The Rural Voice, 1982-09, Page 8PLETCH
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PG. 8 THE RURAL VOICE/SEPTEMBER 1982
new focus and drive. Timbrell asked for a
meeting with Barrie a couple of days after
his appointment and followed that up
with a more detailed briefing a few weeks
later.
Whether because of the dialogue with
Barrie or Timbrell's own awareness of the
serious situation of the beef industry, the
agriculture minister dusted off a six-year--
old beef protection program which is
scheduled to come before the Legislature
this month (September). The $70 -million
program is designed to give bankruptcy
protection to beef farmers. The minis-
terial string -pulling is a Timbrell trade-
mark.
"Timbrell is a smart man and he
adjusts pretty quickly," Barrie says
cautiously, "and he's been open for
consultation, but so far the results haven't
been dramatic."
Quite simply, Barrie insists that more
definitive and positive action must be
taken to help the farmer and especially to
help the beef producer, or "my concern is
that we are going to lose what was a fairly
substantial beef industry" in the pro-
vince, not to mention a crush of farmers
who just can't manage under the money
crunch.
More than many people, perhaps,
Timbrell can understand the problems.
Although an urban gentleman from the
northern suburbs of the province's capi-
tal, he grew up -- until 10 years old -- on a
farm just north of the Kingston hospital
where he was born November 13, 1946.
The Timbrells, Walter and Beryl, lived
near Sydenham. Although Walter tried to
make a go of it as a mixed farmer -- a little
bit of everything, Timbrell remembers
with a grin -- the part-time farmer and
full-time house painter couldn't really get
things going the way he wanted to. Walter
moved the family a few times in search of
the right spread before moving to
Toronto in 1956. Unfortunately, the
family's farmland yielded more rocks
than crops.
In the city Dennis found what he had
been looking for -- recognition. He
pushed through public schools in King-
ston artd Scarborough, attended teachers'
college and York University, was gradu-
ated, and then taught at Don Mills high
from 1967 to 1970. It was during the 1969
municipal election that Timbrell revealed
himself and shocked more than the
defeated candidate.
"I ran for council because I got upset
about the problems in the community and
the fact they weren't being addressed," he
recalls. "But I think I was as surprised as
the incumbent when I beat him."
Two years later he surprised Tory
leaders with a win provincially in the Don
Milts riding. This was perhaps a victory
deserved by the man who was a youthful
supporter of John Diefenbaker and the
president of the Young Conservatives in
Scarborough. In 1973 he received the
usual grooming for bright young states-
man. He was parliamentary assistant in
the Ministry of Colleges and Universities
and then minister -without -portfolio (a
training ground) responsible for the youth
secretariat. He hit the big time a year later
with the energy ministry.
Some at Queen's Park have speculated
that the agriculture ministry may, in fact,
be another stepping stone to the Premier's
office. Timbrell discounts such specula-
tion marginally only, with, "1 suppose the
media is given to rumor and had to
speculate in regards to the future."
Then he adds as a necessary after-
thought, "But I asked to be posted as
Minister of Agriculture because I wanted
a new and completely different oppor-
tunity and different challenge. 1 also think
it is an important challenge."
Many Ontario farmers would agree.
They've been confronted with the dire
tradition of surviving from year to year in
a market that gets worse instead of better,
and the more money made means the less
there is to spend.
Timbrell says he has solutions. While
the stresses that the tripartite agreement
among the two levels of government and
the farm community may ease the farm
bankruptcy problem with a money pool,
there are other solutions he offers.
"In a general way our policies have
been supportive of farmers." the minister
maintains cautiously, "but lately market-
ing has been given more prominence and
we've also established a section in the
ministry to forecast the changes in the
agricultural prices."
He wants stability in agriculture (who
doesn't) and he is also looking toward
promoting the export of goods from
Ontario and controlling the imported
products.
Resolving the mandate is another
matter. Timbrell will have quite a chore
righting the wrongs of the past years. He
isn't accustomed to rejection or failure,
although he says. "I'm not so immodest
that I think I'm unique, but I have had
different and productive experiences --
more than most politicians."
As Barrie insists, "Timbrell is facing a
situation that is dangerous for him
politically, because he inherited a bad
farm economy. And he's got a year to
shape up or many more farmers will be
facing financial ruin."
This is not a threat, but it is a reality for
farming in general and for Timbrell's
political future in particular.