Yes, I think this is a critical section, and I think it's a critical amendment that we should support, because the bill really moves the Canadian Wheat Board from being a body whose primary interests and primary business were to maximize returns back to primary producers; to negotiate with the railways to assure producer cars; to--in their so-called war room--look at the world so they could maximize those returns; and, in their transportation room, to work for the benefit of the lowest transportation costs and the efficient movement of grains...it moves the Canadian Wheat Board from that to being basically a body controlled by big government. That's the principle we see at stake here. The five directors seem to be accountable to no one other than to the minister.
So I have a couple of questions for the department, if they could answer them.
Currently, the Canadian Wheat Board, with its elected directors, has 10 districts, and in those districts they have annual meetings to which farmers can come out, raise the serious questions they have in what the Wheat Board is doing, ask questions through their information office, and whatever it may be they could.... David Anderson could get up in his district--because there's a pro-single-desk director elected there--and ask some hard questions.
Now, with the new board of directors, these five pansies for Gerry Ritz, how do they communicate with the farm community? Are they going to have district meetings to tell the farmers what they're doing, meetings where farmers can stand up in what were the 10 previous districts and raise questions and push the new diffused Canadian Wheat Board to work in their best interests?
How is that going to happen? How is that producer exchange, which has been very good under the board, going to happen under the new five people that Gerry Ritz will appoint?