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The Rural Voice, 2002-08, Page 63GREY County Federation of Agriculture NEWSLETTER 446 10th St., Hanover, Ontario N4N 1P9 Email grey@ota.on.ca Website• www.ofa.on.ca/grey 519-364-3050 or 1-800-275-9551 • The Rural Voice is provided to all Grey County Farmers by the GCFA. OFA proposes rules for Nutrient Management Act Bili 81. The Nutrient Management Pian Legislation was passed in the Ontario Legislature and given Royal Assent on June 27. 2002. Last fall OFA hosted nine workshops across the province. seeking input from farmers that could be incorporated into the regulations that will now be developed. Almost 500 farmers attended those meetings. From that series of meetings and subsequent discussions at OFA Board meetings. a list of what farmers hope to see in the regulations has been developed. Some of the key elements OFA and Ontario's farmers want in the regulations include: • the Ministry of Agriculture and Food should be the lead ministry administering the Act • there should be no contracting out of administrative duties associated with the Act • costs associated with administration of the Act should be the responsibility of the Government of Ontario • regulations must be flexible enough to accommodate the wide range of agricultural systems that constitute the diversity of Ontario farming • biosecurity protocols must be established to ensure that inspectors doing farm visits under the Act do not serve as vectors for the transmission of diseases between farms • the Provincial Government must provide the necessary funding to farmers required to invest in capital projects to comply with the regulations under the Act • municipal bylaws dealing with nutrient management are to be repealed once the Act and its regulations are fully in place.0 Requirements for risk management programming (Safety Nets) Risk Management programming under the Agricultural Policy Framework must include the following elements: • 6/6 NISA (eliminating the 3% NISA interest bonus) • Introduce an enhanced Ontario Grain Stabilization Program with a support price developed considering historical prices and the cost -of -production and a strong link to NISA (similar to Quebec) • Continue Aith the additional 2/2 NISA top -up for edible horticulture • Continue with the OFIDP/CFIP and remove labour costs from the margin calculation and explore introducing negative margin coverage and a stronger Zink with Crop Insurance/SDRM. Ontario should work nationally to develop a consistent approach to dealing with disaster programming starting in 2003. It should Eastern Ontario hay heading to Prairies Farmers in Eastern Ontario with surplus hay from this year's crop are preparing to ship some of that surplus to drought -stricken livestock farmers in Western Canada. Since the word went out that hay was being collected for Western farmers. Cumberland Township Councillor and farmer Phil McNeely says his phone "has been ringing off the hook." Plans call for the first shipment of big bales of hay to leave Brockville on Thursday, July 25, on its way to Edmonton via CN Rail. Farmers will be expected to get their hay to the rail yard in Brockville by Wednesday, July 24, McNeely says. "There may be some instances where the hay can be picked up at the farm," he says, "but the more hay we can get delivered to Brockville the better." In the early stages of the campaign, McNeely says a few hundred bales won't help too many of the western ranches, "but we're hoping the Ontario 60 THE RURAL VOICE and federal governments can work out a plan to ship thousands of tonnes of hay to these ranchers." "Both CN and CP rail companies have expressed interest in helping (with the transportation), but there are lots of details stili to be worked out," he says. McNeely is hoping the provincial and federal ministries of agriculture will get involved and "carry the ball from here." McNeely can be reached at 613- 580-2489 or 613-824-0517.0 GCFR Office Hours Monday to friday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. GREY COUNTY FEDERATION OF AGRICULTURE PLEASE NOTE: There will be NO Board of Directors' meeting in August Next meeting will be Thursday, September 26, 2002 find innovative ways to reduce the need for disaster assistance within the province. • 4/4 SDRM as a top -up to NISA for 2001 stabilization year and as a stand- alone program starting with the 2002 crop year Transition Funding: • AAFC should allocate the $600 million in federal transition dollars to the provincial governments and the provinces should be responsible for distributing the transition dollars based on need. • The province of Ontario should receive at least 21 per cent of the $600 million, based on the Fredericton allocation agreement. • Ontario should target sector support based on need using delivery mechanisms in consultation with farm organizations. • Government must deliver the transition dollars quickly, i.e., commencing in July/August 2002.0 GREY COUNTY FEDERATION OF AGRICULTURE 62ND ANNUAL MEETING AND BANQUET AND OFA REGIONAL MEETING Friday, October 4, 2002 Markdale Community Centre Social: 6:30 p.m. — Dinner: 7:00 p.m. NOTE OFA Regional Directors, Delegates and Alternates for OFA Convention and GCFA Presidents will be elected at the meeting i