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The Rural Voice, 1979-12, Page 21Rural News in Brief Barrie new OFA president Ralph Barrie 51, has been acclaimed president of the 23,000 member Ontario Federation of Agriculture at the OFA convention on this week in Toronto. Mr. Barrie replaces Peter Hannam, who announ- ced his resignation last week. Ralph Barrie was serving his third term as the first vice president of the OFA. He is a dairy and beef farmer near Perth, Ontario in Lanark County. After being acclaimed to the presidency, Mr. Barrie said, "This will be the most challenging year of my life, following in the footsteps of Peter Hannam." Mr. Barrie was very involved in the Balderson Cheese Factory in Balderson. He was president of the factory for four years during the mid -1960's during which time the factory underwent a major rebuilding program. Mr.Barrie has been an OFA director for over six years. He served as second vice-president for two years during which period he was also on the Canadian Federation of Agriculture board of Direc- tors. In announcing his resignation prior to the convention39-year old Peter Hannam, a Guelph grain farmer, said he was stepping down to "encourage new talent" in the organization, the largest general farm organization in the province. Mr. Hannam took over as OFA president in 1976 from long-time president Gordon Hill of Varna. Crop Insurance Commission defrauded Kenneth Beverley Wright, 33, of R.R.2, Seaforth, was convicted in provincial court recently of attempting to defraud the Crop Insurance Commission of Ontario of $4,162.88 by making a fraudulent claim to the commission for his 1978 white bean crop. This is the first time a case of attempted fraud against the Crop Insurance Commission has come to trial in the 13 years of the commission's history. The accused was charged with selling 38,700 pounds of his own white beans to the Ontario Bean Grower's Co-operative in Seaforth under the name of Gordon Dale, R.R.4, Clinton. The crown charged when Mr. Wright filed his crop loss report on his white bean yield in 1978 with the crop commission, he didn't notify the commission of the sale of these beans. The crown said Mr. Wright should have claimed crop insurance for only 7,106 pounds of white beans, instead of for the 45.806 pounds which were the subject of his claim. Mr. Wright told the court he had put the beans in Mr. Dale's name in payment for custom work Gordon Dale had done on his farm in the spring and that the matter slipped his mind when filling out the yield loss report in November, 1978. Judge Carter said, "I cannot accept the accused's evidence that 38,000 pounds of beans that he had harvested and put in Gordon Dale's name. . . . had never crossed his mind." In finding the accused guilty he said, "1 am satisfied the accused had both the intent to defraud and acted upon that intent by signing the yield loss form." The judge said he didn't see any problem in farmers paying another farmer with produce, "as long as the proper government authorities" are notified of the transaction. He said the Crop Insurance Commission was the proper authority in this case. Walter Bain, area manager in the Stratford Office of the Crop Insurance Commission, said in an interview following the trial, that the case "will certainly set a precedent for the commission." He said there were other cases in the province that the commission was still investigating, and some of those might also come to trial. He said, "We still have some right in this immediate area that we're looking at." The area covered by Mr. Bain's office includes Huron, Bruce, Perth, Waterloo and part of Oxford and Middlesex counties. Mr. Bain said, "99.9 per cent of farmers are honest and it's unfair to those who are trying to do the right thing to have this (the attempted fraud) happen." The area manager said the Crop Insurance Commission now insures ap- porximately 38 different crops grown in Ontario. Mr. Wright will be sentenced on Dec. 11. His defence lawyer, Robert Rogerson of Stratford, said following the trial that an appeal is "under consideraton." Farm severances causes problems Provincial Agriculture Minister Lorne Henderson is encouraging severances on the best agricultural land and is creating concern among Those who want to save the farmlands, Huron -Middlesex M.P.P. Jack Riddell recently told the legislature. Henderson has recently been quoted as saying that too many rural communities are outlawing severances that would allow a retired farmer to have a second home onthe farm while his children take over the operation. "These statements condoning re- sidential severances contradict the govern- ment's own policy statement," Riddell said. Housing Minister Clauda Bennett, who has ultimate authority over severances through the Planning Act said he under- stands what Henderson "has been saying in his leniency toward severances." The government has tried to assess severance applications based on whether there is an appropriate use of the land. Henderson's remarks follow the government's line of thinking, he said. Bennett added that a few years ago, the government was cnticized tor being too restrictive in allowing farmers to have severances on their property. He then said that some municipalities have not ex- ercised "the greatest degree of good judgment" on severance matters. Henderson said he had been quoting from the foodland guide on the issue of severances and the opposition had never, object to the guide's wording. THE RURAL VOICE/DECEMBER 1979 PG. 19