick. We've adjusted our corral space and changed our watering system and pastures around to accommodate the steers in one bunch and heifers in the other. This all requires time and money.
The weather so far has been in our favour, but we still don't know how long we have to keep our calves. If winter hits, it's going to be a lot worse, and they will require a lot more feed.
I understand that I had to come here today to discuss compensation with you, and I thought I'd try to explain how this works for my family. In comparison with how you folks live day to day, it would be like getting a call one day from some agency telling you that all your assets had been seized, and not just your monthly paycheque is being held, but your entire year's income. You carry on, showing up for weeks, and you can't get paid for it the next three, four, or maybe five months, with investigation pending. You can't buy groceries, pay bills, or make montage payments until they decide to unfreeze everything, but they can't tell you when it will be. It's your baby to worry about.
Needless to say, it's an ongoing worry and stress for the whole family, and the unanswered questions and time frames just add to the stress.
Thank you very much.