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Ontario Association of Food Banks Honours Dairy Farmers of Ontario and Gay Lea Foods With Paul Mistele Memorial Award

GUELPH, Ontario -- The Ontario Association of Food Banks (OAFB) is pleased to announce Dairy Farmers of Ontario and Gay Lea Foods Co-operative Limited (Gay Lea Foods) as the recipients of the 2018 Paul Mistele Memorial Award. Last year, in recognition of Canada150, Dairy Farmers of Ontario donated an incredible $150,000 over five years, and Gay Lea Foods committed to providing at-cost products for five years in support of Ontario’s food bank network.
 
Named for the late farm leader who founded Ontario Pork’s Donate-A-Hog program in 1998, the Paul Mistele Memorial Award recognizes agricultural partners who have shown a significant and enduring commitment to ending hunger in Ontario. The award was presented to Dairy Farmers of Ontario and Gay Lea Foods on November 1st, 2018 at Farm & Food Care Ontario’s annual Harvest Gala.
 
“On behalf of the provincial food bank network, we would like to thank Dairy Farmers of Ontario and Gay Lea Foods for their incredible generosity and partnership,” says Carolyn Stewart, Executive Director of the OAFB. “We are honoured to present both of these organizations with the Paul Mistele Memorial Award in recognition of their ongoing commitment to assisting families in need and local communities across the province.”
 
In addition to the Canada150 gift, individual Ontario dairy farmers collectively donate, with the support of the Ontario Dairy Council and Ontario Milk Transport Association, almost one million litres of milk to the Ontario food bank network annually. Gay Lea Foods is also a longstanding supporter of Ontario’s annual milk donation program and a proud sponsor of the OAFB’s capacity building program, which provides food banks in Ontario with funding to grow their capacity to accept, store and distribute milk and fresh food.
 
“Dairy farmers across Ontario produce some of the highest quality milk in the world. I believe it is important to ensure everyone in Ontario has access to high-quality Canadian milk. Ontario Dairy farmers recognize how fortunate we are to be able to give back to our communities, with the support of the Ontario Dairy Council and Ontario Milk Transport Association. It’s our pleasure and honour to increase our commitment to the OAFB, and work on this initiative with Gay Lea Foods,” says Dairy Farmers of Ontario Chair, Ralph Dietrich. “By working together, I’m reminded of our core Canadian values and ongoing commitment to support our local community and families, achieving more than we ever could alone.”
 
“Gay Lea Foods is proud of this collaboration with Dairy Farmers of Ontario and the Ontario Association of Food Banks, which allows us to provide more nutritious Ontario milk and dairy products to those living with hunger in our province than any one of us could have done alone,” says Gay Lea Foods Chair, Rob Goodwill, who accepted the award on behalf of the co-operative. “We’re pleased to be recognized alongside DFO for an initiative that exemplifies our co-operative values while supporting the very communities where our farmer members, employees and their families live, work and play.”
 
Past recipients of the Paul Mistele Memorial Award include the Ontario Dairy Council, Dairy Farmers of Ontario, and Ontario Milk Transport Association (2009); Nature Fresh Farms in Leamington (2010); Turkey Farmers of Ontario (2011); Whittamore’s Farm (2012); Ontario Pork, Zoetis, Shur-Gain, Elanco, Mable Honor Farm – The Fraser Family (2013), Egg Farmers of Ontario (2014), Beef Farmers of Ontario (2015), Chicken Farmers of Ontario (2016), and Stephen Thomas of Elanco (2017).
 
The 11th Ontario Harvest Gala, attended by 225 farmers and agricultural industry supporters, is organized annually by Farm & Food Care Ontario. Farm & Food Care Ontario develops and supports programs to communicate with consumers, thus helping to earn confidence and trust in food and farming.
 
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US Soy: Pig growth is impaired by soybean meal displacement in the diet

Video: US Soy: Pig growth is impaired by soybean meal displacement in the diet

Eric van Heugten, PhD, professor and swine extension specialist at North Carolina State University, recently spoke at the Iowa Swine Day Pre-Conference Symposium, titled Soybean Meal 360°: Expanding our horizons through discoveries and field-proven feeding strategies for improving pork production. The event was sponsored by Iowa State University and U.S. Soy.

Soybean meal offers pig producers a high-value proposition. It’s a high-quality protein source, providing essential and non-essential amino acids to the pig that are highly digestible and palatable. Studies now show that soybean meal provides higher net energy than current National Research Council (NRC) requirements. Plus, soybean meal offers health benefits such as isoflavones and antioxidants as well as benefits with respiratory diseases such as porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (PRRS).

One of several ingredients that compete with the inclusion of soybean meal in pig diets is dried distillers grains with solubles (DDGS).

“With DDGS, we typically see more variable responses because of the quality differences depending on which plant it comes from,” said Dr. van Heugten. “At very high levels, we often see a reduction in performance especially with feed intake which can have negative consequences on pig performance, especially in the summer months when feed intake is already low and gaining weight is at a premium to get them to market.”

Over the last few decades, the industry has also seen the increased inclusion of crystalline amino acids in pig diets.

“We started with lysine at about 3 lbs. per ton in the diet, and then we added methionine and threonine to go to 6 to 8 lbs. per ton,” he said. “Now we have tryptophan, isoleucine and valine and can go to 12 to 15 lbs. per ton. All of these, when price competitive, are formulated into the diet and are displacing soybean meal which also removes the potential health benefits that soybean meal provides.”