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Farmers to meet federal transport minister over moving big crop by rail

Farmers to meet with federal Transport Minister Marc Garneau in Saskatoon over worries of another bottleneck in moving grain by rail.
Farmers to meet with federal Transport Minister Marc Garneau in Saskatoon over worries of another bottleneck in moving grain by rail. Jeff McIntosh / The Canadian Press

More than a dozen groups representing farmers are to meet with federal Transport Minister Marc Garneau in Saskatoon to talk about moving grain by rail.

The second largest crop on record is expected this year and farmers are worried about a repeat of a rail bottleneck that occurred in 2013-2014.

READ MORE: Federal Court denies CN appeal on grain shipping ruling

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Saskatchewan Agriculture Minister Lyle Stewart said he will make a pitch for improved transportation rules, including better reporting of weekly progress in moving rail cars and penalties for shippers and rail companies that don’t meet delivery agreements.

Stewart also wants interswitching, the transfer of traffic between two railway companies, kept at a distance of 160 kilometres.

The Canadian Federation of Agriculture has called on Garneau to ensure railways don’t abuse their role and to maintain limits on how much profit they can make from grain transportation.

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READ MORE: Prairie farm groups say they can’t get meeting with federal transport minister

Canadian Pacific Railway has said it’s ready to move the crop, but the grain isn’t ready because wet weather is contributing to a late harvest.

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