Business Beat » by Glynis Fediuk
What’s new in Kootenay business
An aid for local meat producers
Plans to construct a mobile abattoir unit in the Boundary region have finally come to fruition. The Grand Forks and Boundary Regional Agricultural Society have secured approximately $420,000 in funds for the project, and more than half of that money will be donated by Western Economic Diversification Canada. Other funds for the project will come from the Southern Interior Development Initiative Trust (SIDIT), Community Futures Boundary, the Phoenix Foundation of Boundary Communities and the Meat Transition Assistance Program (MTAP).
Members of the Grand Forks and Boundary Regional Agricultural Society have been working on the mobile abattoir project for the past five years and Roly Russell, who is the society’s president, is pleased to see it move ahead.
“It’s been a long haul,” said Russell. “We have been waiting on this final funding announcement from Western Economic Diversification Canada and it is the final amount that we need. And we have been waiting all this time to get approval from various government regulatory bodies, and now we have it, so we will be moving forward.”
Getting regulatory approval for the mobile abattoir has been a challenge for the society, partly because the abattoir will be a multi-species unit. According to Russell, most units either deal with poultry or red meat, but this mobile abattoir will have the capacity to process both.
The change in regulations that went into place several years ago has made it more difficult for small- to medium-scale meat producers to sell their products to grocery stores and restaurants in the province. However, Russell said that the new mobile abattoir will help a lot of regional meat producers to get back into business.
“(Meat producers) have been slowly dwindling because it is so hard to access those markets—so hopefully, this project will open those markets back up for producers,” said Russell.
He expects to see the mobile abattoir in operation by fall of 2012. Initially, it will operate within the Boundary region but Russell said that the Grand Forks and Boundary Regional Agricultural Society’s goal is to see the unit in use as much as possible. Its members may look into having the unit serve other regions in the Kootenays, as well.
“Ideally, we would see that it would be operative here in Boundary for some time and then it would move to another location—potentially, somewhere in the West Kootenay or more into the Okanagan,” said Russell. “We have initiated conversations but we would love to hear from other locations that would potentially have the capacity to utilize the unit for a window of time.”
Hemp Car, the Kestrel EV, has Kootenay connection
A subsidiary of Hydro Quebec is developing the Kestrel's powertrain. And here's the Kootenay connnection; Toxco Inc., in Trail is one of the world's few recyclers of lithium-ion batteries and the company is involved in designing charging stations for the Kestrel EV electric vehicle.
"If we use different materials and technologies, and if we go electric, we can do this for a lot less money, and we can do it in Canada," Nathan Armstrong, Motive Industries, president, recently told BIV Magazine.
Motive Industries projects that annual sales of electric vehicles could reach 160,000 in Canada at some point in the future. The company has produced a prototype vehicle and is currently working at finding more investors to fund the start-up.
Resort news
The company found the Golden facility to be an ideal fit, adding to their already successful roster of popular resorts that includes Fernie Alpine Resort and Kimberley Alpine Resort. Given the Kootenay tourism industry's significant success, it's no doubt that all of these resorts have a bright future to look forward to.
For more information, visit them online at www.skircr.com.
The Kootenay communities live and breathe creativity, ingenuity, and talent. From the colourful summer markets of Invermere to the tailored boutiques in Nelson, it’s the people behind the scenes that make business in the Kootenays something to be proud of.
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