Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Saskatchewan Wrestles With Controversial Issue Of Farmland Ownership

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 May, 2015 10:34 AM
    CALGARY — Saskatchewan Agriculture Minister Lyle Stewart expects to catch an earful when the province's residents start to weigh in on who should and shouldn't be allowed to own farmland in Canada's breadbasket.
     
    "There are strong opinions on both sides, and that's why we're doing this consultation," Stewart said in a telephone interview.
     
    "We really want to know what people think and we're hopeful that a consensus will emerge from this."
     
    The province announced public consultations Wednesday to gather public feedback on pension plans and foreign investors potentially buying farmland in the province.
     
    The consultations come amid increasing concern that foreign buyers are circumventing laws that limit foreign ownership to just over four hectares.
     
    Stewart says the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board's announcement in late 2013 that it will spend about $120 million to buy close to 46,540 hectares of land raised further controversy, since many thought pension plans had already been restricted from buying farmland.
     
    Last month, the province temporarily expanded ownership restrictions to specifically exclude pension funds including the pension board from buying farmland and limit financings of farmland purchases to ones that go through a financial institution registered to do business in Canada.
     
    Since its initial $120-million investment, the pension board has spent $33.7-million buying more farmland in Saskatchewan. The board says its intention has been to spend about $500 million buying Canadian farmland in over five years.
     
    The worry is pension funds and other deep-pocketed investors could drive up land prices. That would make it even harder for younger people to take up farming, says Norm Hall, president of the Agricultural Producers Association of Saskatchewan.
     
    "A lot of young guys that are raised on the farm want to farm," says Hall. "But the dollar amount to get in on the operation, even to buy their first quarter, getting that down payment is almost unmanageable."
     
    Hall says opinions are mixed in the association about whether pensions should be able to buy land, though there is a fairly strong consensus that foreign ownership should continue to be restricted.
     
    The Saskatchewan Chamber of Commerce has come out in support of foreign individuals and pension funds being allowed to buy land, but not companies or governments.
     
    "We've had many discussion with the CPPIB folks, and the companies that they work with here," says Steve McLellan, CEO of the Saskatchewan Chamber of Commerce.
     
    "We've had conversations with farmers, we've surveyed our members, and the consensus is clear — they're a good partner for Saskatchewan farmers, they're good landowners, they're good neighbours."
     
    The pension board rents out the land it buys to farmers, which it says allows young farmers without much money to get into the business. Since the 1980s, roughly 35 to 40 per cent of farmland has been farmed under lease agreements, the board says.
     
    Saskatchewan has one of the strictest farmland ownership laws in Canada at four hectares, while Alberta allows foreign entities to own twice that and Manitoba allows just over 16 hectares. Ontario and British Columbia have no foreign ownership restrictions.
     
    Saskatchewan also has the lowest-priced farmland in the country, averaging $881 an acre, compared with $1,388 an acre for Manitoba and $1,934 an acre for Alberta, according to Statistics Canada.
     
    The public consultations on farmland ownership continue until Aug. 10.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Inquest Into Taxi Drop-off Death Hears Hospital Saw Woman As 'Inconvenience'

    WINNIPEG — A woman whose mother died hours after being sent home in a cab from a hospital has told an inquest that her mother was seen as a nuisance by medical staff who just wanted to "get rid of her."

    Inquest Into Taxi Drop-off Death Hears Hospital Saw Woman As 'Inconvenience'

    Rob Ford Undergoes Surgery To Remove Cancerous Tumour

    Rob Ford Undergoes Surgery To Remove Cancerous Tumour
    TORONTO — Rob Ford, the controversial former mayor of Toronto, began intensive surgery to remove a cancerous tumour from his abdomen Monday, with the operation expected to last more than 10 hours.

    Rob Ford Undergoes Surgery To Remove Cancerous Tumour

    Lowe's Builds Canadian Reach By Adding 13 Target Stores, Distribution Centre

    Lowe's Builds Canadian Reach By Adding 13 Target Stores, Distribution Centre
    Lowe's announced Monday that it is building its presence in Ontario and six Western Canadian cities after reaching a deal to buy 13 Target Canada leases and a distribution centre west of Toronto for about $151 million.

    Lowe's Builds Canadian Reach By Adding 13 Target Stores, Distribution Centre

    Green Party Leader May Very Apologetic About Omar Khadr Remarks

    OTTAWA — Green party Leader Elizabeth May says she is "very apologetic" about remarks she made on the weekend that included profanity and insulted the federal cabinet about how it has treated Omar Khadr.

    Green Party Leader May Very Apologetic About Omar Khadr Remarks

    Too Early To Decide On Public Inquest Into Chilliwack Family Deaths: Coroners Service

    VANCOUVER — A spokeswoman for British Columbia's Coroners Service says it's too early to say whether a public inquest will be held into the death of a father who appears to have confessed on Facebook to killing his daughter, wife and sister.

    Too Early To Decide On Public Inquest Into Chilliwack Family Deaths: Coroners Service

    Allen Lascelles, Toronto Man, Charged With Murder In Death Of Mother Of Three, Suraiya Gangaram

    Allen Lascelles, Toronto Man, Charged With Murder In Death Of Mother Of Three, Suraiya Gangaram
    TORONTO — Police in Toronto say a young girl who returned home from school to find her mother fatally stabbed alerted them to a "despicable and incredibly cowardly" homicide.

    Allen Lascelles, Toronto Man, Charged With Murder In Death Of Mother Of Three, Suraiya Gangaram