ESSENTIAL NEWS FOR AGRI-RETAILERS
The Communicator

February 2023 Issue – See All

CAAR News

No Concerns with New Pesticides & Ag Plastic in Québec Changes

The Resiliency of Canadian Ag Production

It has been three long years since I last attended an indoor farm show. Yesterday, I travelled to Brandon, Manitoba for the opening day of 2023 Manitoba Ag Days.

By The Numbers

2.9 That’s how many billions of dollars Canada’s ag industry lost because it lacked the necessary labour, according to a 2020 survey. See Page 18.

3 The number of quick and easy ways to get your new hire interested in your work-related health and safety. See Page 12.

7 The Royal Bank of Canada says that there are seven things our country can do to turn it into a global leader in agriculture innovation and technology, while also reducing our ag greenhouse gas emissions. See Page 26.

30 The required amount of metric tonnes of GHG emissions Canada needs to annually reduce by 2030. One way to eat at that number is to use more grain oils as vehicle fuel. See Page 14.

100 That’s the percentage of effort CAAR Scholarship Award winner Alice Hehli said she will be able to put into her school work now, no longer having to worry about finances. See Page 36.

449.8 This is the molecular weight of Lambda-cyhalothrin, a compound that was used as the main ingredient in highly effective brands of insecticide. Banned, but not banned in Canada, its loss affects our crops as well as our feed imports. See Page 8.

Top 3 ways to engage employees in workplace health and safety

Make sure your employees understand the importance of health and safety with these tips.

The RBC transformative seven

With Canada having to reduce its GHG emissions, the ag industry needs more innovative technologies. So how do we do that?

Food not feed

What we know about the strange “ban” on Lambda-cyhalothrin insecticide.

Canadian ag labour resolution may have a flaw

The interim report developed for the National Workforce Strategic Framework for Agriculture and Food & Beverage Manufacturing is a thing of beauty. But something integral to its success is missing.

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Top 3 ways to engage employees in workplace health and safety

Make sure your employees understand the importance of health and safety with these tips.

By Haley Bilokraly

Congratulations! They put you in charge of making sure new employees and interns have their health and safety training. Remember when you were first trained? How was that?

We’ve all been there. Sitting in a boardroom for eight hours, listening to endless health and safety rules, and counting down the minutes left in your day, just to leave the room feeling like your time has been wasted.

Is this the best way to approach health and safety training?

Health and safety are extremely vital topics within the agriculture industry, but it does not mean the learning process has to be boring. In fact, to ensure employees are absorbing the essential information provided during training, it should be the opposite of boring—it should be an engaging experience with useful takeaways.

Here are the top three tips for making your next health and safety training engaging and productive:

  1. Make the Information Personal After reading countless booklets on health and safety, it’s easy for you to become desensitized to the topic. To combat this issue, make training personal by telling real stories and including relevant up-to-date statistics. This will help remind employees about the serious reality of health and safety in the workplace.

    The Telling Story Project and Ag Injury News are two online resources dedicated to sharing agriculture-related safety incidents. These campaigns are free to use, and can easily be integrated into your next training session.

  2. Be Interactive

    Regardless of how important a training session is, the material will not be retained if an employee feels as though their time is being wasted. You can make the session worthwhile for employees by using interactive methods of communication.

    Abandoning the meeting room is a great opportunity to make training interactive. Instead of sitting at a desk speaking about hypothetical hazards in the workplace, walk around and show new employees which areas or equipment hold a higher risk of injury.

    Another way to be interactive is to turn learning into a game. Who doesn’t love friendly competition? There are plenty of free online tools, such as Kahoot, to quickly create trivia games using your training material. You can even supply small prizes to the winner as a further incentive.

  3. Focus on Frequency, Not Duration

    When staring at an extensive list of health and safety topics to cover, it is tempting to “get it over with” in one long day. However, this approach will only overload employees with excessive information and communicate that health and safety is a chore rather than a crucial conversation.

    Instead, break up training into continual, short, and frequent sessions. Not only will this be beneficial for keeping the attention of your employees during each session, but it will also ensure that safety is consistently top of mind.

    Remember, just because your health and safety training was bland and uninteresting, doesn’t mean you have to teach others the same way.

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  • Food not feed What we know about the strange “ban” on Lambda-cyhalothrin insecticide. By Andrew Joseph, Editor When is a ban not a ban? When it’s a Canadian decision regarding Lambda-cyhalothrin insecticide. It’s another case...
  • CAAR News No Concerns with New Pesticides & Ag Plastic in Québec Changes No Concerns with New Pesticides The Market Access Committee has released information about new pesticides in corn and soy that will be launched f...
  • The Resiliency of Canadian Ag Production It has been three long years since I last attended an indoor farm show. Yesterday, I travelled to Brandon, Manitoba for the opening day of 2023 Manitoba Ag Days. It has been three long years since I last attended ...
  • Meet your 2022-23 CAAR Board of Directors Get to know Board members: Wes Arnfinson, Eric Gregory, Martin Kiefer, Darrel Knight, Stan Loewen, Taylor Olsen, Stu Rasmussen, Scott Russell, Craig Senchuk, and Stewart Whillans. The Board of Directors will cont...

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