Close X
Thursday, November 7, 2024
ADVT 
National

Saskatchewan Residents Tell Consultation 'No' To Foreign-owned Farms

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Oct, 2015 10:59 AM
    REGINA — Nearly nine out of every 10 people who responded to a Saskatchewan government survey say they don't want the province's farmland to end up in foreign hands.
     
    Eighty-seven per cent of the more than 3,200 people who responded to a farmland ownership consultation say they don't support foreign ownership of Saskatchewan farmland.
     
    Seventy-five per cent also say they're opposed to allowing investors such as Canadian pension funds to purchase farmland in Saskatchewan.
     
    The issue of who can own farmland in Saskatchewan has prompted a spirited debate that was sparked after the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board started buying up farms in 2013.
     
    The rules currently don't allow institutional investors to own Saskatchewan farmland and limit foreign ownership to four hectares, but the investment board's structure made it eligible.
     
    The vast majority of people who took part in the consultations — 95 per cent — were Saskatchewan residents and 62 per cent of respondents were farmers.
     
    Agriculture Minister Lyle Stewart says the results will ensure the government makes decisions for the long-term success and sustainability of the province's agriculture industry.
     
    Stewart says the next steps will be announced later this fall.
     
    The agriculture minister said in August that Saskatchewan won't impose restrictions on Canadians who want to buy farms in the province, but he wouldn't rule out anything else as the government looks at the laws on farmland ownership.
     
    Farmers have raised concerns about loopholes they say allow a variety of investors to drive up rents and farmland prices in the province.
     
    In their submission to the consultations, the National Farmers Union said that under today's laws, Canadian-owned investment companies are legally buying up farmland, a trend it says has turned Saskatchewan landowners into tenant farmers.
     
    The union has called for changes that would allow only Saskatchewan residents or incorporated farming operations owned by Saskatchewan residents to own farmland.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman Calls Summit As City Tries To Shake 'Most Racist' Label

    Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman Calls Summit As City Tries To Shake 'Most Racist' Label
    Mayor Brian Bowman says the race relations summit, to be held by the Canadian Centre for Human Rights, will continue a much-needed discussion about racism.

    Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman Calls Summit As City Tries To Shake 'Most Racist' Label

    Suspect In Elderly Indian-American Couple's Murder Arrested

    Suspect In Elderly Indian-American Couple's Murder Arrested
    Joshua Poacher was arrested and charged with the murders of Kantibhai A. Patel, 72, and his wife Hansaben K. Patel, 67, in Jasper county

    Suspect In Elderly Indian-American Couple's Murder Arrested

    Inuit Lose Bid To Block Seismic Testing Off Baffin Island

    Inuit Lose Bid To Block Seismic Testing Off Baffin Island
    A tiny Inuit hamlet on the coast of Baffin Island has lost its bid to block seismic testing off its shores.

    Inuit Lose Bid To Block Seismic Testing Off Baffin Island

    Family Looks On As Gravestone Unveiled For Slain Teen, Father In Winnipeg

    Family Looks On As Gravestone Unveiled For Slain Teen, Father In Winnipeg
    WINNIPEG — Family and friends have marked the one-year anniversary of a slain teen's body being recovered from Winnipeg's Red River.

    Family Looks On As Gravestone Unveiled For Slain Teen, Father In Winnipeg

    Small ISPs Ask CRTC To Let Them Run Wireless Networks

    Small ISPs Ask CRTC To Let Them Run Wireless Networks
    Canada's small Internet service providers are appealing a recent CRTC decision against their efforts to offer wireless services using the networks of Bell, Telus and Rogers.

    Small ISPs Ask CRTC To Let Them Run Wireless Networks

    Canadian Company Gets Patent For 20-Kilometre-High Space Elevator

    Canadian Company Gets Patent For 20-Kilometre-High Space Elevator
    PEMBROKE, Ont. — Blasting off into space may never look the same if one Canadian company has its way.

    Canadian Company Gets Patent For 20-Kilometre-High Space Elevator