:
Welcome to meeting number 13 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Agriculture and Agri-Food. Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on October 24, 2020, the committee is resuming its study on processing capacity.
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the House order of January 25, 2021. Therefore, members are attending in person in the room and remotely using the Zoom application.
The proceedings will be made available via the House of Commons website. So you are aware, the webcast will always show the person speaking rather than the entirety of the committee.
Today's meeting is also taking place in the new webinar format. Webinars are for public committee meetings and are available only to members, their staff and witnesses. Members may have noticed that the entry to the meeting was much quicker and that they immediately entered as an active participant. All functionality for active participants remains the same. Staff will be non-active participants only and therefore only view the meeting in gallery view.
I'd like to take this opportunity to remind all participants in this meeting that screen shots or taking photos of your screen is not permitted.
[Translation]
To ensure that the meeting runs smoothly, I'd like to share certain rules with you.
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[English]
I believe we're all online. There's nobody in the actual meeting room, so I think we have everybody on the screen.
With that, I would like to welcome our first panel. From Olymel L.P. we have Richard Davies, senior vice-president, sales and marketing. From Scotian Cattle Company, we have Anthony Eikelenboom, drover.
We'll start with Mr. Davies, for seven and a half minutes, to do his opening statement.
Go ahead, Mr. Davies.
:
Good afternoon, everyone.
Mr. Chair and honourable members of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Agriculture and Agri-Food, thank you for your invitation.
My name is Richard Davies. I'm the senior vice-president of sales and marketing at Olymel, whose main shareholder is the Sollio Cooperative Group, formerly known as La Coop fédérée.
Olymel is Canada's leading pork producer and the leading exporter of pork meat. Many countries recognize its meat as being of superior quality. We export our products to over 65 countries.
Olymel has deep roots in Quebec. It has also expanded into Ontario, Saskatchewan, Alberta and New Brunswick. We provide direct employment to 15,000 Canadians. Our annual sales are around $4.5 billion. We generate considerable economic benefits for our regions. The entire value chain of our sectors is also very significant.
The goal of the , Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food, is to increase Canada's total agri-food exports from approximately $67 billion in 2020 to $75 billion by 2025. However, this goal would be easier to achieve if the government, along with the industry, were to pick up the pace in terms of removing barriers that can only hinder the objective.
I'll list some of the issues that our industry is facing, starting with the issue currently described as the mother of all issues: labour. This issue is critical and essential not only for Olymel, but also for the entire agri-food sector. Even before the current pandemic, we were already facing a serious labour shortage. However, given its growth and major investments in recent years, our company can create thousands of new jobs wherever it operates in Canada.
We provide stable jobs with very competitive conditions in regions that need jobs. For example, we'll need to hire 1,200 people a year over the next few years to deal with the expected turnover rate, the retirement of baby boomers and adverse demographic projections.
We also need to hire an additional 1,200 employees right now to bring our plants up to full capacity and to optimize previous investments. Lastly, we'll need another 1,200 employees to handle opportunities that arise and future projects already in the works. In short, along with the 15,000 current jobs, Olymel will need the equivalent of 3,000 to 4,000 additional jobs in our regions over the coming months.
Obviously, the inability to find workers is a major barrier to our development and growth. Without sufficient labour, we'll be forced to abandon certain markets. This will mean fewer jobs and investments. This will also mean that processors from other countries will quickly take our place in foreign markets and here in Canada because of the labour shortage. The entire value chain is affected by the labour shortage.
We're already working with local elected officials and regional governments to make new workers even more welcome in regions that want to boost their economies.
In recent years, Olymel has brought in a good contingent of temporary foreign workers. These workers, who come from halfway around the world, are strongly motivated by a search for a better life in Canada. However, the federal government's temporary foreign worker program has a 10% cap per company. We've been advocating for years for this cap to be raised to 20%. We also want fewer bureaucratic delays that slow down the program.
Since the start of the pandemic, our employees have done an outstanding job of responding to the call from governments to maintain our processing activities as an essential service. We're the essential extension of the livestock farm. Our slaughterhouses are the essential end result of the farmers' activities.
Not only is the labour issue critical, but it urgently needs to be addressed.
On another note, the current pandemic has prompted us to look ahead at our modernization plans. These plans involve the development of new technology and greater integration of robotics and automation in our operations. Although robotics and automation aren't designed to replace labour, if the industry wants to remain competitive and effective, we must speed up the implementation of these tools, which require research and major investments.
We believe that the Canadian government must assist exporting companies in this area through appropriate and easily accessible support programs that are comparable to the same programs provided by the governments of our main competitors.
The barriers to accessing our priority markets constitute another challenge that increasingly limits our export capabilities. For example, our access to the Chinese market has been disrupted for several months. As a result, 70% of Canada's total production no longer has access to the world's largest market. There are some technical issues that can easily be resolved. However, the current political relationship certainly isn't helping to resolve the issues and lift the suspensions. Our plant in Red Deer, Alberta has been particularly hard hit since April 28, 2019.
Moreover, right here in Canada, a major issue is developing in the relationship between mass distribution and Canadian processors. The Canadian government could certainly help promote a better balance of power, as requested by most stakeholders in the processing industry. I'm referring here to the attempts by some retailers to unilaterally impose market conditions on processors that could threaten the processors' viability. We believe that the establishment of a code of good practice between the mass distribution and processing stakeholders would be beneficial to everyone, including Canadian consumers. When faced with the same issue, several countries have taken action to address the situation.
Lastly, in more immediate news, the current pandemic has forced the companies asked to continue their operations to quickly adapt to new conditions, particularly health conditions. We've done everything possible to protect the health of our employees, although we haven't been able to avoid periodic outbreaks. We believe, as the Canadian Meat Council already advocated last December, that food processing employees, particularly in the meat sector, should have priority access to a vaccine. This approach is in line with other sectors where the solution has already been implemented.
In closing, I've provided a broad summary to stay within my allotted speaking time. Olymel is, of course, willing to give you more information on these issues.
Thank you.
:
Good afternoon, and thank you for inviting me to this committee.
My speech is going to be more of an overlook of what we do here in Nova Scotia, and then I'll take some questions regarding what I've said.
My name is Anthony Eikelenboom and I'm from Shubenacadie, Nova Scotia. I own and operate Scotian Cattle, which has been in operation for approximately 10 years. We are a buyer throughout Nova Scotia. I'm also a partner in Cowtown Cattle Company, which has been in operation for four years and is a buyer Maritimes-wide. Cowtown also accepts animals from other buyers within the maritime provinces, and some in Quebec and Ontario.
For Scotian, we travel around the province twice weekly doing business with roughly 160 of the 200 dairy farms in Nova Scotia. When I started Scotian Cattle Company, we were only buying replacement heifers. Over the past 10 years, we've grown and now we buy a large percentage of the cull cows and bob calves here in Nova Scotia.
Historically, there were markets for Holstein bull calves and replacement heifers. However, now with the markets drying up for those replacement heifers, and with the new transport regulations, it is presently near impossible—and starting in February 2022 it will be absolutely impossible—to ship Holstein calves into the veal market in Quebec.
New regulations have been put into effect where the maximum amount of time a calf can be on a truck is 12 hours. Calves must then be offloaded, fed and rested. We all know where Nova Scotia stands logistically. What this means is that we are no longer able to ship those Holstein calves to Quebec into that veal market.
What we're doing to fix that problem here is encouraging the farmers to breed their cows to beef bulls. The result is a cross-bred calf that is 50% Holstein and 50% beef. This specific type of calf gives the farmer and us the opportunity to sell the calves to local feedlots.
In order for dairy farmers to operate, it's necessary for the cows to be bred and calved yearly. Because we are unable to ship the Holstein calves, we're encouraging farmers to breed the top one-third of their herd to the female sexed semen to ensure heifer replacements for the farm, and then we are promoting that with the bottom two-thirds of their herd they breed those animals to the sexed male beef semen, and that will hopefully ensure that we can sell their calves.
By doing all that, folks, this will hopefully fix the transportation issue in regard to transporting the baby calves. However, once those cross-bred calves have matured to an ideal market weight, we're not going to be able to process them here in Nova Scotia. Therefore, we will need to sell them out of province at increased costs and, as you all know, trucking is very high nowadays.
In addition to these calves, because of the new transport regulations we're also now limited in the number of cull cows that we're able to ship on trucks, and also in the different classes of cows. We have to pay more attention to the age and condition of the animals. This leads us to processing more cows in the province, and the provincial plants are also running at near full capacity. Most of them are at full capacity.
I think all this goes back to why we're here today, processing capacity and capability. If we were able to have a federally inspected plant here in the province, which we do not at the present time, it would drastically change the entire picture. Farmers will then have the luxury of selling their animals to the federal plant, which will in turn give them more money for their animals as the federal plant can sell outside of the province. It allows us cattle dealers to sell more animals and put more money into the farmers' pockets. It also lowers my costs of transportation.
In closing, a federal processing plant in the province is necessary. To do it through the private sector would be difficult, given the economics and the scale and the small margins. However, with government funding, we should be able to change the current state and make it a viable business for all parties involved, from the farmer to the table.
There's no doubt that the provincial governments need to play a leadership role. However, the federal government could be a conveyor or provide support through ACOA or through the Canadian agricultural partnership.
I guess that's it for my speech. Thank you very much for listening. I can take questions whenever questions are allowed.
Happy New Year to everyone, and thank you to the witnesses for appearing.
I'm going to begin with Mr. Davies. I will make a comment and then pose a question. We'll try it, and then we'll move on.
In preparing for this, I did speak with a pork producer in my riding, down in the most southern part of Canada here, who ships to you in Quebec. He just expressed gratitude for the special arrangements you have made through this difficult time, for capacity and making arrangements to have that slaughtered in the States.
I will pass that along. We're somewhat aware of the challenges with labour that you talked about.
The question I have, if we can get this by translation, is what percentage of your business is export-focused and what percentage is domestic.
I want to thank the witnesses for being here today.
My questions are for you, Mr. Davies. I took note of your remarks. You said that, with its 30 years of experience, Olymel has a successful business model based on a large workforce that requires foreign workers. We know that labour is a major issue for food-processing plants.
Can you explain why hiring temporary foreign workers is necessary and beneficial for your business?
Second, I want to know what other measures should be taken to support the hiring of workers in processing plants, particularly in the regions.
Third, in your opinion, what limits growth in the processing sector?
These were my questions. I'll give Mr. Blois the rest of my time.
:
I call the meeting back to order, and I'd like to make a few comments for the benefit of the new witnesses.
Before speaking, please wait until I recognize you by name. When you are ready to speak, you can click on the microphone icon to activate your mike. I remind you that all comments should be addressed through the chair. Interpretation in this video conference will work very much like in a regular committee meeting. You have the choice, at the bottom of your screen, of floor, English or French audio.
We'll start our second panel.
[Translation]
We're joined by Ian Blenkharn, who will be speaking as an individual.
[English]
Welcome to our committee, Mr. Blenkharn.
[Translation]
We're also joined by Kathleen Sullivan, chief executive officer of Food and Beverage Canada.
Welcome, Ms. Sullivan.
We'll now begin. The witnesses will have seven and a half minutes each. Mr. Blenkharn will go first.
[English]
Go ahead, Mr. Blenkharn. You have seven and a half minutes. The floor is yours.
:
Thank you for the invitation and opportunity to appear before this committee.
Briefly, my background, and the context for my comments today, is the result of 34-plus years working in the agricultural industry. I hold a Bachelor of Science degree in agricultural economics. I spent the first 13 years of my career as an agricultural banker for various lending institutions in five provinces across Canada, and the next five years as an agricultural finance consultant working closely with farmers. I have spent the last 16-plus years as a partner in a large broiler chicken, hatching egg and mink farm, as well as a business executive managing various poultry companies in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador.
Based on my experiences over the years, I have the following observations, opinions and recommendations to present to this committee today.
The Canadian supply management system has been, and continues to be, a very positive marketing tool for the agricultural commodities fortunate enough to have this system in place. The ability to control imports and establish domestic production levels, along with the ability to set the producer price at a level that covers all costs and a return to investment, is the envy of many other farmers in Canada and around the world.
The poultry meat processing sector in Canada is generally supportive of supply management. However, there is a need for modernization of the system, as the strategy of supply management is only at the primary producer level. Once the primary production is sold to a processor, there is no supply management at that point and beyond. It is solely free market, driven by supply and demand. This fact has been creating increasing pressure on the stability of supply management over the years and is reaching a tipping point at this juncture. The current COVID-19 pandemic has brought the problem to a new level of importance. Given that producers ultimately control the amount of chicken grown in Canada per year, and processors are ultimately obligated to purchase this volume at a regulated price that guarantees the producer a profitable return regardless of what the consuming marketplace may demand or be willing to pay, it is a serious problem that is getting worse by the day in these COVID times.
As market demand has dropped over the past year, with restaurants being closed due to COVID-19, and the supply has continued to either rise or be maintained by producers, the supply of chicken now well exceeds demand, and the market price received by processors and further processors is at or below cost of production. This market distortion and lack of willingness by producers to react and understand that they are one segment in a much bigger industry is very problematic and troubling. It is extremely difficult for processors to consider existing reinvestment strategies, let alone consider expanding capacity for export under the current circumstances.
In my opinion, and that of many in the processing sector, the powers of the Farm Products Council of Canada need to be enhanced so that they can drive change and modernization of the supply management system.
One quick change that could be made in the case of the chicken sector would be to require the live price paid to producers to include a wholesale price component in the pricing formula. Thus, if the producers realized the negative consequences of oversupply through a reduction in their live price as a result of the low wholesale price, I expect they would be more responsive to establishing the appropriate domestic supply levels.
Another significant problem for processors in certain parts of the country is the fact that producers are free to ship their product to whichever processor they want and there is no system in place to backfill the losing processor with equivalent volume. In some cases, live birds are being transported for 10 to 12 hours to a competing processor instead of being processed at a processor that is minutes away from the farm. This is both a potential animal welfare issue and a major supply risk to the affected processor. How does a processor in this situation view future investment?
Recently, the issue of food security was seriously challenged in the Nova Scotia chicken sector. The only federally inspected poultry processor was shut down for two weeks by the provincial health department due to COVID-19. This put serious pressure on the supply of fresh local chicken. The problem was amplified by the fact that processors in the neighbouring province had limited ability to assist the Nova Scotia plant as their catching and transport systems were not compatible between plants. Fortunately, solutions were found and no birds were euthanized. However, it has highlighted the need for more uniformity between regional plants so that they can help each other in times of need to protect food security and animal welfare. This uniformity will have significant costs associated with it and require co-operation amongst competing processors.
Access to a reliable and reasonably priced labour pool is another limitation of many processors, as well as transportation regulations that are becoming increasingly restrictive on the movement of livestock to regional processors. Compensation for trade deals and assurance that TRQ will remain predominantly in the hands of processors are other factors that will affect processors' willingness and ability to reinvest in their industry or expand for export potential.
Until the supply management system is modernized and many other concerns I have raised are addressed by industry and government, I find it difficult to see major poultry processor investment for export markets. However, if the investment is to be considered, then export markets need to be expanded. The federal government needs to endeavour to increase market access for Canadian agricultural products, and expanded access to the Chinese market would be a good place to start.
You'll note from my comments that I never talked about the need for direct financial investment in industry by government. In my opinion, financial investment with public funds is not the key to increasing processing capacity in Canada. The key is providing the appropriate business-friendly landscape for private investment to occur. There's more than enough private money in the world looking for low- to medium-risk profitable businesses to invest in. However, that same money will also run from high-risk, unprofitable investments just as quickly.
In my opinion, government needs to focus on creating the appropriate environment for business to operate at low risk with stability and predictability. With this environment, entrepreneurs will surface, invest and achieve the goals that the Barton report aspires to.
Examples of changes in the landscape that I believe need to be addressed include easier and more reliable access to year-round foreign labour; more reasonable union laws that are conducive to business while not jeopardizing employee rights; changes to employment insurance guidelines so that employees are encouraged to find full-time year-round employment and to work when work is available, instead of claiming on an open claim; health and safety regulations that are more rational and put the onus on the employee to work safely; more reasonable environmental regulations that still protect the environment while allowing business to operate efficiently and profitably; and a simplified Income Tax Act with more access to investment tax credits to reward investment after it is made and is successful.
With respect to the farming community, I believe many farmers still need to improve their financial acumen. It has improved over the years. However, in my opinion there is more work to be done. Both federal and provincial governments can assist with this initiative. New farmers should be required to prove their understanding of financial statements and business planning principles before having access to credit. Just because a new farmer is the son or daughter of an existing farmer and has lived and worked on the family farm, that does not mean they have the financial skills to manage a for-profit business. I appreciate that farming for many is a lifestyle choice. However, it is also a for-profit business and needs to be operated and managed as such. The financial education should go beyond simply understanding financial statements and business planning. It should include topics such as production economics and supply and demand principles.
:
Good afternoon, and thank you for the invitation to appear today.
Food and Beverage Canada is a national association whose members include provincial food and beverage associations, as well as leading Canadian food and beverage processing companies.
Food and beverage manufacturers are at the centre of Canada's food supply. There are few Canadian agriculture products that make it to Canada's grocery store shelves without first being transformed by one of our almost 8,000 companies.
Food and Beverage is the largest manufacturing employer in the country. We employ almost 300,000 people, generate $120 billion in annual sales and supply much of the food that Canadians eat.
A strong and vibrant processing sector is critical to ensure Canada's food sovereignty, to support our primary agriculture sector and to continue contributing to the country's economic recovery and well-being.
Entering 2020, our sector was focused on the goals set by the federal agri-food economic strategy table—increasing domestic food sales and exports by 30% by 2025.
Canada has tremendous potential when it comes to agriculture and food. This is a sentiment we hear often, and one we often repeat, but we need much more than words to support Canada's agriculture and food-processing sectors. We need to put action behind those words.
Today I will focus on three priorities for ensuring recovery and growth for food and beverage processing: labour, worker health and retail concentration.
First off, on labour, entering 2020 our industry was already flagging labour as a crisis. Today we estimate the sector is short 30,000 workers, 10% of our workforce. By 2025, we expect that number to more than double. Why? It's due to increased retirements, a shortage of skilled workers, the seasonal nature of certain subsectors and the regionality of some of our businesses. COVID-19 has also led to additional absenteeism and challenges finding replacement workers.
This cannot continue. Without healthy, skilled workers, we cannot produce the food Canadians need and we cannot add value to the agriculture products Canada wants to export.
Over the last two years, we have repeatedly raised the alarm regarding the industry's labour issues, largely and very sadly to no avail. We understand labour is complex, but there are some simple things we can do to start.
First off, we need a simple assessment of current and future labour requirements for this industry—and I will say for primary agriculture as well—matched up against expected domestic labour supply. If there is a shortage—and industry says there is—then we need to address that.
Last year, we at FBC held a labour strategy session where we included government and identified three priority areas: addressing the shortage of skilled trades, ensuring we have access to qualified foreign workers, and supporting automation. We continue to invite the federal government to work with industry on these.
Second, I'd like to talk about worker health. With the outbreak of COVID-19, food and beverage processors took on the incredible challenge of managing worker health while meeting the imperative, as an essential service, of maintaining Canada's food supply.
Food plants are, first and foremost, manufacturing sites. They are designed for efficiency, for food safety and for occupational health and safety. They were never originally designed to manage a public health crisis. With COVID-19, manufacturers, literally overnight, had to implement new policies and protocols to protect workers from the virus—things like enhanced PPE, health screening tools, structural modifications and enhanced cleaning. We estimate that the industry has invested close to $1 billion so far to protect workers. Despite these measures, food plants are congregate settings. As well, no matter what we do inside our plants, we cannot protect our workers outside our walls.
Front-line food workers have made sacrifices so our food system can operate. We need to protect them by ensuring they have access, if they want it, to a vaccine. The national advisory committee on immunization recommended that essential workers, including from our sector, be prioritized for vaccine access, but these are only recommendations. I will point out that even last week the Province of British Columbia announced its vaccine rollout plan, and that plan fails to prioritize food and other essential workers, other than health care workers, over the general population. We encourage the federal government to utilize whatever levers it has to ensure that provinces follow the recommendations of the NACI.
Finally, I want to talk about retail concentration, a topic you've heard a lot about. As you know, the Canadian retail food sector is highly concentrated, with just five companies controlling 80% of the market. This leaves the food and beverage manufacturers with limited negotiating power. Please remember that there are almost 8,000 food processors in Canada, and 7,000 of them, 90%, are small and mid-sized businesses, companies with fewer than 100 employees.
Food retailers regularly impose arbitrary transaction costs, fees, and penalties on their suppliers, often without notice or retroactively. In addition, they regularly extend payment terms for months, often delaying payments and impacting the liquidity of their suppliers. This is absolutely no longer tolerable.
We are very pleased that at their November meeting the federal, provincial and territorial agricultural ministers committed to strike a working group to look at the issue. We continue to encourage them to prioritize this and to play a leadership role in ensuring that a grocery code of conduct is in place by the end of this year.
As a final note, I would like to touch on the cost impacts of COVID-19. Unlike many businesses, food and beverage processors were able to operate through the pandemic, which is, of course, what every business wanted to do. The cost of this, however, has been quite significant. As I said, it was close to $1 billion. We have asked the Department of Finance to consider a refundable tax credit for COVID-19 costs incurred by our sector and other essential services sectors, businesses that continue to operate through the pandemic and that have seen significant cost increases related to ongoing critical operations and to ensuring workers' safety.
I would like to thank you again, and I look forward to answering any of your questions.
:
When we use foreign workers in the food-processing sector—and primary agriculture would be very much the same—sometimes we use temporary foreign workers because the jobs are seasonal. If you think about canning tomatoes, for example, that's a seasonal job. Other times, we're bringing in foreign workers because there is simply a structural shortage of workers here in Canada.
The TFW system, as my colleague from Olymel pointed out, is a very cumbersome system. There are limits on the percentage of TFWs you can have in a company. The application for TFWs is very long, even though you're often bringing in TFWs, the same persons, year after year, and you're having to book six months out for the workers you need. There's absolutely a need to go in and look at the TFW system, modernize it and simplify it.
On the other side, we have permanent jobs and we're looking for economic immigrants to come to Canada to take on permanent, full-time, respectable jobs with us. There are many people who want those jobs. The way our immigration system works, though, is quite complicated. It's a point system and there are various streams. Very few of those streams, if any, as they award points, actually favour what we may think of as the blue-collar workers or the technicians who are coming to work in food plants.
We're dead before we start, if you will. We really have very few opportunities to bring in the workers we need, because the system has been designed not to favour the workers we require.
:
I think we've been very lucky here in Canada. We obviously saw shortages on the grocery store shelves early on last March. I think we saw some more in the fall, certainly where I live, with the second wave of the pandemic. I think Canadian companies have done an incredible job of keeping that food supply going, but it has been a Herculean effort.
As I said, food processing is a manufacturing business. You think of the equipment, the quintessential assembly line. When you have people who stand near each other on that assembly line, to accommodate social distancing you can put fewer people there, which means you have to slow down production. We have seen companies overcome this by adding other shifts. They're less productive on any given shift and have had to try to find new workers to work different shifts, adding an overnight shift, for example.
We also saw companies do things such as streamline their product line. If you were a chicken processor who perhaps previously offered 40 different products, you may have had to streamline that down to 20 to increase the efficiency of what was going through.
At the end of the day, it has added to worker bonuses, changes to the actual configuration of the plants, additional PPE and cleaning. As I said, last year we estimated it was $800 million. I'm guessing we're getting close to $1 billion just in the cost of trying to keep our workers safe while they're at work.
:
The labour shortage is something that we hear about from every single province in the country. It may look different or manifest itself differently in different regions, but it is wholesale pretty much across the board. I think where I'm frustrated is that, like you, I've already acknowledged that we've been talking about this for years.
It's very difficult for industry to read the economic strategy table report, to read the Industry Strategy Council report that came out just before Christmas, and to hear these very enthusiastic cheers for agriculture and food processing and all the potential that it has, and yet when the industry comes forward and says there are some really basic fundamentals they need to get right here, it seems like that all falls on a deaf ear.
Not all the work we do is sexy or is going to include buzzwords. I know that people like to talk about robotics a lot now, but robotics isn't going to address all of industry's production issues, processing capacity issues. Sometimes you just have to roll up your sleeves to deal with the basics and figure out what's going wrong to fix the problem, and I think that's what we have unfortunately failed to do. There is a real, growing frustration on the part of industry.
To the extent that we had problems going into COVID, this sector is going to be incredibly critical for economic recovery. First of all, you need this food supply chain for food sovereignty, but there's also massive potential to leverage what the agri-food sector is doing to actually grow economically, both domestically and also from a trade standpoint. As somebody else pointed out, Canadians will keep eating. If we don't feed them the food we make, someone's going to bring their product in from overseas and people will eat that.
:
Right now we're still in the middle of the pandemic. We're obviously in the middle of the second wave, and things are probably worse, or recently have been worse, than they have ever been, so no, companies aren't, at this point, anywhere near thinking of planning to roll things back.
If anything, I think we're not going to see many changes, or even planning, until we see a critical mass of the population vaccinated and we start to hear from the experts about what the risk level is of the virus transmitting. Even at that point, I think we are going to see some changes in plants that are permanent.
For example, plants have put in walkways and barriers so that people can't pass each other. It's similar to what you see in grocery stores where you can only go one way. I think it will be a long time before you see that change. I think it will be a long time before you see the enhanced cleaning, or any of the changes that we've had to make, be reversed.
Some of those costs have been incurred and they won't be incurred again, and some are ongoing, like PPE, additional cleaning, health screening.
Even if you have an employee who is diagnosed with COVID, as an employer you do the contact tracing within the plant; public health doesn't come in and do that. The employer does all the contact tracing within the plant and watches security cameras to see what employee may have contacted another employee. There are massive costs that are involved in that, and I think those will be around for quite a while.