Mr. Speaker, I will add the 50 minutes to my hour. Then maybe we will get through this issue. It is a pleasure to say a few words but it is also a sad moment for me.
There is a crisis on the farm scene. Nobody doubts that. There is a bigger crisis in the Liberal front benches. I do not see any of them over there. That is where the crisis is. I am almost blind but I noticed it somehow.
I will read a couple of quotes. Since I was elected in 1993 we have worked on the agriculture committee. We pointed out to the government that we need a whole farm income support program. This is a question that was put by the member for Haldimand—Norfolk to the agriculture minister on February 9, 1994.
In the red book we promised a system of whole farm support that would help Canadian farmers who were in distress. This was in 1994. The agriculture minister replied:
I appreciate the question. Under the previous government in conjunction with provincial governments a process is under way to review and revamp Canadian farm income safety nets.
That has never been accomplished. Why not? In 1994 everybody knew that the Europeans had huge subsidies. The Europeans would not allow their farmers to get into a financial problem. They would support them. We had to be prepared to have some safety net programs in place.
How huge is this crisis in farming?
I was quite appreciative of the member for Yorkton—Melville when he started comparing prices. I know there are a lot of supply management people in this House who have been supporting that type of system. These are prices for their products. From a devilled egg that costs $1.60, they get 10 cents at the farm gate. From a whole quiche which costs $12.50, which has three eggs, 2 ounces of cheese and 16 ounces of milk, the farmer gets 92 cents. From a 6 ounce grilled breast of chicken, costing $8.20, the farmer gets 29 cents. This is in the supply management sector. When we go back to the wheat and the hogs, as the member for Yorkton—Melville pointed out, it is disaster.
I saw a letter from a farmer who said “If you can imagine, in 1981 I received $4 a bushel net initial for No. 3 hard spring wheat. Today I receive $1.80 for that same type of wheat”. It is not even one-half of what this farmer received in 1981.
We know what has happened to the price of fertilizer. We know what has happened to the price of equipment. We have a pretty good idea of what the cost/price squeeze is.
How are these farmers supposed to deal with this? Farmers have been looking far and wide to see if they can get better prices. It is astounding that the special crops industry has not done too badly. The canola prices this year are such that if it was not for that income I think 100% of the farms would be in crisis. At least they have some value from the special crops industry with which they can supplement their income.
In the 1992 crop year in Saskatchewan grain was damaged by frost. It looked like everything would be turned into feed. Saskatchewan farmers looked across the border and found a market where they realized they could pretty well double the price for their feed wheat. What did the grain companies and the wheat board do? They dumped 1.5 million bushels into that market and ruined it.
In 1993-94, when Manitoba had the fusarium problem, what happened? Farmers who found a market for that product were not allowed to sell to that market. It was demanded that they get an export licence from the wheat board and they were charged as much as $40 to $50 a tonne more for that grain than they got in the final return.
Farmers who did not abide the law and marketed it on their own wound up with huge penalties, fines and even jail terms. Is it democracy when farmers are in a financial bind and they know there is a market a dozen or two dozen miles way that they can access but are not allowed to? If they do, then they are put away.
One of the farmers drove all the way from Saskatchewan to the Manitoba border crossing to object and to protest. He got worse than the APEC protesters in Vancouver. He was not allowed to go back without paying a fine. He was fined $1,500 and was told to turn his car in. Andy McMechan, as we know, had some barley which no one could market for him. It was a specialty barley. He wound up in prison.
Farmers will find a remedy. I had at least half a dozen farmers phone me last week. They said “I don't need any money. If you can get me a guarantee that I can market my own grain, don't bother with any payments. We will make it. We will find a market and we will survive this crisis”.
How do we deal with this? On the one hand we have markets that have developed themselves because of crisis issues, but other markets are not allowed to be developed to the point where they pay properly. That more or less puts pressure on farmers to go to markets with decent prices so they can survive, make their farms viable and have more over-production.
The hog producers in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta did not want to get into these huge hog operations because they knew it would cost a small fortune to build the barns, but they had no way out. The feed grains were such a price that they could not afford to keep their farms viable. So with provincial encouragement they expanded and diversified. Today they are losing $50 to $60 a hog.
I ordered bacon and eggs for breakfast this morning and I figured I would get a plate full of bacon because pork is cheap. They could do away with the potatoes and give me the bacon. They could have taken that bacon off a live pig and it would not have lost a squeal. That is the amount of bacon I got. It was worthless. How do we deal with a situation like that? it is funny, but it is true. I did not have to swallow too hard to put those two thin little slices of bacon away with one swallow. Then I had the two eggs left with a bit of toast.
Guess what that toast costs at that restaurant? A bushel of wheat yields about 120 loaves of bread, which amounts to about two cents a loaf. If a loaf has 24 slices and I had two slices, there would be one-twelfth of a cent of wheat in that toast. How can the price of the breakfast be $5? I know the potatoes do not cost that. I am astounded. Farmers are supposed to survive and they are not supposed to be subsidized.
Mr. Hehn appeared before the standing committee. I asked him why we were not getting better prices for our wheat. He said they were pricing it at Thunder Bay. I asked him what if they priced it in Manitoba and he said that this was the price. The price of a bushel of wheat was initially $1.57 at the elevator. The buy-back price was $3.93 at Morris, not at Thunder Bay.
It does not make sense. Farmers cannot survive. Subsidies are part of the problem, but politics and the marketing system are probably more to blame than the Europeans and the Americans thrown together in one washtub.