Maritime beef plant gets 1 more chance
Last Updated: Friday, September 25, 2009 | 9:51 AM AT
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
Audio
- CBC's Maggie Brown discusses challenges facing Atlantic Beef Products's new board (Runs: 5:52)
- Play: Real Media »
The beef plant will be adding hamburger to its list of products. (CBC) Maritime beef producers are hoping a new board of directors will help turn things around at the Atlantic Beef Products plant in Borden-Carleton, P.E.I.
It is the region's only federally inspected beef plant. It opened with the participation of the three Maritime provincial governments and beef farmers in the region in 2003. Since then it has lost $30 million, $600,000 of that in the last four months.
The financial picture for the plant has been up and down — it even broke even for a brief period at the end of last year — but officials with the P.E.I. government say the new board could be the plant's last chance.
"I would say if we can't make this successful, with the level of expertise we have around that board table now, it may be the last kick," Brian Douglas, P.E.I.'s deputy minister of agriculture, told CBC News on Thursday.
Douglas described the new board as a group of successful Maritime business people. It includes Jim Casey, who is a member of the P.E.I. Business Hall of Fame for his success in building the Paderno cookware company.
Farmers lose faith
Casey and his fellow board members face the task of not only bringing the plant into the black, but doing it in the face of cattle producers who are losing faith in the company.
Some of them have been sending their steers to Ontario for processing because they have been waiting too long to get paid on P.E.I.
Casey said the company is being restructured, and a long-awaited $6-million injection from the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency is expected in the next few weeks. That money was promised in December 2007, but has been tied up in arguments about whether it would be a grant or a loan. Casey said it has not been agreed the money would be repayable only if the plant starts making a profit.
Some of that money will go to installing a hamburger processing line in an effort to to boost sales.
"It's a tough business, and there's so many risk factors that you don't have control of. You can get yourself in trouble pretty fast," Casey said.
"On the other hand, it can turn around fairly fast. If you get everything working right and do the best you can, we should be able to make it work."
Casey said once the new arrangements are complete, beef producers will get paid more quickly.
A new board of directors was not government's first choice. Douglas said officials scoured North America to find someone to either buy or partner in the plant, but there was no interest.
Government officials expect to see a two-year business plan from the new board sometime soon.
Share Tools
Latest Prince Edward Island News Headlines
- Harper to address Tory caucus amid Senate scandal
- Conservatives gathered Monday night to mourn the passing of a key architect in their rise to power — and to brace for the toughest test Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government has faced since taking office on a promise to clean up politics in the national capital. more »
- Donagh parents fear school closure
- Donagh Regional Home and School is worried P.E.I.'s English Language School Board has plans to shut down the school. more »
- Recovering addict supports methadone substitute
- A Charlottetown woman who's trying to kick her addiction to prescription narcotics would like to see the province cover the cost of a new substitute drug for methadone. more »
- NDP wants RCMP inquiry into $90K payment to Duffy
- The NDP has asked the RCMP to launch an investigation into the $90,000 payment from the prime minister's former top aide, Nigel Wright, to Senator Mike Duffy in relation to the Senate expense scandal. more »
- Conservative MP remains tight-lipped on Duffy scandal
- Revenue Minister and P.E.I. Conservative MP Gail Shea isn't offering an opinion on whether Senator Mike Duffy should resign in light of the unraveling expenses controversy. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Oklahoma tornado recovery work begins after dozens killed
- Rescue teams searched through the night in hopes of finding survivors after dozens of people were killed in a tornado16 kilometres south of Oklahoma City that flattened two elementary schools and many homes, but efforts increasingly turned to recovery work.
more »
- Will alleged Rob Ford video overshadow Toronto casino debate?
- A debate about a proposed downtown casino is supposed to take centre stage at Toronto City Hall on Tuesday, but it seems a safe bet that a still-unseen video of Mayor Rob Ford will continue to be a topic of conversation. more »
- Harper to address Tory caucus amid Senate scandal
- Conservatives gathered Monday night to mourn the passing of a key architect in their rise to power — and to brace for the toughest test Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government has faced since taking office on a promise to clean up politics in the national capital. more »
- Keith Boag: Have you heard about the murderous abortion doctor?
- The gruesome trial and murder conviction of Philadelphia abortion provider Dr. Kermit Gosnell is unlikely to change American abortion law, Keith Boag writes. But it has U.S. journalists questioning their priorities and how they cover such a sensitive issue. more »
- Fearful Oklahoma families search for children
- The parents and guardians stood in the muddy grass outside a suburban Oklahoma City church, listening intently as someone with a bullhorn called out the names of children who were being dropped off — survivors of Monday's deadly tornado. more »
- RBC Cup adds $2M to Summerside’s coffers
- Conservative MP remains tight-lipped on Duffy scandal
- Alberton fishermen face lobster quota
- Man dies in off-road vehicle crash near St. Patricks
- P.E.I. marked low on foreign worker treatment
- NDP wants RCMP inquiry into $90K payment to Duffy
- Medical marijuana changes worry P.E.I. woman
- Police find bodies of 2 missing New Brunswick fishermen
- Can the Senate fire a senator?

