Back-to-work law introduced to end CP strike

Canadian Pacific Railway’s striking engineers, conductors, yardmen and trainspersons can expect to be ordered back to work later this week. Federal Labour Minister Lisa Raitt on Monday introduced Bill C-39, which would require an end to the CP strike and the appointment of an arbitrator 12 hours after the law receives royal assent, expected before […] Read more

Talks ‘stalled’ between CP, union

Talks to reach a new labour deal for Canadian Pacific Railway’s striking engineers and conductors are now "stalled." The Teamsters Canada Rail Conference (TCRC), which represents about 4,800 of CP’s engineers, conductors, yardmen, trainspersons and rail traffic controllers, said Sunday that the federal Mediation and Conciliation Service is "no longer involved" in talks between CP […] Read more



CP engineers, conductors out on strike

Locomotive engineers, conductors and other unionized rail workers at Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) have hit the bricks, as of 12:01 a.m. Wednesday. "The strike has now started but talks will resume first thing in the morning," the Teamsters Canada Rail Conference (TCRC), which represents the railway’s 4,800-odd striking employees, said in a release shortly after […] Read more


CP engineers, conductors serve strike notice

Canadian Pacific Railway’s engineers, conductors, yardmen and rail traffic controllers have served strike notice to take effect Wednesday at 12:01 a.m. The 72-hour notice, announced Saturday, does not necessarily mean a strike will begin at that time, but allows up to 4,800 workers, represented by the Teamsters Canada Rail Conference (TCRC), to walk off the […] Read more

CP’s CEO quits ahead of reckoning

Prairie farmers can expect one of their two main railways to press harder for wider profit margins under a quick regime change announced Thursday. Canadian Pacific Railway’s embattled CEO Fred Green announced his resignation Thursday morning, hours ahead of a shareholder vote in Calgary on nominations to the company’s board, put forward by an activist […] Read more


Sask. mustard miller shuts doors

A bid to restructure the finances of an overextended mustard miller in southwestern Saskatchewan has ended with the company permanently shutting its doors. Tom Halpenny, CEO of Mustard Capital Inc. at Gravelbourg, Sask., announced on the company’s website that MCI has "discontinued operations" as of May 4. MCI announced in early February this year that […] Read more

Viterra rolls out mobile crop pricing app

Qualifying customers of the Prairies’ biggest grain handler will be able to get elevator-level pricing information through a new mobile app. Viterra on Wednesday rolled out myViterra mobile, a new mobile interface growers can customize for specific commodities and facility locations. The app is a new mobile-phone extension of the company’s online myViterra service, available […] Read more


Case IH telematics tailored to hay production

Hay and forage producers can track production quality and costs with Case IH’s new AFS Connect telematics packages


The sight of a tractor and heavy disc breaking up hay and pasture land in mixed farming areas hasn’t exactly been a rare one in the last couple of years. Strong grain and oilseeds prices have been driving farm incomes and pulling acres aware from hay and forage production. “We’re seeing a reduction in hay […] Read more

Deere introduces baler-mounted moisture tester

For mixed farmers and other forage producers, determining when windrows of hay are ready to bale can seem a bit more like an art than a science. Of course, there are a variety of moisture testers on the market that can provide some hard and fast data, but using them typically involves choosing spots to […] Read more