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The Rural Voice, 2001-12, Page 31 R. Y. Editor & Publisher: Keith Roulston editorial advisory committee: Bev Hill, farmer, Huron County Diane O'Shea, farmer, Middlesex Cty. George Penfold, associate professor, University of Guelph Gerald Poechman, farmer, Bruce Cty. contributing writers: Bonnie Gropp, Ralph Pearce, Bob Reid, Mervyn Erb, Sandra Orr, Janice Becker, Andrew Grindlay, Mark Nonkes, Larry Drew marketing & advertising sales manager: Gerry Fortune advertising representative: Merle Gunby production co-ordinator: Joan Caldwell advertising & editorial production: Dianne Josling printed & mailed by: Signal -Star Publishing, Goderich, Ontario subscriptions: $17.12 (12 issues) (includes 7% GST) Back copies $2.75 each For U.S. rates, add $5 per year Changes of address, orders for subscrip- tions and undeliverable copies (return postage guaranteed) are to be sent to The Rural Voice at the address listed below. Published monthly by: The Rural Voice, Box 429, Blyth, Ontario, NOM IHO Telephone: 519-523-4311 (fax 523-9140). e-mail: norhuron@scsintemet.com Canadian Publication Mail Agreement Number 1375016 held by North Huron Publishing Co. Inc. at Blyth, Ontario. All manuscripts submitted for consideration should be accompanied by a stamped, self- addressed envelope. The publisher cannot accept responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts or photographs, although both are welcome. The opinions expressed here- in are not necessarily those of the publisher. Editorial content may be reproduced only by permission of the publisher. The Rural Voice makes every effort to see that advertising copy is correct. However, should an error occur, please notify The Rural Voice office within 30 days of invoicing in order to obtain a billing adjustment. Behind the Scenes Hard work and good deeds We have two stories this month about determined, dedicated women. Harriett Ellicott may have a small farming operation but the folks at Agricore have learned it wasn't wise to make her angry. Following the drought of 1998, Ellicott and many other Grey and Bruce County farmers bought forage crop insurance in 1999, but they were amazed and furious when they received no payment following another drought that summer. Adding to the frustration for Ellicott was the computer simulation in the crop insurance final report that showed she should have had more than 80 per cent of her normal crop (payments kick in below 80 per cent) when she knew she got only 66 per cent of a normal crop. She went to work to find out how the crop insurance simulation could be so wrong, and started a process that's not over yet. We've got her story and the story of the other farmers in the two counties who are fighting to try to get a forage insurance program that actually works. Meanwhile in Perth County, Francine Peeler has spent the last 15 years rescuing animals, whether abandoned horses or cats and dogs left at the side of the road. In all she estimates she's helped 400 animals. It's the time of the year when people can't wait to get their snowmobiles out and roaring along the trails. This year, however, there are some differences. For one thing, to cover the cost of liability insurance that has gone up more than 600 per cent, there is a new, higher trail permit fee. For another, Bill 101 is a new provincial bill designed to regulate safety on the trails, giving police the same powers on trails that they have on the open road. It can mean, for instance, reckless snowmobilers can lose their licence not only to operate on trails, but to drive their cars. Also this month, everybody likes the idea of food safety, but the regulations to safeguard food preparation can be a different matter. When the Grey -Bruce, Owen Sound Health Unit issued a "church letter" about preparing fundraising dinners, huge concerns were raised about the future of these events. The Health Unit says it doesn't want to stop the dinners, just gives the information it wants to have groups understand and make use of as they prepare meals.0 Update Managing cedar In what one organizer termed as a "surprise", about 34 people turned out to a seminar in Wiarton, November 3, to learn more about management of cedar woodlots. The seminar was planned after a great deal of heated debate over a couple of years because of the cutting of cedar bushes on the Bruce Peninsula. The idea was to provide some light to replace the heat of that debate. Given the controversy, some organizers figured there might be up to 100 people present, said Craig Todd, Bruce Resource Stewardship Network Co-ordinator. But what the audience lacked in numbers, it made up for in the quality of the questions and discussions, Todd said. A panel of speakers, including Jim Eccles of Lands and Forestry Consulting, whose cedar management tips were featured in our October 2001 article "Cropping the Humble Cedar", answered some thoughtful questions on managing a cedar bush. A high proportion of those present, a survey showed, owned substantial acreages of cedar. People came from the Bruce Peninsula in the north to the Durham area in the southeast. Evidence of the fact that these were serious woodlot managers came from the fact some panelists actually negotiated contracts with landowners at the meeting. The Stewardship Network still wants to help enlighten seasonal property owners who were conspicuously absent so they plan a second seminar next summer.0