Loading...
The Rural Voice, 2001-05, Page 53are being urged to participate in "gate to plate" marketing but with the power of large retailing chains to demand payment for "shelf space" in supermarkets, "the odds are stacked against producers who want to get products to the retail level." Faced with the power of the retailers, processors are also getting bigger to play on an even field, leaving farmers locked into lower prices. Calder said the issue "interests me a lot". He noted that many farmers are turning to contracting with large processors in order to buy a piece of the market but he wondered if a farmer could pay the cost of a large barn over a five or six year contract period. Meanwhile smaller producers are having to operate on the open market and try to find a market share. "Their days could be numbered," he said. The provincial government came under fire for high requirements for setting up co-operatives. Ralph Dietrich said the government's proposed "red tape" bill needs some serious looking at. Following the Federation's "Taking Back Your Livelihood" conference in March, a group of people had been meeting to try to find ideas that could mean more food processing in Bruce County. "Some of the ideas we came up with have limitations that can kill it before we get off the ground," he said of the expense of setting up a co- op. Another speaker pointed out a co- op can be required to come up with $200,000 to register with the government before it can even start business, far more than shareholder companies. Both Helen Johns, MPP for Huron -Bruce and Bill Murdoch, MPP for Bruce -Grey asked for more information on the situation so they can look at the problems. On a related topic, the Federation's brief asked governments to make available economic resources to assist local leadership in the establishment of regionally based production and processing clusters that can help stabilize rural communities in the county and enable primary producers to move News farther up the processing chain. On the environmental side, the Federation called on governments to require everyone applying nutrients, including golf courses, to track application and uptake of nutrients to reduce impact on the environment. Enforcement of Nutrient Management bylaws and legislation will require training and monitoring costs the province needs to support, the brief said. On the federal side, the brief said it "is imperative that federal and provincial governments continue to work towards securing long-term funding for the Environmental Farm Plan. We urge the government to offer further incentives to farmers who are implementing environmental improvements on their farm." There were several calls at the meeting for quick passage of the Ontario Agricultural Operations Act with Murdoch saying he hoped the act would be presented in the spring session of the legislature from where it would go to the committee for study and likely consultation with farm groups. The Federation's brief argued that any capital improvements necessary for farmers to meet the requirements of the legislation will be more of benefit to society as a whole, not to the farmer. As such it should be supported either through capital grants, perhaps through the province's Healthy Futures initiative, or by creating a 50 per cent or higher capital cost allowance and/or an investment tax credit program. Both the Federation and the Bruce County Wheat Producers called for the coverage under the Market Revenue Insurance program to be increased to 100 per cent from 85 per cent. The Federation pointed out that because of good yields in 1999, the Market Revenue payout for 1999 covered only 60 per cent of one director's corn crop and 73 per cent of his soybean crop. U.S. farmers meanwhile can expect close to a 100 per cent payout. The brief also argued the federal government is twisting NISA deposits data to show there is no pressing need for more aid to grain and oilseed farmers. By using total deposits the figures are distorting the situation because some established farmers have accumulated large deposits but those who really need to make withdrawals because of the current crisis with low prices have long since withdrawn their money, the brief said.0 Study exposes myths about local health status Anyone who harboured illusions about the superior health of people living in rural areas would have them dashed by a study of health behaviours in Huron, Perth, Bruce and Grey Counties. The study, released by the Grey Bruce Huron Perth District Health Council and the health units in the four counties, shows that local residents generally are in worse shape physically than the general population of Ontario. For instance, among residents aged 20-64, 35 per cent of the population was overweight compared to 28 per cent across Ontario. Among males 12-19, only 64 per cent of people took part in physical activity 12 times or more a month, compared to 75 per cent in Ontario. Only 30 per cent of people were termed to be active compared to 39 per cent in Ontario. Among smokers in the four counties, 82 per cent started smoking at or before the age of 18 compared to 75 per cent elsewhere. Only 29 per cent of employees reported working in a completely smoke-free workplace, compared to 43 per cent across the province. More local people drank and drove after drinking •than elsewhere. Among males under 20, 62 per cent of males reported having five or more drinks on one occasion compared to 45 per cent across the province. Among young adults the ratio was 57-49 and among male drinkers it was 56-49.0 MAY 2001 49