Celebrating Ontario's New Crop
Of Ideas
McGuinty Government Rewards 7 Local Farms
for their Innovations
Innovative ideas grown by Ontario farmers are contributing
to the local economy, boosting the agri-food industry and offering more
choices for the consumer. Those ideas were celebrated today at a ceremony
honouring local winners of the province's regional awards for innovation
excellence.
The Premier's Agri-Food Innovation Excellence awards are
part of a $2.5-million, five-year program (now in its second year) established
to recognize innovators who contribute to the success of Ontario's agri-food
sector. Winners of the $100,000 Premier's Award and the $50,000 Minister's
Award were presented last month at the Premier's Summit on Agri-Food.
Local events across the province will recognize 55 regional
award winners, who will receive $5,000 each for their innovations. Area
winners announced today were:
Algoma
Northern Quality Meats (Bruce Mines)
Nipissing
Marcel Betty (Verner)
Manitoulin
Burt Farm (Gore Bay)
Martin Farms (Gore Bay)
Sudbury
Jonella Farms (Massey)
Temiskaming
Ferme Blanche Rive (New Liskeard)
Terza Farms (Thornloe)
QUOTE
"I am pleased to recognize our local farmers with these awards.
Their hard work and innovative ideas are helping to make our rural communities
stronger," said Michael A. Brown, MPP for Algoma-Manitoulin.
QUICK FACTS
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Since its launch, the Premier's Award for Agri-Food
Innovation Excellence has attracted 358 applications highlighting
on-farm innovations.
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Ontario's agri-food sector is the second-largest
goods manufacturing industry in the province (after the auto industry)
and contributes $30 billion to the economy every year.
LEARN MORE
See videos
of this year's award winning innovations and discover the variety of
previous award-winning on-farm innovations at the Ministry of Agriculture,
Food and Rural Affairs website.
Learn more about other government programs supporting
innovation in Ontario by visiting the Ministry of Research and Innovation
website.
Backgrounder
Local Farmers Recognized for their Innovations
The following are recipients of the Premier's Award for Agri-Food Innovation
Excellence - regional awards:
ALGOMA DISTRICT:
Northern Quality Meats Ltd. - Bruce Mines
Northern Quality Meats Ltd. knows how to recycle. It developed
a licensed composting facility to compost abattoir wastes for a provincially
licensed and inspected abattoir. The innovation has allowed continued
operation of this producer-owned and operated business, offering an
option for area farmers to process their livestock locally. Composting
abattoir by-products is more environmentally sustainable, more energy
efficient, eliminates odour and the need for storage, and contributes
to the sustainability of the operation.
NIPISSING DISTRICT:
Marcel Betty - Verner
Farmers, particularly in the north, know that frost can lift
cement catch basins, posing a dangerous obstruction for equipment
in their fields and rendering the drain inoperable. Marcel Betty put
a lid on the problem by developing a safer field catch basin that
works in areas where frost heaving is a problem. Its design is low
cost, low maintenance and prevents wildlife from entering the drain.
As a result, a safer field with proper drainage enables farmers to
crop land that would otherwise be left as "wet spots." This
innovation has been shared amongst the community and adapted for winter
conditions of the area.
DISTRICT OF MANITOULIN:
Burt Farm - Gore Bay
The operator of a mixed livestock farm with an on-site abattoir
on Manitoulin Island introduced a small-scale biodiesel facility to
his operation, with the potential to meet his energy requirements.
It took some ingenuity to effectively process the fat by-products
from the abattoir, but Max Burt has integrated his equipment and labour
schedules and now recycles an undesirable product that does not compost
well. A few more tweaks to the abattoir furnace and the tractor, and
Burt should be able to use the biodiesel year-round.
Martin Farms - Gore Bay
Jim and Birgit Martin of Martin Farms own a diversified beef
operation that markets from gate-to-plate. The operation includes
a Shorthorn and Angus beef herd. It also custom boards cows and sells
purebred breeding stock and commercial cattle, which are finished
and marketed in the farm's own small beef feedlot. This business has
recognized that diversification and value adding help mitigate financial
risks and serve the growing interest consumers have for locally-produced
food.
DISTRICT OF SUDBURY:
Jonella Farms - Massey
The virtual farmer has arrived. Sudbury-area farmer John
Mooney did not let the remote location of his dairy farm impede him
from acquiring the latest technology in robotic milking. He brought
technical support from the manufacturer to the farm by installing
telecommunications equipment that includes video monitoring equipment
in the barn and fast internet linkage with the manufacturer's service
centre. With the click of a 'mouse' Mooney can access the service
and maintenance he needs for his robotic milking system. This innovation
eliminates service obstacles for remote dairy farmers interested in
these systems. It also opens the door to expand the technology for
new uses.
TEMISKAMING DISTRICT:
Ferme Blanche Rive - New Liskeard
The Ferme Blanche Rive farm in Temiskaming has what you could
call a 'baby monitor' for cows. The device, based on anti-theft technology,
enables the farmer to know when an animal is ready to give birth without
having to constantly check on the animal. That gives the farmer an
extra forty winks, knowing that there are no false alarms with this
innovation. The device is non-invasive and can be adapted for use
in other animals.
Terza Farms - Thornloe
Matthew and Carol Duke saw the advantages of drawing on the
unique qualities of North Eastern Ontario to promote their products
outside the region. They established strategic alliances with other
local producers, created new products and added value to their traditional
products. They market their farm-based products as "northern",
"natural", and "humane and healthy" through a
website and farm retail store. Locally produced flour and barley-fed
pork have been used to produce sausage rolls, specialty sausages,
hams and high-value specialty cuts of pork, all marketed under the
"Northern Flavors Ontario" campaign.
For more information contact:
Kelly Synnott, Minister's Office, 416-326-6439
Brent Ross, Communications Branch, 416-326-9342
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