Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alberta Counties Declare Agricultural Disaster As Drought Hits Crops

The Canadian Press, 16 Jul, 2015 12:55 PM
  • Alberta Counties Declare Agricultural Disaster As Drought Hits Crops
CALGARY — From drought to grasshoppers, it's been a tough year for Alberta farmers, with some counties declaring states of agricultural disaster.
 
"We are just incredibly dry, dryer than we have been in approximately 50 years," said Garett Broadbent, Leduc County's director of agricultural services.
 
The county has called a special meeting for July 21 to declare a state of agricultural disaster. Two other counties — Parkland and Mackenzie — have already done so, and several others are considering following suit.
 
"From pretty much seeding, we haven't had any significant rainfall," said Broadbent. "Our municipality wants to bring awareness to this at the provincial and federal levels."
 
Large swaths of Alberta have experienced low rainfall since April, with many areas receiving well under 40 per cent of normal precipitation.
 
"Our annual crops, cereals, oil seeds, are really starting to suffer," said Broadbent. "Our pasture, hay lands are really, really suffering."
 
The dry conditions have also allowed pests like grasshoppers to flourish, with parts of Leduc county plagued by the insects.
 
"In areas where the grasshoppers did hit, whatever was standing was hit really hard," said Broadbent. 
 
Of all the crops, hay and pasture land have suffered most, with an average of 55 per cent of crops rated as poor across Alberta. The figure rises as high as 81 per cent in the northwest. 
 
That's where Mackenzie County sits, and it was the first county to declare a state of agricultural disaster in late June.
 
County reeve Bill Neufeld said officials made the declaration in an attempt to get help for cattle farmers who rely on those crops to feed their herds.
 
He wants government action on possible feed subsidies because feed costs keep climbing, or tax deferrals for ranchers when they sell their cattle so they can rebuild herds later.
 
"You can get pasture insurance . . . but that doesn't help anything if you're going to decimate your cattle herds because of the drought, if farmers have to sell off their cattle."
 
And even for grain farmers, insurance doesn't go very far.
 
"Insurance will probably cover the input costs, but that still doesn't make any payments on the equipment and if anybody has land owing," said Neufeld. 
 
There could be some relief in the days to come for parts of the province, with 40 to 60 millimetres of rain forecast in the hardest-hit areas.
 
"Rain is coming to some of the driest portions of the Prairies so it's much welcome news," said Bill McMurtry, a meteorologist at Environment Canada.
 
Since the rain is forecast to fall over a few days, it will have a better chance of soaking into the ground, with more expected later next week, McMurtry said.
 
"This will help, but we're still going to be a ways off normal yet."

MORE National ARTICLES

Sentencing Hearing Continues In Via Rail Terror Case In Toronto

Sentencing Hearing Continues In Via Rail Terror Case In Toronto
TORONTO — A sentencing hearing continues today for two men convicted of terrorism in a case involving a plot to derail a passenger train travelling between Canada and the U.S.

Sentencing Hearing Continues In Via Rail Terror Case In Toronto

Speedy Manoeuvres Sink Cigar Boat In Okanagan Lake, Raise Possibility Of Leak

Speedy Manoeuvres Sink Cigar Boat In Okanagan Lake, Raise Possibility Of Leak
KELOWNA, B.C. — Transport Canada will have to send a recovery crew to Okanagan Lake, off West Kelowna, B.C., to raise a sunken cigar boat.

Speedy Manoeuvres Sink Cigar Boat In Okanagan Lake, Raise Possibility Of Leak

Health Canada Spends $1.5Million To Re-Air Ads On Prescription Drugs And Pot

OTTAWA — Health Canada is spending $1.5 million to air recycled ads on prescription drugs and pot in the run-up to the fall federal election.

Health Canada Spends $1.5Million To Re-Air Ads On Prescription Drugs And Pot

Feds Collect More Than Half Of Bad Employment Insurance Claims Over Eight Years Of Tory Rule

Feds Collect More Than Half Of Bad Employment Insurance Claims Over Eight Years Of Tory Rule
OTTAWA — Freshly released figures show the government aims to recoup up to $377.6 million in fraudulent employment insurance benefits paid out during the life of the Conservative government.

Feds Collect More Than Half Of Bad Employment Insurance Claims Over Eight Years Of Tory Rule

Othman Ayed Hamdan, Arrested On Terror Charges Makes Court Appearance In A Fort St. John Courtroom

Othman Ayed Hamdan, Arrested On Terror Charges Makes Court Appearance In A Fort St. John Courtroom
Othman Ayed Hamdan, 33, wore a long-sleeved black T-shirt Monday when he appeared in a Fort St. John courtroom via video conference.

Othman Ayed Hamdan, Arrested On Terror Charges Makes Court Appearance In A Fort St. John Courtroom

Lost Killer Whale, Sam, Found Back With Its B.C. Family; Researchers Laud Reunion

Lost Killer Whale, Sam, Found Back With Its B.C. Family; Researchers Laud Reunion
VANCOUVER — A Vancouver Aquarium orca researcher says a young killer whale has been reunited with its family two years after it was found alone in a remote cove.

Lost Killer Whale, Sam, Found Back With Its B.C. Family; Researchers Laud Reunion