August 27, 2010
Canada aids new pig farmers with Thinkfarm scheme
Agriculture Minister John MacDonell launched the new Thinkfarm initiative on August 25, which provides information on available programmes and services to help Canadian farmers start their own business.
"We have been getting frequent requests for information and support from new entrants in the agriculture sector, so we focused on providing resources to meet their needs. Our agriculture industry is in a state of transition and we are encouraging new farmers to be diversified, market-focused and profitable so that we can create good jobs and grow the economy," said Mr MacDonell.
The Department of Agriculture staff developed a four-year project funded through Growing Forward, a federal-provincial-territorial agriculture initiative.
"This is a tremendous initiative that will help new farmers get the resources they need to start a farm business. We are pleased to partner with Nova Scotia to make these kinds of smart investments that will help beginning farmers get off on the right foot and also make the agriculture industry stronger for the future," said federal Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz.
The Thinkfarm programme includes a co-ordinator working on resources for new pig farmers, a guidebook, resource fact sheets and a website (www.gov.ns.ca/agri/thinkfarm/) that provides a one-stop location for all information.
"Department staff(s) are excited to have a programme dedicated to working with beginning farmers from a variety of backgrounds. The people getting into agriculture now are not the same people we saw 10 or 20 years ago. The Thinkfarm programme allows us to respond to the current needs of the industry and support this new group of farmers who are crucial to the continued viability of the farming sector in Nova Scotia," said Kevin Bekkers, agricultural resource co-ordinator with the Department of Agriculture.










