Sask. livestock drought program extended

Ten RMs added to area eligible for per-head payment, application deadline lengthened

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: January 30, 2024

  Photo: Thinkstock

Glacier FarmMedia — Governments have expanded and extended the Canada-Saskatchewan Feed Program available to the province’s livestock producers.

Ten rural municipalities have been added to the area eligible for the initial $150 per head payment, and the application deadline has been extended to March 15.

“We recognize the areas significantly impacted by drought this past fall and the importance in maximizing access to financial relief for livestock producers by expanding the area eligibility,” said provincial agriculture minister David Marit.

The RMs added to the list include Britannia, Rosthern, Bayne, Lumsden, Sherwood, Bratt’s Lake, Edenwold, Lajord, South Qu’Appelle and North Qu’Appelle.

Read Also

 Photo: Canada Beef

Trump tariff on Brazilian goods could jack up U.S. burger price

U.S. President Donald Trump’s plan for a 50 per cent tariff on goods from Brazil will likely raise prices for the beef that is used in American hamburgers, traders and analysts said on Thursday, as food manufacturers increasingly rely on imports during a time of declining domestic production.

Applications must include the number of breeding animals in the herd as of Aug. 21, 2023, and kept until Jan. 31, 2024.

Receipts must be submitted to indicate extraordinary expenses including purchased feed, self-hauling or transport costs of feed, and/or land rented for additional grazing or feed production.

Cattle, bison, elk, deer, sheep, goats and horses are all eligible to receive 70 percent of extraordinary costs incurred after May 1, 2023, to the new deadline.

More details are available on the Saskatchewan Crop Insurance Corp.’s website.

Karen Briere writes for the Western Producer from Saskatchewan.

explore

Stories from our other publications