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The Rural Voice, 2000-01, Page 18Opinions vary regarding the massive change of direction announced by the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs December 2 but one thing no one disagrees on: an era of farm extension — of face-to-face service between farmers and ministry specialists — is over. The 93 -year tradition of agricultural representatives has ended. The scale of the changes is so immense few farmers seem to have absorbed them yet. While offices will continue to exist in some areas such as in Fergus, Clinton, London and Stratford, they will bear no similarity to the OMAFRA field offices of the past. Think of it as all 32 field offices in southern Ontario being closed, explained Dan Carlow, manager, field services at the Clinton and Stratford offices. Some of those locations will have new uses as Agriculture Technology Resource Centres with a cluster of specialists who will prepare information for the ministry to disseminate through other sources, but there will no longer be offices that offer information directly to the public. The position of Ag Rep, part of the ministry's history since extension began, is now abolished. Instead, OMAFRA will have a call centre located at its head office on Stone Road, Guelph with a free - calling number for farmers across the province. Modeled on AGRICORP's 1-800 calling system, it will be manned by five people trained to give callers information they request. The ministry will also offer information through its award- winning internet site. For OMAFRA staff across the province, it means massive dislocation and relocation. The current 130 staff working in the ministry's Agriculture and Rural Development section, explains Jack Westlake, Ag Rep at the Markdale The 90 -year tradition of extension services in Ontario ends as OMAFRA changes direction By Keith Roulston 14 THE RURAL VOICE office in Grey County, will either be leaving the ministry or will be applying for one of the 90 jobs available in the restructured ministry. The changes hit harder in some offices than others. At the Markdale office, no one is guaranteed a job after the change. In Walkerton, Soil Fertility Specialist Keith Reid's job will be moved to Stratford while commodities specialist Colin Reesor's position will be transferred to Guelph. At Clinton, only engineer Harold House is assured of a job while in Stratford, Rob Templeman's position as soybean and edible bean specialist will be retained. The offices in Clinton, Fergus, London and Stratford along with the nine other Agriculture Technology Resource Centres, will have focussed groups of specialists with a small administrative support staff. Clinton's current complement of 10, for instance, will be reduced to six, with one secretary and five specialists. Besides House, who will specialize in dairy and beef housing issues, there will be a beef feedlot specialist, a veal specialist and a swine finishing sector specialist as well as a regional information co- ordinator whose job it will be to be the "eyes and ears of the ministry", as Carlow describes it. Stratford will have seven positions with 'a focus on livestock technology and crops. In addition to Templeman and Reid, cereals specialist Peter Johnston, currently in the London office will be moved to Stratford. There will also be a swine nursery/grower specialist, a regional information co- ordinator and two support staff. The idea, Carlow explained, is that clusters of expertise will be created in different areas so the specialists will feed off each other. These specialists will develop concepts and proposals and create packages of leading- edge information for distribution through other manners. If, explains Westlake, cattlemen wanted to have a major meeting, the beef specialist could be invited as a guest speaker. Unlike the past, he would not be involved in helping organize the meeting, he would just provide information. A regional information co- ordinator based at Fergus will oversee Grey and Bruce counties, Westlake says. While the ministry's press release mentioned a Business Enterprise Centre in Markdale, this centre will have no agricultural mandate. "This won't be a place for a farmer to come in and say `how do I get started in farming'," Westlake says. Instead, it will be a place where farmers, and other businesses, can register a business name and find out about other government services. While the changes are massive, reaction varies about just how much the county offices will be missed. Murray Clark, president of the Bruce County Federation of Agriculture says his group is still trying to judge the feeling of its members. "There hasn't been a huge hue and cry about it," Clark said a week after the announcement. Part of the reason is that the usefulness �f OMAFRA's field offices had been waning for a decade. "The bodies have disappeared from our area before," Clark says. "We're not about to fight fora building." Bruce Shillinglaw, a Londesboro- area farmer who has been a leader in adapting new technology agrees. "A lot of the things we used to use