Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes...

43
DELIVERED BY SCIC Saskatchewan Crop Insurance Corporation Guide to Understanding Crop Insurance

Transcript of Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes...

Page 1: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

DELIVERED BY SCICSaskatchewan Crop Insurance Corporation

Guide to Understanding Crop Insurance

Page 2: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

DeadlinesDeadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured and coverage levels. Report any land you have added to or deleted from your farming operation. Customers who want insurance for this year must make arrangements for payment of any outstanding balances by March 31.

Note: This deadline also applies to the Bee Mortality Insurance Program.

Under the Bee Mortality Insurance Program, this is the deadline to notify SCIC of loss in the spring. Coverage terminates as of this date.

Deadline to seed camelina in the brown soil zone. Deadline to seed all classes of chickpeas.

Seeding deadline for both risk zones under the Grain Corn Production Insurance Program. For additional seeding dates, check out the Seeding Date Tool at www.scic.ca.

Under the Contract Price Option, this is the deadline to provide production contract information to SCIC.

Deadline to seed soybeans.

31MARCH

30MAY

15MAY

31MAY

21MAY

5JUNE

2

Page 3: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Deadline to seed hemp grain. Full yield-loss coverage becomes effective on winter wheat and fall rye that will be grazed and/or cut for feed. Deadline for planting potatoes (processing and table varieties). Final day to finalize claims on over-winter extensions.

Full yield-loss coverage begins today on established spring and fall-seeded crops.

Deadline for planting potatoes (seed varieties).

Deadline to submit Seeded Acreage Reports on all crops. Deadline to submit Unseeded Acreage claims. Deadline to report stored grain. Deadline to submit Hive Reporting form. Deadline to submit Stored Honey Report. Deadline to endorse overwintering insurance for the Bee Mortality Insurance Program.

Crop Insurance will not accept yield-loss liability for spring crops seeded after this date. Deadline to submit Establishment Benefit claims. Deadline to submit a gopher claim on crops that fail to establish due to gopher damage. Under the Forage Establishment Benefit Option, this is the deadline to seed forage acres.

Deadline to seed greenfeed crops insured as forage. Establishment and gopher damage claims on greenfeed must be submitted by this date.

10JUNE

21JUNE

15JUNE

25JUNE

20JUNE

30JUNE

For additional seeding dates, check out the Seeding Date Tool at www.scic.ca.

3

Page 4: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Deadline to seed fall rye and winter wheat and be eligible for winterkill insurance. Deadline to file Forage Declarations. Deadline to register forage yield-loss claims or request an extension of insurance on unharvested forage acres. Forage claims submitted between October 1 and November 15 may have indemnities reduced by 25 per cent up to $1,000. Claims will not be accepted after November 15.

Minimum summerfallow coverage requirements for the crop year must be met by this date and maintained for the rest of the year (includes acres that are too wet to seed) in order to be eligible for summerfallow for next year. For green manure crops in the brown soil zones, minimum summerfallow coverage requirements must be met and maintained by this date.

Under the Organic Reseeding Benefit, this is the deadline to reseed.

For green manure crops in the black and gray soil zones, minimum summerfallow coverage requirements must be met and maintained by this date.

Deadline to select winterkill coverage for fall rye and winter wheat.

Deadline to harvest potatoes (all varieties).

Deadline to report seeded greenfeed acres.

5JULY

11JULY

15JULY

25JULY

1OCTOBER

25AUGUST

30SEPTEMBER

4

Page 5: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Deadline to file Production Declarations. Deadline to submit yield-loss claims on harvested cereal, oilseed, pulse, honey and potato crops, and request any extensions of insurance on unharvested acres (excluding potatoes). Deadline to submit a Fall-Seeded Acreage Report for producers with winterkill coverage on fall-seeded acres. Claims submitted between November 16 and December 31 may have indemnities reduced by 25 per cent to a maximum of $1,000. Claims will not be accepted after December 31.

Deadline to pay current year’s premiums without interest being charged.

Annual crop post-harvest claims submitted between November 16 and December 31 may have indemnities reduced by 25 per cent up to a maximum of $1,000. Claims will not be accepted after December 31.

ContentsFrequently Asked Questions 6

Your Crop Insurance Program 8

Customer Responsibilities 10

Your Coverage 14

Coverage Levels and Premiums 19

Prices 22

Coverage Features 24

Diversification Option 28

Pedigreed Seed Option 29

Crop Averaging Program 30

The Claims Process 31

Preventing Program Abuse 33

Insurable Area Maps 34

31DECEMBER

31OCTOBER

15NOVEMBER

5

Page 6: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

1. How do discount/surcharges work? How will myclaim affect my experience discount?

Premium discount and surcharges acknowledge risk differences between customers, reducing premiums for customers without a history of repeated claims.

Experience discount and surcharges are calculated using an individual’s history of losses and a comparison of individual loss history to area losses. For more information, see page 20.

2. How do quality factors work?

When producers select their Crop Insurance coverage, they not only have a determined production guarantee, but they also have a designated grade for the crop they are insuring. To determine the amount of compensation for quality loss, SCIC uses a formula that makes up the difference between the value of the harvested production and the value of the designated grade for the insured crop. The difference is known as a quality factor and this factor is applied to the harvested production to calculate the final indemnity. For more information, see page 15.

3. What does USA stand for? What is eligiblefor USA?

USA stands for Unseeded Acreage Feature. All producers have this protection for land that is too wet to seed due to excessive spring moisture. USA can be stand alone coverage or be part of producer’s multi-peril coverage. Eligible acres are the acres you normally seed that remain unseeded by June 20 due to excessive spring moisture. For more information, see page 26.

4. Am I eligible for the Establishment Benefit?How does coverage work for fall seeded crops?

Crops that fail to adequately establish or suffer significant damage due to insurable causes before June 20 are eligible for an establishment benefit.

Fall crops seeded by September 30 and insured for yield-loss by March 31 of the following year will be covered for spring-related establishment losses that are not winterkill related. For more information, see page 25.

5. How is my coverage calculated?

Your coverage is based on what you have grown over the long term and the coverage option you selected. For more information, see page 14.

6

Page 7: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

6. What do I and my son/daughter have to do to getthem started with Crop Insurance?

Young farmers taking over family farms can use the experience obtained from the family farm for their own contract. For more information, see Intergenerational Transfer on page 16.

7. How are prices set?

The base prices for grain crops are established on the basis of January price forecasts provided by the Market Analysis Group of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada. These prices represent the expected farm gate market price for the coming crop year. As a producer, you have the option of selecting from a variety of price options, including: Base and Low Price Options; In-Season Price Option; and Contract Price Option. For more information, see page 22.

8. What happens to my coverage if I don’t growa crop for one or two years?

If you do not grow a crop for one or more years, your previously established individual experience will be compared to the area to establish your current yields. For more information, see Individual Coverage on page 16.

9. What is a farm practice survey and what doesit entail?

A Farm Practice survey examines the farming practices of selected customers, monitoring their farming methods on crops. If you are selected for a farm practice survey, you will be sent a Cropping Plan form to complete by March 31. An adjuster will complete an inspection to verify the cropping plan is being followed. For more details, see page 37.

10. Does Crop Insurance share my information?

SCIC uses your information for the delivery of its programs and will disclose information only according to the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FOIP). For more information, see page 9.

11. What if I decide to not harvest my crop but baleit instead?

If you wish to put your insured acres to a use other than harvesting, you must notify SCIC prior to putting those acres to an alternate use. See page 35 for more information.

7

Page 8: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Your Crop Insurance Program

Under the Canadian Agricultural Partnership, producers will continue to have access to a robust suite of Business Risk Management (BRM) programs to help manage risks beyond their control, which provides a foundation for the agriculture industry to grow.

Crop Insurance provides you with insurance for crop losses due to insurable causes of loss, whether a result of loss in quantity or quality of the insured crop. Your insurance covers you in case the crop fails to establish or excess moisture prevents you from being able to seed. You select your coverage level (50 to 80 per cent) which, combined with your past growing experience with the selected crop, determines your production guarantee.

SCIC covers you for losses resulting from uncontrollable natural hazards including drought, excessive rain, hail, flood, frost, snow, wind, lightning, hurricane, tornado, accidental fire, damage caused by wildlife, insects, gophers and/or plant disease.

SCIC realizes that one insurance package does not suit everyone. For this reason there are many options to choose from, allowing you to tailor your insurance to your farm.

ELIGIBILITY

Insurance is available to any producer who meets SCIC eligibility requirements. Crop Insurance regulations require contract holders to demonstrate legal, operational and financial independence from all other producers in order to be eligible.

All new applicants are required to fill out an application to demonstrate eligibility. Legal independence is defined as legal access to the land (owned or leased) on which insured crops will be grown. Operational

8

Page 9: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

independence means you are responsible for farming decisions and have access to machinery and crop storage. Financial independence means you bear the financial risk of any crop loss. SCIC may review existing contracts to ensure they meet eligibility requirements. Where concerns are identified, the contract holder will be advised of the requirements in order to maintain their contract.

To apply for a contract, visit your local customer service office or call 1.888.935.0000 to meet with us before March 31 of the insurable year. You must apply for a contract of insurance in person. Non-residents of Canada applying for a contract must have verification of approval or compliance from the Saskatchewan Farm Land Security Board.

PROTECTING YOUR PERSONAL INFORMATION

SCIC requires producer information to deliver effective and efficient programs and customer service. SCIC will

use your information for the delivery of the program and will disclose information according to the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FOIP). However, as a government entity, SCIC is obligated to share statistical data with Statistics Canada upon request. SCIC is committed to ensuring your personal information is secure at all times and has implemented privacy procedures to ensure compliance with current legislation.

Customers of SCIC are entitled to access their personal information according to FOIP. If customers are concerned about their privacy, they can e-mail [email protected] or phone 1.888.935.000 and ask to speak to the Privacy and Security Manager. Complete information regarding our privacy and security policy is available at www.scic.ca.

9

Page 10: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Customer Responsibilities

NEW CONTRACTS / APPLICATIONS

New customers are required to fill out an application in person at their customer service office as early as possible but in all cases before March 31. Visit https://www.scic.ca/files/ci/pubs/ci_application_checklist.pdf for a list of all

documentation required on your application. If a farming operation is being transferred to another operator, please visit page 16 to learn more about intergenerational transfer.

CONFIRMATION OF INSURANCE

As a contract holder, you were sent a Confirmation of Insurance listing the insurance selections you made the previous year. Your contract will remain the same for the current crop year unless you make changes. The deadline to make changes for all Crop Insurance programs is March 31.

Premiums are charged on acres seeded to crops selected for insurance. There is no charge for endorsing crops you do not grow.

CANCELLATION

If you wish to cancel your Crop Insurance contract, SCIC requires notification in writing by March 31.

The cancellation notification must contain the signatures of all parties named on the contract.

REINSTATEMENT

In the event you cancel your contract, you can go seven

years without paying any premium before losing your discount. Contracts with four years of no premium earned will automatically cancel.

LAND

As part of the SCIC contract, producers must list all land they own and operate. All land changes should be made early, as soon as you are aware of the change, to ensure it is covered under your insurance. All land changes (additions or deletions) are subject to approval. Acre verifications may be necessary to determine eligibility. Land can be added to your contract after the March 31 deadline but the crops on those acres must have been endorsed by March 31, to be insurable.

Note: These acres may not be eligible for insurance if damage occurs before you notify SCIC or complete your Seeded Acreage Report.

Land rental or sale arrangement documents may be requested to verify land changes.

10

Page 11: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

SEEDING DEADLINES

To be insurable, crops need to be seeded in reasonable time so they reach maturity before the first fall frost date in your area.

Seeding Date Tool

This tool provides the final date full liability may be accepted on insurable crops. The map provides dates based on townships and rural municipalities, using first fall frost dates. June 20 remains the final seeding deadline for all crops. Crops seeded between the SCIC recommended date and June 20 will be compared to other crops in the area if a seeding date related loss occurs, like frost, or may impact a request for an extension of insurance where all others have completed harvest. This area comparison may reduce liability.

Note: Some crops have absolute final seeding dates that are earlier than June 20. Please refer to terms and conditions for chickpeas, hemp, soybeans and grain

corn.

SEEDED ACREAGE

You must submit a Seeded Acreage Report declaring your seeded acres no later than June 25. This report is necessary to calculate your level of insurance and process your claims.

You do not have any Crop Insurance coverage until you report your acres on your Seeded Acreage Report. If you suffer a crop loss and have not reported your acres by June 25, your claim may be denied.

Seeded Acreage Report forms will be mailed to you in May. You can phone, fax, mail or drop off your seeded acreage information at any customer service office, or CropConnect customers may complete personalized reports online.

If you fail to submit or are late, you may be assessed a penalty of $60. If necessary, an adjuster will visit your farm to gather the required additional information at an additional charge.

Average Maturity in Days Final Date Liability is Accepted

Greenfeed June 30

Camelina (brown soil zone) May 21

Chickpeas (all classes) May 21

Grain Corn May 30

Soybeans June 5

Hemp Grain June 10

Fall Crops September 30

11

Page 12: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

12

Page 13: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

STORED GRAIN

You are required to report all stored grain either on the separate Stored Grain Declaration form enclosed with your Seeded Acreage Report package or filed online through CropConnect. Providing your stored grain information will result in more accurate claim payments. Your completed Stored Grain Declaration must be submitted to SCIC by June 25 with your Seeded Acreage Report.

If your stored grain amounts change after June 25, contact your customer service office to update your reported information. Updates must be made before harvest begins. Additional forms are available at your customer service office.

Note: Stored grain not reported will be considered new production in the event of a yield-loss claim. If your production is mixed with that of any other producer, either in sales or storage, yield-loss claims will be averaged among individual producers. All stored grain, whether the crop is insured in the current year or not, should be reported. Your grain is not covered for losses once it is placed in storage.

STATEMENT OF INSURANCE

Once you have reported your seeded acres, you will be sent a Statement of Insurance listing your premium, insured crops, total number of acres, production guarantee, premium discount or surcharge and the provincial, federal and producer share of the total premium.

Examine your statement carefully as it is your responsibility to report any errors or omissions immediately upon receipt. Your premium is due upon receipt of your Statement of Insurance. Interest will start to accrue October 1. However, if your premium is paid before October 31, there will be no interest charged.

Outstanding balances will have interest charged monthly. Claims will be applied to any outstanding

balances. Amounts not paid by October 31 will continue to accrue interest at the beginning of each month until the account is paid in full. The interest rate is RBC prime plus two per cent, adjusted quarterly.

Any contract with premiums not paid or not having approved payment arrangements made prior to purchasing subsequent insurance will not be eligible for continued coverage and will be cancelled.

Your account can be paid online, at your financial institution or at a customer service office by March 31.

Cheques are to be mailed and payable to:

Saskatchewan Crop Insurance Corporation PO Box 3000 Melville, SK S0A 2P0

DECLARING YOUR YIELDS

In the fall, you will be mailed a Production Declaration form. The deadline to submit your declaration is November 15, and declaration information must be provided before you can register any yield-loss claims. You can phone, mail, fax or drop off the information, and CropConnect customers may complete personalized declarations online.

The Production Declaration serves two important functions for your Crop Insurance contract:

• Production information is used to calculate yourannual yield. If you do not complete a ProductionDeclaration, your annual yield will be set at zero,reducing your future coverage by 10 per cent for eachyear you fail to report.

• Production Declaration information must be submittedbefore you can register a post-harvest claim andshould be filed as soon as you complete harvest. Thismakes the claim process more efficient, allows us tobetter allocate our adjusting resources, and improvesthe customer service you receive.

SCIC verifies a percentage of all declarations.

13

Page 14: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Your Coverage

PRODUCTION GUARANTEE AND QUALITY COVERAGE

An SCIC contract guarantees a yield based on what you have grown over the long term and the coverage option you selected. This guarantee appears on your Statement of Insurance in kilograms and bushels for most crops, and kilograms and pounds for those crops typically marketed in pounds.

Coverage for yield-loss starts on June 21 for all established crops. Crop losses after June 20 but prior to harvest are assessed through a pre-harvest inspection. Crops are covered for losses in the field; there is no coverage for grain once it is put into storage.

Pre-harvest inspections are completed when a crop is put to an alternate use, other than harvest. Failing to

report a loss before it is put to an alternate use may void your insurance. Notify SCIC if you are considering putting your acres to an alternate use.

Losses on harvested crops are based on production and quality for most crops. Yield-loss coverage ends November 15.

If you have not harvested all of your acres, you must contact SCIC to request an extension of insurance by November 15 if you want over-winter losses covered.

It is important to store and sell your insured grain separately from all other producers’ grain and all other crops, whether insured or not. If ownership of the grain cannot be clearly identified, production is averaged among the involved producers.

Yield-Loss Payment

Yield-loss payments are based on the shortfall between the production guarantee and the total net harvested production, adjusted for quality, for all acres of the insured crop.

$Production guarantee

Net harvested production

Yield-loss payment

14

Page 15: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Yield-loss payments are based on the shortfall between the production guarantee and the total net harvested production for all acres of the insured crop. Any appraisals applied to acres put to any use other than harvesting will be included in the final yield-loss calculation.

Yield-loss payments are determined once the total yield-loss, including quality factors, have been finalized. The production loss is paid at the insured price, according to the price option you select in the spring. The insured price is not based on, nor does it guarantee, market price.

Quality is also factored in when calculating yield-loss. A designated grade has been established for each crop based on a historical average grade. When the grade of

your harvested production is lower than the designated grade due to an insurable peril, that production is reduced by a quality factor and is used in calculating your claim.

Quality factors are determined by comparing the price of the harvested grade to the price of the designated grade. The prices used to calculate quality factors are the post-harvest selling prices established through a survey of grain companies and processors from across Saskatchewan. Once these market prices are available, quality factors are listed at www.scic.ca by the end of December of each year.

These factors are then applied to your claim.

Harvest Quality

Quality is factored in when calculating yield-loss.

Yield Quality Both

15

Page 16: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

INDIVIDUAL COVERAGE

Your individual average yield is recalculated every time you grow a crop using 90 per cent of your previous individual average yield and 10 per cent of your most recent annual yield. There is a one-year lag in this calculation. For example, yields from two years prior are included in this year’s calculation.

If you do not grow a crop for one or more years, your previously established individual experience will be compared to the area to establish your current yields.

If you are a new or existing customer and insuring a crop for the first time, you can provide your own records to establish your individual yield. You also have the option of using the Management Experience Transfer (MET) index to determine your yields and choose the best option. New customers with no

records will establish their beginning yields at the long-term average yield for that area.

TRANSFER OF EARNED CREDIT

If you are involved with a contract that involves one or more partners/family members, you can use production records and experience credit obtained from the original farm for your own contract. Yield history, along with the seeding intensity and experience discount or surcharge, may be transferred directly to the new farm.

INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSFER

Young farmers taking over family farms can use the experience obtained from the family farm for their own contract. The transfer of earned credits would be implemented using partial credits with a three-year progression to the full credits of the original contract.

Individual Coverage

Your individual average yield is recalculated using 90 per cent of your previous individual average yield and 10 per cent of your most recent annual yield.Previous

individual average yield

90%

Most recent reported

individual yield

10%

Individual Average

Yield

16

Page 17: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

MANAGEMENT EXPERIENCE TRANSFER

The Management Experience Transfer (MET) index is used to establish a starting yield for a crop where no individual yield previously exists and more accurately reflects the individual customer’s farm management abilities.

Your MET index is greater than 1.0 if your yields are better than the area average; it is less than 1.0 if your yields are lower than the area average. New customers with no previous yield history start with a MET index of 1.0. Once your yields are established, they are updated using your individual annual production information.

YIELD TRENDING

Yield trending recognizes the continued advancement in the agriculture sector. Yield trending allows for

long-term yields to be increased accounting for improvements in production techniques, varieties and technological advances. Since the program’s inception, yield trending has grown to include canola, identity-preserved canola, fall rye, winter wheat, hard red spring wheat, hard white spring wheat, durum, barley and oats.

The program’s expansion has a number of positive impacts: it increases yield coverage offered to producers where yields are increasing over time and positively impacts long-term yields for producers who have not previously insured these crops.

For a complete list of crops impacted by yield trending, visit www.scic.ca.

Yield Trending

Long-term yields are increased to account for improved production techniques, varieties and technological advances. The feature includes canola, identity-preserved canola, fall rye, winter wheat, hard red spring wheat, hard white spring wheat, durum, barley and oats.

17

Page 18: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

YIELD CUSHIONING

Yield cushioning provides greater protection and coverage to Saskatchewan producers by limiting the impact on yields in poor crop years. Yield cushioning includes forage crops.

Yield cushioning reduces the impact of consecutive poor yields by limiting or “cushioning” the decrease in a producer’s yield coverage. Yield cushioning occurs

by crop and land use. When two low yields occur in consecutive years, the amount the yield level drops will be cushioned in the second year. For this year, yields from two years ago will be cushioned to 70 per cent of the customer’s Long-Term Individual Yield.

Some conditions will apply. Customers with uninsured causes of loss, or who have a MET less than 0.85 and a surcharge of 15 per cent or more, are not eligible for yield cushioning.

Reduced yield

Year 1 Year 2

Long-term individual yield

Reduced yield Cushioned coverage

70%Cushioned to

Yield Cushioning

When two low yields occur in consecutive years, the amount the yield level drops will be cushioned in the second year.

18

Page 19: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Coverage Levels and Premiums

For most crops, customers may select coverage at 50, 60, 70 or 80 per cent of their average yield. The premium for this coverage is cost-shared at 60 per cent by governments, 40 per cent by producers.

Coverage is only available up to 70 per cent for the following crops: alfalfa seed, caraway, chickpeas, coriander, dry beans, khorasan wheat, potatoes, timothy hay, honey, soybeans, hemp, camelina, grain corn and wild rice.

PREMIUMS AND COST SHARING

SCIC sets premium rates to recover losses (claims paid) over the long term and to maintain a sustainable program by paying off program debt and building a reasonable reserve. The methodology used by SCIC to calculate premium rates and yields must be certified by an actuary and approved by Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada every five years.

Premium dollars are not used to pay for program administration. The full cost of program administration is cost-shared by the federal and provincial governments. Premium rates are updated annually on a crop and risk-zone basis. Risk-zone rates are based on the claim payment history from 1973 to the present, specific to each crop and risk zone. There is a one-year lag in the information used. The premium rate itself is only one factor in the dollar-per-acre premium to the customer. The dollar-per-acre premium is calculated using a combination of the premium rate, the risk zone long-term average yield, the selected coverage level (50, 60, 70, 80 per cent), the insured price and the customer’s experience discount or surcharge.

Premium is only charged on the actual acres seeded and selected to insure. You may endorse all crops and if you do not grow them, premium is not charged. Premium for the Unseeded Acreage Feature will show up as a separate charge on your statement.

PREMIUM DISCOUNTS AND SURCHARGES

Premium discounts and surcharges acknowledge risk differences between customers, reducing premiums for customers without a history of repeated claims.

Experience discounts and surcharges are calculated using an individual’s history of losses and a comparison of individual loss history to area losses. When an increase in the number or size of losses is experienced, the discount, if present, is reduced or the surcharge is increased.

The following crops and programs are excluded from all experience discount and surcharge calculations: camelina, dryland dry beans, honey, hemp, vegetables, wild rice, timothy hay, the Forage Diversification Option, Forage Rainfall Insurance Program, Corn Rainfall Insurance Program, Corn Heat Unit Program, Establishment Benefit, grain corn, Bee Mortality Insurance Program, Fruit Tree Insurance Program and Gopher Damage claims.

19

Page 20: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Premium Discounts and Surcharges

How your individual claim history affects discount/surcharge:

The number of credits or debits earned will be added to the previous balance. Partial credits are rounded down. Accumulated credits or debits must achieve a complete step before the discount or surcharge is adjusted.

The maximum number of both debits and credits a customer can accumulate is 16. Customers with 16 credits cannot lose their 50 per cent discount based on one or two years of claims. There is a one-year lag in the calculation. New contract holders will remain at zero following their first year of coverage due to this lag.

Indemnity Discount/Surcharge

No claim 1.0 credit earned

Less than or equal to 20% of total net annual premium. (Cumulative premium paid by the producer and governments)

0.5 credit earned

Greater than 20% but less than or equal to 100% of total net annual premium

No change

Greater than 100% but less than or equal to 200% of total net annual premium

1.0 debit earned

Greater than 200% of total net annual premium

2.0 debits earned

Comparison to Area Discount/Surcharge

Lowest risk customers – have no claim in a risk area where 70% of customers have received indemnity

2.0 credits earned

Low risk customers – have no claim in a risk area where 60% of customers have received indemnity

1.0 credit earned

Average risk customer No change

High risk customers – among the next highest 10% of indemnity paid relative to premium among claimants

0.5 debit earned

Highest risk customers – among the highest 10% of indemnity paid relative to premium among claimants

1.0 debit earned

Accumulated Credits 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 to 16

Discount % 0 5 6 8 11 15 20 26 33 40 50

Accumulated Debits 0 -1 -2 -3 -4 -5 -6 -7 -8 -9 -10 to -16

Surcharge % 0 0 0 8 11 15 20 26 33 40 50

20

Page 21: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

INSURABLE CROPS

SCIC insures crop varieties suitable for local growing conditions throughout the province. Insurance is also available on a larger number of specialty crops. When selecting crops, distinguish between all wheat and canola varieties. For a complete list and the terms and conditions, visit www.scic.ca or a customer service office.

INSURED CAUSES OF LOSS

SCIC covers you for losses resulting from uncontrollable natural hazards (see complete list on page 8). Losses that are controllable or could have been prevented with sound farm management practices are not covered. If an insured cause of loss cannot be identified, coverage may be reduced or denied; therefore, it is important to notify SCIC immediately when damage occurs.

UNINSURED CAUSES OF LOSS

The uninsured cause of loss policy ensures that producers following industry recommended farm management practices are not at a financial disadvantage to those who do not.

Generally, SCIC does not advise producers on what are acceptable farm management practices. For some specialty crops, there are specific terms and conditions that apply. Producers can gain more information about their business through available sources of agronomic information or industry experts.

Any “controllable” loss is considered an uninsured cause of loss. Examples include:

• Poor quality seed• Improper seed placement or seeding date• Uncontrolled, excessive weed populations• Chemical damage• Insect or disease damage where it is possible and

practical to prevent or control the damage

Many different factors can reduce yields. Risk can be decreased by actively monitoring crops and taking any necessary measures including a combination of cropping choices and rotations, timely seeding, stubble and fertility management, field scouting and monitoring, and timely use of crop protection products.

You are expected to implement appropriate measures if there is a clear economic advantage to doing so and assuming normal growing conditions for the rest of the crop year. Failure to do so may result in the claim being denied in full or reduced. Contact your customer service office before destroying any crop or putting it to an alternate use. Organic uninsured causes of loss are available on the website, the Organic Guide or by contacting your customer service office.

When a crop is not adequately monitored or control measures are applied too late to be effective, uninsured causes of loss are applied.

21

Page 22: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Prices

The base prices for grains crops are established on the basis of January price forecasts provided by the Market Analysis Group of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada. These prices represent the expected farm gate market price for most crops for the coming crop year.

Producers have the option of selecting the Low Price Option for each crop, which is set at 85 per cent of the base price for the crop. Also available is the In-Season Price Option. A select group of crops are also eligible for the Contract Price Option. Pedigreed, forage and organic crops have their own price structure to reflect the value of these crops.

Alternative sources are used to determine prices for some smaller acreage crops.

Visit www.scic.ca to access the online calculator

through CropConnect to determine premium.

IN-SEASON PRICE OPTION

The dollar guarantee for In-Season Price will be recalculated based upon the final price. Producers should be aware that the dollar guarantee may fluctuate up or down, depending on final pricing.

The premium is based on the historical relationship between the actual base price in the spring and the final price. This allows the premium costs to be finalized in March regardless of the direction the prices move for the final price. However, premiums will be higher than for the base price or Low Price Option, to mitigate the risk of price uncertainty.

In-Season Price Option

Current season crop price averages are used and premiums are set up front.

50%+ –

+/– 50 per cent of base price

Premium certainty

Higher or lower $ coverage

Six-month average actual price survey

SEPT – FEB

$/22

Page 23: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

The final price for a crop can increase or decrease by a maximum of 50 per cent in relation to the base price for the crop.

The Contract Price Option or Crop Averaging Program is not available if In-Season Price Option is selected. Either option must be selected by March 31.

The In-Season Price Option sets the final price in February following the year of selection. An interim payment will be made when the claim is processed, based upon a percentage of the spring base price, and the final payment will be issued once the In-Season Price is finalized.

CONTRACT PRICE OPTION

The Contract Price Option allows a customer to insure a crop at the price at which it is contracted.

To access a complete list of crops available for insurance under this option, visit www.scic.ca or your

customer service office.

The insured price is an average of your contract price and SCIC’s base price based on the amount of crop contracted and your production guarantee. This creates a “blended” price for which you will be insured. The blended price will be used to calculate the coverage and premium for all acres of the insured crop, including those that are not contracted. Your insured price does not guarantee market price.

Note: Most total production, partial production or deferred delivery contracts are eligible. For deferred delivery contracts, the delivery period must be August of the crop year or later. The producer must be financially independent from the buyer for the contract to be eligible. SCIC requires a contract to determine insurable price.

Eligible contracts must specify the contract price or a price premium (e.g. dollars per bushel or dollars per tonne) and the quantity of grain or number of acres contracted. A maximum allowable contract price will be set by SCIC for each crop by March 1 of the

current crop year, based on contract prices offered by Saskatchewan’s primary contractors.

You must provide SCIC with a copy of the contract by May 31 of the current crop year. SCIC will use that information to calculate the insurable price, coverage and premium for the crop. If you do not provide complete contract details, your insured price will default to the base price for that crop. For losses due to quality, SCIC applies standard quality factors. Quality is not determined by criteria stated in your production contract nor on the final price of the crop. If the use of SCIC standard quality factors places you in a claim position, your claim will be paid using the calculated blended price.

23

Page 24: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Coverage Features

ESTABLISHMENT BENEFIT FOR SPRING-SEEDED CROPS

To be eligible for an establishment claim there must be an area that is five acres or greater together in one piece (not scattered) per legal land description. The non-established acres must exceed the lesser of 10 acres or 10 per cent of the total acres seeded before an establishment claim is paid. Both acre conditions are to be met. Crops that fail to adequately establish or suffer significant damage due to insurable causes before June 20 are eligible for an establishment benefit, even if reported as yield-loss after June 20.

If you believe it is necessary to reseed or work down a portion of your insured crop prior to June 20, contact SCIC immediately. An adjuster must inspect those acres prior to reseeding or destroying the acres.

Insurance may be purchased on the reseeded acres even if the crop was not previously selected. If the reseeded crop was previously selected, those acres will continue to be insured. To be eligible for insurance, reseeded crops must abide by SCIC’s seeding deadlines.

SPRING ESTABLISHMENT BENEFIT FOR FALL-SEEDED CROPS

Crops seeded by September 30 and insured for yield-loss by March 31 of the following year, will be covered for spring-related establishment losses that are not winterkill related. Yield-loss coverage will be denied if fall-seeded acres are grazed in the fall, or in the spring, prior to June 10. Contact your customer service office if grazing or cutting your fall-seeded acres for feed after June 10.

UNSEEDED ACREAGE

The Unseeded Acreage (USA) feature is included with multi-peril insurance coverage and all producers have this protection for land that is too wet to seed due to excessive spring moisture.

Acres subject to flooding, such as sloughs in the field that are traditionally wet or remain underwater in a year of normal moisture, are not eligible. However, if a producer was able to work, mow or burn the areas that were wet, essentially prepare the seed bed in the fall, then this land would be considered eligible for USA coverage. Acres that are deemed as too wet to seed are excluded from any future USA claim calculations until they are in a condition to seed.

Any land that remains underwater due to previous years’ moisture is not eligible as it is not considered in adequate seeding condition.

SCIC strives to inspect all USA claims in a timely manner. Where USA claim volumes are high, producers may have their claims paid without an inspection.

There are four coverage levels: $50, $70, $85 and $100 per acre. Customers can choose the lower or higher coverage to correspond to their individual needs. Unseeded acreage premium will be charged on acres a producer normally seeds, whether or not the land is seeded or insured for yield-loss. This feature is not optional. Discount and surcharges are applied to Unseeded Acreage premiums. Producers’ Unseeded Acreage claims will be included in the calculation of the experience discount/surcharge.

24

Page 25: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Unseeded Acreage (USA) Claim Eligibility and Payable Acres

The USA feature is designed to compensate producers who are unable to seed due to excess spring moisture. Acres subject to flooding, such as sloughs in the field, that are traditionally wet or remain underwater in a year of normal moisture, are not eligible. All USA claim acres are subject to inspection.

NORMAL MOISTURE YEAR

EXCESS MOISTURE YEAR

Slough, ineligible wet acres

Eligible wet acresEligible wet acres

Slough, ineligible wet acres

YOU ARE ELIGIBLE FOR USA COVERAGE

YES YES YES YESNO NO NO NO

CROP INSURANCE

BY MARCH 31 BY MARCH 31 BY JUNE 20

YOU ARE ELIGIBLE FOR USA CLAIM*

*All USA claim acres are subject to inspection.

Do you have an active Crop Insurance

contract?

Is the land listed on your contract and was the seed bed prepared for seeding?

Were the acres reported on your Seeded Acreage

Report as too wet to seed by June 20?

Are the acres traditionally wet or remain

under water in a year of normal moisture?

25

Page 26: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

This feature does not provide payment on every reported wet acre. Eligible acres are the acres you normally seed that remain unseeded by June 20 due to excessive spring moisture. A five per cent deductible is applied to quarters with acres too wet to seed.

The deadline to submit an unseeded acreage claim is June 25. Claims received from June 26 to July 2 will be subject to a 25 per cent reduction in payment to a maximum of $1,000. Claims received after July 2 may be denied.

Seeding Intensity

Acres normally seeded are determined using your total annual crop acres multiplied by your historic seeding intensity. The seeding intensity is the seeded acres compared to the total cultivated acres and calculated as a percentage. Your claim seeding intensity is the average of the previous four years.

The four-year seeding intensity used to calculate your Unseeded Acreage claim will be calculated as follows:

For eligibility purposes, SCIC calculates a whole farm claim (using the seeding intensity) separate from a summerfallow claim, as all acres of the previous year’s summerfallow are expected to be seeded in the current year. The Unseeded Acreage claim is paid on the greater of these two calculations.

Your Unseeded Acreage claim may be reduced or denied if your loss is significantly greater than other producers in your immediate area due to management practices. (For example, failing to seed when it is possible.)

Acres reported as too wet to seed and included in an Unseeded Acreage claim are not eligible for any subsequent coverage including greenfeed and wildlife.

Unseeded Acreage and Establishment Benefit

If conditions are too wet to reseed, a producer may be eligible for an Unseeded Acreage benefit on the acres where an Establishment Benefit was previously paid. These acres do not have to be destroyed to be eligible for the Unseeded Acreage Feature. If a field, or area in a field, is eligible for an establishment claim and excess moisture prevents another crop from being seeded, the Unseeded Acreage claim may be paid as well. There will be no further coverage on the affected acres. If the field, or area in the field, does not qualify for an Establishment Benefit – due to having sufficient plants or less than five acres in an adjoining block – the crop will have full yield-loss coverage.

GOPHER DAMAGE FEATURE

Crop Insurance includes gopher damage as an insured cause of loss under both the Establishment Benefit and yield-loss components of the multi-peril program. All crops for which SCIC offers establishment coverage qualify for the Gopher Damage feature.

During the establishment period, customers have two options for acres damaged by gophers:

1. Receive an establishment indemnity2. Gopher Damage feature

If a customer chooses to file an establishment claim, standard eligibility applies. Any subsequent crop seeded on those acres is eligible for further establishment and yield-loss coverage.

Year Acres

Seeded

Acres Too Wet To Seed

Summer- fallow

Total Acres

Annual Per Cent Seeded

Year 1 800 **200 0 1,000 100%

Year 2 850 **100 50 1,000 95%

Year 3 800 **0 200 1,000 80%

Year 4 860 0 140 1,000 86%

4 Year Avg 90%

26

Page 27: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Compensation is provided at $50 per acre for crop acres destroyed by gophers. Such acres are not eligible for further insurance within the current program year.

Damage occurring after June 20 may qualify

for compensation under the Wildlife Damage Compensation Program.

For more information, contact your customer service office or visit www.scic.ca.

OPTIONS

Winterkill

Winterkill coverage is a separate option for fall rye and winter wheat. Winterkill claims are subject to an eight per cent deductible per legal land description. Producers have until August 25 to select winterkill insurance for fall rye and winter wheat crops to be seeded by September 30. Premiums are charged in the year of establishment.

Winterkill coverage for winter wheat, seeded in the fall prior to the year of harvest, will be available in all risk zones regardless of the stubble type into which the crop is seeded. The stubble type determines if the acres are charged a low- or high-risk premium rate. Contact your local Crop Insurance office for further details regarding stubble requirements. Customers with winterkill coverage will be asked several risk assessment questions on the Fall-Seeded Acreage Report which will determine the risk category of the acres.

Yield-loss coverage can be selected in the spring of the harvest year. If you do not select winterkill coverage, fall crops to be insured for yield-loss are subject to a spring inspection to assess establishment.

Irrigation Coverage

Comprehensive coverage is available for crops grown on irrigated and dryland land uses. To reflect the higher production potential and reduced risk of irrigated crop

production, coverage is based on individual irrigated production records, and the premium rate is reduced to a percentage of the dryland rate. Producers contribute 40 per cent of the premium cost and governments contribute 60 per cent.

With the exception of the Enhanced Irrigation Option, production from all acres of an insured crop, both dryland and irrigated, is combined when calculating a claim for a crop.

Enhanced Irrigation

To recognize the unique risks associated with irrigated crop production, SCIC is continuing the Enhanced Irrigation Option. The program allows irrigated producers to further tailor their insurance by allowing a separate production guarantee for irrigated and dryland acres of the same crop. Coverage and claims on irrigated acres of a crop is calculated separately from a claim on the dryland acres of the same crop. This allows a customer to be protected against losses on one land use without being impacted by the production of the same crop on the other land use.

Under the terms of the Canadian Agricultural Partnership, this enhanced option requires the customer to pay 66.7 per cent of the premium. However, the provincial government contributes the premium required to reduce the customer premium share to 40 per cent, as in other program options.

If you opted for the Enhanced Irrigation Option last year, it will be listed on your Confirmation of Insurance in your endorsement package. If you wish to discontinue this coverage, you must contact your local customer service office. Customers wishing to select this option for the first time must contact Saskatchewan Crop Insurance. Customers are required to harvest and store irrigated and dryland production separately in order to be eligible for separate dryland and irrigated coverage. Please contact your customer service office for customer specific details.

27

Page 28: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Diversification Option

The Diversification Option is available for crops and varieties and cropping practices, such as intercropping, that are not insurable under core multi-peril Crop Insurance. To be eligible for this option, you must also have insured acres of traditional grains, oilseeds or pulses in the multi-peril program. A maximum of 30 per cent of total acres insured under the mult-peril program can be included under the Diversification Option.

Coverage levels, premiums and any claims paid for the crop grown under the Diversification Option are equal to the average coverage, premium and claims paid for your insured multi-peril acres.

Diversified annual crops that fail to establish by June 20 due to insurable causes may be eligible for a Diversification Establishment Benefit. A minimum of 10 acres or 10 per cent of the total eligible acres seeded to the insurable diversified crop must have failed to establish to receive a benefit per acre.

If your diversified crop has failed to adequately establish or has suffered damage before June 20, contact your customer service office. Eligibility requirements for the Establishment Benefit will be determined by an SCIC adjuster.

Diversification Option

Includes 30 per cent of the grains program’s insured acres. Coverage levels, premiums and claims are equal to those of your multi-peril acres.

Diversification premium

Premium

Average premium

Eligible diversification acres

Premium

# of acres

Acres insured under grains program

Diversification acres

*Premium based on per acreaverage of other crops.

Up to

28

Page 29: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Pedigreed Seed Option

Customers selecting this option must be members of the Canadian Seed Growers’ Association. Recognizing the unique value and higher costs associated with pedigreed seed production, the Pedigreed Seed Option provides:

• A higher price option for insurable crops• A quality adjustment if the germination of the seed

produced is below certified seed standards due toinsurable causes of loss

If you believe the germination of your harvested production is below the certified standard, you must request a germination test when the adjuster completes the claim or supply a record of a germination test.

If you select the Pedigreed Seed Option, you must select the same coverage level for your commercial

crop. For example, if you choose 70 per cent coverage on your HRSW crop under the Pedigreed Seed Option, you must also select 70 per cent coverage for your commercial HRSW crop.

Individual coverage and yield-losses are calculated and updated separately for pedigreed and commercial crops. Pedigreed and commercial production must be kept separate.

If you harvested feed HRSW that failed the germination standards for Canada Certified #1, the quality factor would be calculated as the commercial factor divided by the price difference between pedigreed and commercial.

Pedigreed Seed Option

This option provides a higher price option for insurable crops and a quality adjustment. If you select the Pedigreed Seed Option, you must select the same coverage level for your commercial crop.

Commercial crop coverage level

Pedigreed seed coverage level

29

Page 30: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Crop Averaging Program

The Crop Averaging Program provides insurance coverage for a basket of crops grown by a producer. This allows producers to insure at a higher overall coverage level compared to insuring each crop separately but for the same premium cost.

Only select crops are insurable under this program. For a complete list, contact your customer service office or visit www.scic.ca. Irrigated acres are eligible

for this option.

COVERAGE

Customers in the Crop Averaging Program (CAP) can select and pay premium at the 50, 60, 70 and 80 per cent level in return for higher coverage at the base price. Customers select one coverage level, which is applied to all CAP crops. In some cases, producers would receive more than ten per cent additional coverage (cannot exceed 90 per cent), depending on their own crop mix. CAP allows producers to basket production on all their eligible crops in return for higher coverage. This option cannot be combined with the In-Season or Contract Price Option. This option cannot be selected with Enhanced Irrigation.

You must endorse all CAP eligible crops you intend to seed. To determine your additional coverage, please use the CAP coverage and premium “what if” calculator available at www.scic.ca or at your customer

service office. The CAP calculator will provide you with the coverage possibilities depending on the combination of crops and number of acres selected.

Changing your seeding plans or updating your individual coverage after March 31 may affect your coverage level. If your seeding plans change and you would like to know how it will impact your CAP coverage, contact your customer service office.

If you seed an eligible crop you did not endorse under the Crop Averaging Program by March 31, it will automatically be endorsed and included according to the information you provide on your Seeded Acreage Report. Crop Averaging Program coverage will be recalculated based on the insured acres as provided on your Seeded Acreage Report.

CLAIMS

A CAP claim is paid based on the total value of crops harvested compared to the dollar coverage on all crops. The dollar value is used to calculate the total production loss; CAP does not provide a guarantee of market price. You must declare all of your production before a claim can be filed. Your Statement of Indemnity will include your final claim calculation.

30

Page 31: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

The Claims Process

Contact SCIC as soon as an insured crop suffers significant damage.

ESTABLISHMENT BENEFIT CLAIMS

If your crop does not adequately establish or suffers significant damage due to insurable causes, you need to file an establishment claim by June 20. For more information about the Establishment Benefit, see page 25.

UNSEEDED ACREAGE CLAIMS

Land that is too wet to seed due to excessive spring moisture may qualify for an unseeded acreage claim. The deadline to submit this claim is June 25. To learn more about eligible acres, see page 26 or talk to your Crop Insurance office.

PRE-HARVEST APPRAISALS

If you wish to put your insured acres to a use other than harvesting, contact your customer service office before destroying or putting the acres to another use. To account for all production, an adjuster will inspect any acres put to an alternate use. The appraised value will be applied in the event of a claim.

POST-HARVEST CLAIMS

Contact your customer service office to register a claim on harvested crops immediately after completing harvest but no later than November 15. Your total harvested production information must be submitted before you can register any yield-loss claims. Producers are insured for both losses in quality and yield. Producers that project a quality loss should talk to their crop insurance office.

Claims may be denied if submitted more than 15 days after harvest is generally completed in your area. Claims will not be accepted after December 31. Late filed claims from November 16 to December 31 will have indemnities reduced by 25 per cent up to $1,000. Insurance does not cover losses to production while in storage.

SCIC will pay a limited number of claims based on production information supplied by customers and without a visit by an adjuster. SCIC uses established criteria to determine if you are eligible to receive your claim payment based on your declared yields. When registering a post-harvest claim, customer service staff will inform you if you are eligible.

31

Page 32: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

EXTENSIONS OF INSURANCE

For all crops except forage and potatoes, coverage expires November 15 of the year the crop was seeded. If you have unharvested acres as of November 15, you must contact SCIC and request an extension of insurance. Coverage may be extended in areas where harvesting is generally not completed. An application must be completed and approval given for each extension request. If you are granted an extension, you are insured for yield and quality losses occurring after November 15. The final adjustment will occur after harvest is complete but no later than June 10 of the following spring.

DEFERRAL OF INDEMNITY

Indemnity payments can be deferred up to one year following your claim inspection date. If you wish to defer your claim, you must tell your adjuster before the cheque is issued. Once a cheque is issued, it cannot be returned for deferral. This complies with the Canada Revenue Agency.

Indemnities deferred to January 1 of the following year will be mailed before the end of December. You have the choice of deferring the entire indemnity, which will require payment of the entire premium 15 days prior to the deferral date, or you can request to have the premium deducted from the indemnity and have the remaining balance deferred.

DIRECT DEPOSIT

SCIC can deposit your claim into your savings or chequing account through direct deposit. You will be notified when the deposit is made. Deferred claims will be deposited on the selected deferral date based on the turnaround time at your financial institution. Authorization for Direct Deposit forms are available www.scic.ca, from your adjuster or your customer

service office.

RECEIVING CLAIM PAYMENTS

SCIC can deposit your claim into your savings or chequing account through direct deposit.

If premium is owing, your indemnity will be applied to the amount owing with remaining funds, if applicable, paid out to you.

APPEALING YOUR CLAIM

An appeal process is in place to address claim disputes between SCIC and customers. This process ensures all customer concerns are addressed quickly, fairly and are fully investigated. For more information on the appeal process visit www.scic.ca.

32

Page 33: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Preventing Program Abuse

All customers pay the price for dishonest claims through higher premiums. SCIC’s Compliance unit assists in maintaining a fair program, ensuring every premium dollar collected goes to farmers who experience uncontrollable losses.

An audit is a formal examination of your farming records, land and grain storage facilities by an SCIC employee. Performed year-round, there are many reasons you might be selected for an audit.

• Random, computer-generated selection• High indemnity-to-premium ratio• Unusually high dockage on claims• Unusual or a history of repeated claims• Complaints from internal or external sources• Anonymous tip through Saskatchewan Crime Stoppers

Audits are also conducted to ensure the fairness and accuracy of employees’ work. During an audit, you may be asked to produce farming records and allow access to your farm for matters arising from the contract of insurance. As a condition of your contract of insurance, SCIC can access your operational information from grain companies or other individuals and organizations.

If false or misleading information is discovered, your contract could be terminated and any excess money returned to the Corporation. Insurance may be voided for the crop year in which the fraudulent action occurred and will remain void until the Corporation

approves reinstatement of the contract. Any premiums paid on voided contracts may not be returned and any unpaid premiums will remain owed.

If you suspect program abuse, a complaint can be filed at any customer service office or with Saskatchewan Crime Stoppers. Crime Stoppers guarantees complete anonymity; call 1.800.222.8477.

FARM PRACTICE SURVEYS

SCIC conducts farm practice surveys to examine the farming practices of selected customers, monitoring farming methods on traditional and non-traditional crops and verifying the use of recommended farming practices. You may be selected for a farm practice survey because of a history of repeated or unusual claims (high dockage claims, repeated uninsured causes of losses applied, etc.).

If you have been selected for a farm practice survey, you will be asked to provide crop input information (i.e. seeding rates and chemical applications), the grain or forage type, variety, seeding dates and seeding methods on a Cropping Plan form to be completed by March 31. The adjuster will review your efforts to prevent and control losses. If the form is not returned or if the farm inspection finds uninsured causes of loss, your potential claim for the year will be adjusted accordingly.

33

Page 34: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Meridian 3

Meridian 2 Meridian 1

Meridian 3 Meridian 2

27

1926

15

54

56

27 2625 24 23 22 21 20 19

18 1716 15 14 13 12

11 10 9 8 7 6

5 4 3 2 1 27 26 25 24 23 2221 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 3130

30 29 28 27 25 24 23 22 21 20 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 34 33 32 31 30

6564636261605958575655545352515049484746454443424140393837363534333231302928272625242322212019181716

141312111098765432

1

55

5352515049484746454443424140393837363534333231302928

2625242322212019181716151413121110987654321

Meridian 1

17

3

4 6

16

8

23

7

14

21

15

10 9

5

2

11

22

1

20

12

1819

13

394

588

51

488

17

111

561

486

49

520

555

496

622

433419

45

9 678 5

494

395

2

344

290

501

44

110

261

228

279

1

71

499

347

42

257259

40

73

498

426

464

230

276

438

335 334

456

333

493

226

168 165

11

331

409

497

231

166

79

939496

171

9597

77 76 63

99 98

786566

169

75 6768 6474 6970

33

18

37 35 3446 363839

10

92

229

61

154

463

12

91

466

138137

461

127

459

411

435

260

32

72

308

254

472

183

440

219

194

126

471

336

285

211

158

366

142

502

271

190

377

403

282

224 221

442

218

487

128

283

247255

157

185

345

312

400

184

315

164

222

101

250

309

429

352

430

248

314

431

31

376

213

273

243244

214

274275

245

277

341

367

189

246

437

284

141

337

381

109

318

139

351338

320 319

129

108106 104107

346

428

317

131 123

105

193

124

316

125130

436

100

136

223

135 133

457

343

427

103

161

458

160

256

410

287

401

467

280288

281

368

340 339

370

398

371

468

216

397

369

405

167

382

217

191

241

434

251

186

134

399

439

406

155156

151

232

286

379

303304 301305307

349

252

153

372373

187

292

181

152

350

220

380

470469

490

460

102

132

322

402

378

342

162

121122

321313

521

215

491

253

159163

310

404

225

±GrainsRiskZone

RM

Early Maturing (OEM) Varieties Only

Both Full(OFS) and Early (OEM) Varieties

Sunflower Insurable Zones

RM Boundary Source: Information Services Corporation, Sask.

Sunflower (OFS) - Oilseed Full SeasonSunflower (OEM) - Oilseed Early Maturing

SUNFLOWER INSURABLE ZONES

Grains Risk Zone

RM

Early Maturing (OEM) Varieties Only

Both Full (OFS) and Early (OEM) Varieties

Sunflower (OFS) – Oilseed Full SeasonSunflower (OEM) – Oilseed Early Maturing

34

Page 35: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Meridian 3

Meridian 2 Meridian 1

Meridian 3 Meridian 2

27

1926

15

54

56

27 2625 24 23 22 21 20 19

18 1716 15 14 13 12

11 10 9 8 7 6

5 4 3 2 1 27 26 25 24 23 2221 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 3130

30 29 28 27 25 24 23 22 21 20 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 34 33 32 31 30

6564636261605958575655545352515049484746454443424140393837363534333231302928272625242322212019181716

141312111098765432

1

55

5352515049484746454443424140393837363534333231302928

2625242322212019181716151413121110987654321

Meridian 1

17

3

4 6

16

8

23

7

14

21

15

10 9

5

2

11

22

1

20

12

1819

13

394

588

51

488

17

111

561

486

49

520

555

496

622

433419

45

9 678 5

494

395

2

344

290

501

44

110

261

228

279

1

71

499

347

42

257259

40

73

498

426

464

230

276

438

335 334

456

333

493

226

168 165

11

331

409

497

231

166

79

939496

171

9597

77 76 63

99 98

786566

169

75 6768 6474 6970

33

18

37 35 3446 363839

10

92

229

61

154

463

12

91

466

138137

461

127

459

411

435

260

32

72

308

254

472

183

440

219

194

126

471

336

285

211

158

366

142

502

271

190

377

403

282

224 221

442

218

487

128

283

247255

157

185

345

312

400

184

315

164

222

101

250

309

429

352

430

248

314

431

31

376

213

273

243244

214

274275

245

277

341

367

189

246

437

284

141

337

381

109

318

139

351338

320 319

129

108106 104107

346

428

317

131 123

105

193

124

316

125130

436

100

136

223

135 133

457

343

427

103

161

458

160

256

410

287

401

467

280288

281

368

340 339

370

398

371

468

216

397

369

405

167

382

217

191

241

434

251

186

134

399

439

406

155156

151

232

286

379

303304 301305307

349

252

153

372373

187

292

181

152

350

220

380

470469

490

460

102

132

322

402

378

342

162

121122

321313

521

215

491

253

159163

310

404

225

±GrainsRiskZone

RM

Coriander Zone

RM Boundary Source: Information Services Corporation, Sask.

Small Seed Coriander Insurable ZoneSMALL SEED CORIANDER INSURABLE ZONE

Grains Risk Zone

RM

Coriander Zone

35

Page 36: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Meridian 3

Meridian 2 Meridian 1

Meridian 3 Meridian 2

27

1926

15

54

56

27 2625 24 23 22 21 20 19

18 1716 15 14 13 12

11 10 9 8 7 6

5 4 3 2 1 27 26 25 24 23 2221 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 3130

30 29 28 27 25 24 23 22 21 20 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 34 33 32 31 30

6564636261605958575655545352515049484746454443424140393837363534333231302928272625242322212019181716

141312111098765432

1

55

5352515049484746454443424140393837363534333231302928

2625242322212019181716151413121110987654321

Meridian 1

17

3

4 6

16

8

23

7

14

21

15

10 9

5

2

11

22

1

20

12

1819

13

394

588

51

488

17

111

561

486

49

520

555

496

622

433419

45

9 678 5

494

395

2

344

290

501

44

110

261

228

279

1

71

499

347

42

257259

40

73

498

426

464

230

276

438

335 334

456

333

493

226

168 165

11

331

409

497

231

166

79

939496

171

9597

77 76 63

99 98

786566

169

75 6768 6474 6970

33

18

37 35 3446 363839

10

92

229

61

154

463

12

91

466

138137

461

127

459

411

435

260

32

72

308

254

472

183

440

219

194

126

471

336

285

211

158

366

142

502

271

190

377

403

282

224 221

442

218

487

128

283

247255

157

185

345

312

400

184

315

164

222

101

250

309

429

352

430

248

314

431

31

376

213

273

243244

214

274275

245

277

341

367

189

246

437

284

141

337

381

109

318

139

351338

320 319

129

108106 104107

346

428

317

131 123

105

193

124

316

125130

436

100

136

223

135 133

457

343

427

103

161

458

160

256

410

287

401

467

280288

281

368

340 339

370

398

371

468

216

397

369

405

167

382

217

191

241

434

251

186

134

399

439

406

155156

151

232

286

379

303304 301305307

349

252

153

372373

187

292

181

152

350

220

380

470469

490

460

102

132

322

402

378

342

162

121122

321313

521

215

491

253

159163

310

404

225

±

GrainsRiskZone

RM

Risk Zone 1

Risk Zone 2

Risk Zone 3

RM Boundary Source: Information Services Corporation, Sask.

For details on insurable chickpea zones,contact your local customer service office.

Chickpea Insurable ZonesCHICKPEA INSURABLE ZONES

For details on insurable chickpea zones, contact your local customer service office.

Grains Risk Zone

RM

Risk Zone 1

Risk Zone 2

Risk Zone 3

36

Page 37: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Meridian 3

Meridian 2 Meridian 1

Meridian 3 Meridian 2

27

1926

15

54

56

27 2625 24 23 22 21 20 19

18 1716 15 14 13 12

11 10 9 8 7 6

5 4 3 2 1 27 26 25 24 23 2221 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 3130

30 29 28 27 25 24 23 22 21 20 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 34 33 32 31 30

6564636261605958575655545352515049484746454443424140393837363534333231302928272625242322212019181716

141312111098765432

1

55

5352515049484746454443424140393837363534333231302928

2625242322212019181716151413121110987654321

Meridian 1

17

3

4 6

16

8

23

7

14

21

15

10 9

5

2

11

22

1

20

12

1819

13

394

588

51

488

17

111

561

486

49

520

555

496

622

433419

45

9 678 5

494

395

2

344

290

501

44

110

261

228

279

1

71

499

347

42

257259

40

73

498

426

464

230

276

438

335 334

456

333

493

226

168 165

11

331

409

497

231

166

79

939496

171

9597

77 76 63

99 98

786566

169

75 6768 6474 6970

33

18

37 35 3446 363839

10

92

229

61

154

463

12

91

466

138137

461

127

459

411

435

260

32

72

308

254

472

183

440

219

194

126

471

336

285

211

158

366

142

502

271

190

377

403

282

224 221

442

218

487

128

283

247255

157

185

345

312

400

184

315

164

222

101

250

309

429

352

430

248

314

431

31

376

213

273

243244

214

274275

245

277

341

367

189

246

437

284

141

337

381

109

318

139

351338

320 319

129

108106 104107

346

428

317

131 123

105

193

124

316

125130

436

100

136

223

135 133

457

343

427

103

161

458

160

256

410

287

401

467

280288

281

368

340 339

370

398

371

468

216

397

369

405

167

382

217

191

241

434

251

186

134

399

439

406

155156

151

232

286

379

303304 301305307

349

252

153

372373

187

292

181

152

350

220

380

470469

490

460

102

132

322

402

378

342

162

121122

321313

521

215

491

253

159163

310

404

225

±GrainsRiskZone

RM

DryBeanZone

Twp

RM Boundary Source: Information Services Corporation, Sask.

Dryland Dry Bean Insurable ZoneDRYLAND DRY BEAN INSURABLE ZONE

Grains Risk Zone

RM

Dry Bean Zone

Townships

37

Page 38: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Meridian 3

Meridian 2 Meridian 1

Meridian 3 Meridian 2

27

1926

15

54

56

27 2625 24 23 22 21 20 19

18 1716 15 14 13 12

11 10 9 8 7 6

5 4 3 2 1 27 26 25 24 23 2221 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 3130

30 29 28 27 25 24 23 22 21 20 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 34 33 32 31 30

6564636261605958575655545352515049484746454443424140393837363534333231302928272625242322212019181716

141312111098765432

1

55

5352515049484746454443424140393837363534333231302928

2625242322212019181716151413121110987654321

Meridian 1

17

3

4 6

16

8

23

7

14

21

15

10 9

5

2

11

22

1

20

12

1819

13

394

588

51

488

17

111

561

486

49

520

555

496

622

433419

45

9 678 5

494

395

2

344

290

501

44

110

261

228

279

1

71

499

347

42

257259

40

73

498

426

464

230

276

438

335 334

456

333

493

226

168 165

11

331

409

497

231

166

79

939496

171

9597

77 76 63

99 98

786566

169

75 6768 6474 6970

33

18

37 35 3446 363839

10

92

229

61

154

463

12

91

466

138137

461

127

459

411

435

260

32

72

308

254

472

183

440

219

194

126

471

336

285

211

158

366

142

502

271

190

377

403

282

224 221

442

218

487

128

283

247255

157

185

345

312

400

184

315

164

222

101

250

309

429

352

430

248

314

431

31

376

213

273

243244

214

274275

245

277

341

367

189

246

437

284

141

337

381

109

318

139

351338

320 319

129

108106 104107

346

428

317

131 123

105

193

124

316

125130

436

100

136

223

135 133

457

343

427

103

161

458

160

256

410

287

401

467

280288

281

368

340 339

370

398

371

468

216

397

369

405

167

382

217

191

241

434

251

186

134

399

439

406

155156

151

232

286

379

303304 301305307

349

252

153

372373

187

292

181

152

350

220

380

470469

490

460

102

132

322

402

378

342

162

121122

321313

521

215

491

253

159163

310

404

225

±GrainsRiskZone

RM

Irr Timothy Twps

Irrigated Timothy Hay Insurable Zone

RM Boundary Source: Information Services Corporation, Sask.

IRRIGATED TIMOTHY HAY INSURABLE ZONE

Grains Risk Zone

RM

Irrigated Timothy Townships

38

Page 39: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Meridian 3

Meridian 2 Meridian 1

Meridian 3 Meridian 2

27

1926

15

54

56

27 2625 24 23 22 21 20 19

18 1716 15 14 13 12

11 10 9 8 7 6

5 4 3 2 1 27 26 25 24 23 2221 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 3130

30 29 28 27 25 24 23 22 21 20 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 34 33 32 31 30

6564636261605958575655545352515049484746454443424140393837363534333231302928272625242322212019181716

141312111098765432

1

55

5352515049484746454443424140393837363534333231302928

2625242322212019181716151413121110987654321

Meridian 1

17

3

4 6

16

8

23

7

14

21

15

10 9

5

2

11

22

1

20

12

1819

13

394

588

51

488

17

111

561

486

49

520

555

496

622

433419

45

9 678 5

494

395

2

344

290

501

44

110

261

228

279

1

71

499

347

42

257259

40

73

498

426

464

230

276

438

335 334

456

333

493

226

168 165

11

331

409

497

231

166

79

939496

171

9597

77 76 63

99 98

786566

169

75 6768 6474 6970

33

18

37 35 3446 363839

10

92

229

61

154

463

12

91

466

138137

461

127

459

411

435

260

32

72

308

254

472

183

440

219

194

126

471

336

285

211

158

366

142

502

271

190

377

403

282

224 221

442

218

487

128

283

247255

157

185

345

312

400

184

315

164

222

101

250

309

429

352

430

248

314

431

31

376

213

273

243244

214

274275

245

277

341

367

189

246

437

284

141

337

381

109

318

139

351338

320 319

129

108106 104107

346

428

317

131 123

105

193

124

316

125130

436

100

136

223

135 133

457

343

427

103

161

458

160

256

410

287

401

467

280288

281

368

340 339

370

398

371

468

216

397

369

405

167

382

217

191

241

434

251

186

134

399

439

406

155156

151

232

286

379

303304 301305307

349

252

153

372373

187

292

181

152

350

220

380

470469

490

460

102

132

322

402

378

342

162

121122

321313

521

215

491

253

159163

310

404

225

±GrainsRiskZone

RM

Khorasan Zone

Twp

RM Boundary Source: Information Services Corporation, Sask.

Khorasan Wheat/Kamut ® Brand Grain Insurable ZoneKHORASAN WHEAT / KAMUT® BRAND GRAIN INSURABLE ZONE

Grains Risk Zone

RM

Khorasan Zone

Townships

39

Page 40: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

40

Page 41: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Customer Service Offices

Assiniboia Box 340 401 1st Ave. W. Assiniboia, SK S0H 0B0 1.888.935.0017

Davidson Box 339 103 Lincoln St. Davidson, SK S0G 1A0 1.888.935.0020

Estevan Box 1716 #5-419 Kensington Ave. Estevan, SK S4A 1C8 1.888.935.0002

Humboldt Geschaft Centre Box 660 1710 8th Ave. Humboldt, SK S0K 2A0 1.888.935.0026

Kindersley Unit 1120 608 12th Ave. E. Kindersley, SK S0L 1S2 1.888.935.0021

Leader Box 387 #5-111 1st Ave. W. Leader, SK S0N 1H0 1.888.935.0011

Moose Jaw 45 Thatcher Dr. E. Moose Jaw, SK S6J 1L8 1.888.935.0012

Moosomin Box 889 709 Carleton St. Moosomin, SK S0G 3N0 1.888.935.0005

North Battleford Kramer Place #100-1192 102nd St. North Battleford, SK S9A 1E9 1.888.935.0028

Preeceville Box 800 239 Hwy. Ave. E. Preeceville, SK S0A 3B0 1.888.935.0015

Prince Albert Box 3003 800 Central Ave. Prince Albert, SK S6V 6G1 1.888.935.0018

Raymore Box 178 113 Main St. Raymore, SK S0A 3J0 1.888.935.0016

Regina 515 Henderson Dr. Regina, SK S4N 5X1 1.888.935.0001

Rosetown Box 1000 124 2nd Ave W. Rosetown, SK S0L 2V0 1.888.935.0019

Saskatoon 3830 Thatcher Ave. Saskatoon, SK S7R 1A5 1.888.935.0024

Shaunavon Box 1210 55 3rd Ave. E. Shaunavon, SK S0N 2M0 1.888.935.0010

Swift Current E.I. Wood BuildingBox 5000#102-350 Cheadle St. W.Swift Current, SKS9H 4G31.888.935.0007

Tisdale Box 310 1105 99th St. Tisdale, SK S0E 1T0 1.888.935.0014

Turtleford Box 400 217A Main St. Turtleford, SK S0M 2Y0 1.888.935.0030

Weyburn Box 2003 #119-110 Souris Ave. N.E. Weyburn, SK S4H 2Z8 1.888.935.0003

Yorkton 38 5th Ave. N. Yorkton, SK S3N 0Y8 1.888.935.0013

Ce livret est aussi disponible en français.

41

Page 42: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

42

Page 43: Guide to Understanding Crop InsuranceDeadlines Deadline to apply, reinstate, cancel or make changes to your current year’s Crop Insurance contract, including all crops to be insured

Contact Information

Saskatchewan Crop Insurance Corporation Head Office 484 Prince William Drive Box 3000 Melville, SK S0A 2P0

Email: [email protected] Phone: 306.728.7200 Fax: 306.728.7202 Toll Free: 1.888.935.0000

Office Hours: Monday to Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Closed weekends and statutory holidays.