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Controversial feedlot tax still making waves in southern Alberta

Dairy cows are shown in a barn on a farm in Eastern Ontario on Wednesday, April 19, 2017. The Canadian Press/Sean Kilpatrick

The county road tax is once again making headlines in southern Alberta.

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This time, due to a report commissioned by the Alberta Cattle Feeders Association and the Alberta Beef Producers that says it could have a harmful effect on feedlots in the area.

The tax was introduced in 2016 as part of a road improvement initiative and is a business tax specifically for confined feeding operations, or feedlots, within the county.

The recent report says that tax may be increasing fixed costs to cattle feeding operations by almost 20 percent per head, and may result in lower returns on feedlot investments.

“Our beef is that the playing field is level for us and other beef producers across Canada,” said Rick Paskal, co-owner of VRP Farms.

Researchers evaluated the existing tax, and offered three alternatives to it.

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One option offered a GPS tracking system to impose some user fees on the trucking industry.

Another suggested taxing feedlots based on their distance from a provincial highway and amount of maintenance needed on the roads nearest them.

The third option recommended was a levy based on the ratio of feed raised by the farm to feed its own livestock, and how much is trucked in.

According to Lethbridge County Reeve, Lorne Hickey, “it does have some merit, but there are some definite deficiencies.”

The 23-page report was published by the University of Calgary’s School of Public Policy Publications and is available here.

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