The Canada and Manitoba governments have announced a Herd Management Drought Assistance program under the AgriRecovery framework. 

The program will help livestock producers offset the costs associated with replacing breeding animals culled due to shortages of winter feed.

“My heart goes out to Manitoba ranchers, some of whom I visited this past summer, who were forced to send their breeding herds to market, selling genetics developed over generations at a fraction of their worth,” said Federal Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau. “Farmers needed their governments to act fast and we did. Through this program and other initiatives, we are helping farmers bounce back from the drought and build the resiliency needed to be sustainable in the face of climate change.”

Eligible animals under the Herd Management Drought Assistance program include breeding females of beef cattle, bison, sheep, goats and elk. Producers must be supporting a minimum of 10 animals to qualify for assistance.

“These extraordinary times have brought extraordinary challenges to our province’s livestock producers and having programs to help producers address feed issues and manage their herd size is paramount,” said Manitoba Agriculture and Resource Development Minister Ralph Eichler. “We all know this has been a tough year, so we remain determined to take the strides necessary to support our producers in any way possible.”

This program will assist producers who must replace breeding females culled due to drought, helping to return the inventory of breeding females to pre-drought levels. The replacement animals can be purchased or retained from the producer’s existing herds or flocks. Payments are determined by the increase in the inventory of breeding females, with payments capped once inventories are restored to pre-drought levels.

“Unfortunately the drought forced many producers to reduce their breeding inventory due to feed and water challenges, so the herd management program under AgriRecovery will be an important component toward helping to rebuild Manitoba’s beef breeding herd,” said Manitoba Beef Producers President Tyler Fulton. “MBP thanks the provincial and federal governments for making this assistance available, as extraordinary costs such as purchasing replacement breeding stock are not directly addressed in existing business risk management programs and this program recognizes the challenge created for producers because of it.”

Application is a two-step process which starts with producers submitting their pre-drought and drought-affected inventories of breeding females. Forms for submitting these breeding animal numbers will be available in January 2022. Starting on Dec. 1, 2022, producers will be able to submit information on their breeding animal inventories post-drought. Payments will be issued after the post-drought inventory is submitted.

“Keystone Agricultural Producers (KAP) thanks the provincial and federal governments for today’s announcement of a Herd Management Drought Assistance program," said KAP President Bill Campbell. “The program will help livestock producers rebuild their herds as they continue to face extraordinary challenges this winter.”

The announcement is part of the Canada-Manitoba AgriRecovery Drought Assistance, announced in August 2021 to support livestock producers affected by this year’s drought conditions. Under this program, the Government of Canada is investing up to $93 million and the Manitoba government is investing $62 million to cover eligible extraordinary costs, for a total program of up to $155 million.

Herd Management Drought Assistance is the third program developed as part of this investment. AgriRecovery is part of the Canadian Agricultural Partnership agreement, with funding shared on a 60-40 federal-provincial basis.