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The Rural Voice, 1982-03, Page 22KEITH ROULSTON Farmers can (earn from the union movement The century had just begun when workers across North America decided something must be done to improve their lot in life. Since the beginning of the industrial revolution one of the least considered elements in manufacturing had been the human factor. Skills were no longer ,important when machines could do so much so anyone could be replaced with another hungry man, woman or even child from the poverty-stricken areas of the city. Additionally, some shrewd businessmen were becoming almost as powerful as the government by amassing huge conglom- erates. Individually, the workers could do nothing to increase their safety on the job, their working hours or their p v. Unions were born. The unions formed early in this century were purely a defensive measure. They were sorely needed but they were a reaction to a particular need. The problem is that though the need has changed, the unions haven't. Today we hear the leaders of auto unions, whose members make $20 an hour, still using the same rhetoric of the organizers of those miserable workers early in the century. Unions still are a negative force. They think mostly of monetary considerations or job security with now and then concern expressed over safety in the workplace. If they had changed, if they had become more a positive force. unions could be doing things like organizing their own day-care centres for workers in large factories, they could be looking at true industrial democracy with more worker manage- ment, even worker ownership. Many union leaders are afraid to touch such issues. preferring the "comfortable" old way of confrontation. Why talk about this in a farm column? Because there is something farmers can learn from the union movement. Like unions, marketing boards are a reaction to a need, a need to give farmers some bargaining power, a need to stop the constant decline in the number of people able to earn a living from the farm. But the danger is that marketing boards can become a long term negative force like the unions if the leadership is not ready to see the boards evolve, to see them move from a purely economic union to a more PO. 20 THE RURAL VOICE/MARCH 1982 positive force in agriculture and the economy. Country Canada recently broadcast a program on agriculture in Israel. It was tremendously enlightening. Israel as a country has existed barely 30 years. Much of that time has been spent at war. The Israelis took over a land that was mostly desert. Nearly all the water must come through irrigations from a single source, the Sea of Gallilee. The population is one-eighth of Canada's but the land area is miniscule by comparison. Yet Israel is self sufficient in foorl halancing what imports it must make with an equal value of exports. By comparison, Canada, with all its resources, is only ten per cent better. Marketing boards in Israel are active in aggressive foreign market development. Few of the marketing boards in Canada are concerned with anything but getting their proper share of the national pie. Marketing boards have shown little interest in the problems of young farmers getting into the business. Some, like the Milk Marketing Board. have shown little concern for their partners in the industry. the small processors like cheese factories which have been driven into the hands of fewer and fewer large companies because of quota problems. Marketing_ boards are good, probably essential tools in keeping farmers farm- ing. But as farmers in more and more sectors take a look at this alternative, let's also make sure they are as good in the long -run as the short. Keith Roulston who grew up on a farm near Lucknow is a playwright and administrator of the Blyth Centre for the Arts. He's a former publisher of Rural Voice. Why Call It "Waste" When It's Worth $80 An Acre? The past few .ummers have proven you can grow even high energy crops like corn with no chemical fertilizer at all. Chemicals that can cost You at least -80 an acre. Livestock produces all the fertilizer You need. manurigation system is a labour saying way to fertilize without compacting Your fields. Find out more about MAN URIGATION, write or call .. R R. ), \Talton Ontario NOK I/O (519) 887-9378 Irnganun and liquid uastr uu LijUun systems