Saskatchewan

Sask. government spending up to $70M to help livestock producers amid drought conditions

On Monday, the province announced some livestock producers are eligible to receive $80 per head because of dry conditions and below average rainfall.

Livestock producers can get up to $80 per head

Cows are pictured during a cattle drive in southern Alberta.
Funding will be based on receipts or documents showing large expenditures for the purchase of feed or transportation of feed and livestock. (Rachel Maclean/CBC)

With dry conditions and below average rainfall in some parts of Saskatchewan, the provincial government has announced livestock producers will be eligible to receive $80 per head in order to help "offset extraordinary costs." 

The government will be providing up to $70 million in relief funding for livestock producers. 

David Marit, Saskatchewan's minister of agriculture, said that he met with about 30 ranchers a few weeks ago and they expressed concerns about securing feed and transporting it. 

"They were starting to make those decisions on whether they were going to downsize their herd, so it was very important for us to get this announcement out as soon as possible," he said on Monday. 

The money is meant to help offset costs related to feeding livestock to maintain breeding herds. 

The support extends to producers of several different breeding stocks, including beef cattle, bison, horse, elk, deer, sheep and goats.

The relief program will be run by the Saskatchewan Crop Insurance Corporation. Funding will be based on receipts or documents showing large expenditures for the purchase of feed or the transportation of feed and livestock.

Marit expects there to be "a few thousand" applications for relief. 

"The [drought] area is quite widespread in the southwest and south...but there's also other pockets in other parts of the province, too," he said. 

Marit also said that Lawrence MacAulay, who is the federal minister of agriculture and agri-food, has accepted an application from the province for an assessment under the AgriRecovery framework. 

It's the first step in a process that, if approved, could result in additional relief for livestock producers or a cost-sharing agreement between the federal and provincial governments.  

"We're hoping that we hear from [Minister MacAulay] soon," Marit said. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Alexander Quon has been a reporter with CBC Saskatchewan since 2021 and is happy to be back working in his hometown of Regina after half a decade in Atlantic Canada. He has previously worked with the CBC News investigative unit in Nova Scotia and Global News in Halifax. Alexander specializes in municipal political coverage and data-reporting. He can be reached at: alexander.quon@cbc.ca.