• Will Legal Pot Hurt The ALR. Will Pot Farms Get Tax Breaks Intended For

    From Greg Carr@1:229/2 to All on Sunday, October 08, 2017 09:46:53
    XPost: van.general, can.politics, alt.pot
    XPost: alt.true-crime
    From: gregpcarr@yahoo.ca

    A large-scale multinational Delta vegetable producer is swapping out
    its tomato plants for pot plants in a 1.1-million-square-foot
    greenhouse because it says it can make more than 10 times the money.

    Village Farms International also has plans to expand to five times
    that scale, resulting in a warning from Delta Mayor Lois Jackson about
    the future of farms in the Agricultural Land Reserve (ALR).

    “If you’re a big corporation, you’re going to do whatever you can to
    make money,” Jackson said. “But if we lose all our greenhouses to
    growing pot, what are the incentives for the farmers to be growing
    tomatoes, turnips and pumpkins?”

    The Agricultural Land Reserve was created to protect five per cent of
    B.C.’s land for growing food and other agricultural practices, said
    Jackson.

    And Delta, with its 22,000 acres of farmland with rich soil, offers
    the “lowest tax rate” to encourage farmers and local production, she
    added.


    Farms operating on the ALR also receive substantial tax breaks, which
    are available to medical marijuana growers.

    “(Village Farms International) is doing it strictly for the money, and
    if the provincial and federal governments are good with that, with
    them wanting to make lots of money and to take it out of this
    province, I don’t agree with that,” Jackson said.


    Village Farms in Delta, B.C., has signed an agreement with a Victoria
    marijuana company to replace tomatoes with pot in a Village Farms
    greenhouse. Jason Payne / PNG
    She also worries that Canadians will eventually have to rely solely on
    the United States for food supply.

    Village Farms has entered into a joint venture with a Victoria-based
    licensed producer of marijuana to grow pot in the greenhouse beginning
    as early as next year, when recreational marijuana is expected to be
    legalized.

    “The reason is that you look back at the vegetable industry, we used
    to have (profit) margins of 20 to 25 per cent, and now it’s down to
    six per cent,” Village Farms CEO Michael DeGiglio said from his Texas
    office.

    Because NAFTA allows Mexican vegetables to be imported into Canada,
    Canadian growers can’t compete with the $8 an hour workers get there,
    he said. With benefits and other expenses like the carbon tax, workers
    here cost the company $16 to $20 an hour.

    “Revenues will be 10 to 15 times higher than with vegetables.”

    And the company’s website says its earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization — a common business measurement — are
    expected to jump 50 per cent.

    “If the margins are that much better (with pot production), we have a
    fiduciary responsibility to our shareholders,” said DeGiglio.

    He said profits for vegetable growing have been on a “10-year slide,”
    and “if we’re going to continue with NAFTA, we’re not going to be a
    viable company soon,” throwing 800 employees out of work.

    He said there’s no worry of a shortage of vegetables because there’s a
    “huge oversupply of vegetables and 60 per cent of them are exported to
    the United States.”

    The deal included an option for the joint venture to eventually expand
    to Village Farms’ second and third greenhouses, for a total of 4.8
    million square feet and output of 300,000 kilograms a year, “which
    would supply a considerable portion of the expected future cannabis
    demand in Canada or for export abroad,” said the company.

    The first greenhouse now grows close to six million kilograms of
    tomatoes, said DeGiglio.

    The new joint company expects to grow 75,000 kg of marijuana in the
    first greenhouse in the first year, he said.

    Jackson said her municipality is going to make recommendations in a wide-ranging report to the province and the Agricultural Land
    Commission on how legalized marijuana is going to affect Delta.

    Martin Collins, director of policy and planning for the commission,
    said it’s not known what regulatory changes are coming after
    legalization, but he said the commission is not concerned about pot
    production exhausting arable farmland because the product would likely
    be subject to supply management that would limit its production.

    B.C. Agriculture Minister Lana Popham was not available for comment.

    slazaruk@postmedia.com

    http://theprovince.com/business/local-business/pot-production-could-edge-out-vegetables-on-lower-mainlands-agricultural-land-says-delta-mayor/wcm/130ae335-d96c-4720-aed5-1f2737872668

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