Loading...
The Rural Voice, 1991-09, Page 8FALL PLANTING SPECIALS Austrian Pine $6.50 Norway Spruce $6.50 White Spruce $6.50 Serbian Spruce $6.50 Potted 12' - 36' in 1 gal. containers Specimen Trees 3 ft. Colorado Blue Spruce $45 3 ft. Austrian Pine $45 Selected shrubs and trees $5 each Lawn 527-1750 master „ter R. R. 2; SEAFORTH Hart Ford �1 SEAFORTH 'The Lawn Master orlde /= Nee Al AO Centralia College invites you to attend SHOWCASE '91 on Wednesday, September 25, 1991 9:30 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. Come out and join in the fun as Centralia students and staff demonstrate their skills in these activities: • "The Food Safety Mystery" • "Destroying the Myth About Plants" • 'Food Feud Trivia Game' as well as veterinary technology, agricultural engineering experiments, ultrasound technology on livestock, and much, much more! Demonstrations begin every half hour during the day. Tour the campus, see the newly renovated library, and meet the students. Lunch and dinner are available in the college cafeteria. There's something for everyone! And for CCAT grads, don't miss the Alumni Pub 8.00 p.m., Huron Hall Lounge For more information, phone the college at (519) 228-6691. We look forward to seeing you! 'School tours are welcome - please call ahead to make arrangements. 1111 f It `b .104101411.147. f4i11rr 6.1j4 4 THE RURAL VOICE CENTRALIA COLLEGE Huron Park, Ontario NOM 1Y0 (519) 228.6691 FEEDBACK 474)111111 IIIb=_. r111/11011/111111/1/11/1 Pilral Voice � EDITORIAL USES STEREOTYPES While visiting my father on his Perth County farm, I read the July 1991 issue of The Rural Voice. Your editorial under the Behind the Scenes banner deserves a response. It con- tained some serious distortions and I was sorry to see that you had to use misguided stereotypes to advance your arguments. It wasn't good journalism. First, the stereotypes — you suggest all non -farmers are lined up against the tiny minority of farmers. You im-ply that non -farmers are yuppies (whatever that suggests) who dominate the Ontario legislature and "sit pretty" in $300,000 dollar homes. In other words, we're all rich snobs with all the power and we don't give a damn if the farmer makes a good living. Untrue, and quite a smear! Second, as to the arguments about preserving farmland — let me say at the beginning that I believe consumers of food (I think that includes all of us) should be paying a price for food that enables farmers to make a good living. However, to suggest that the solution to making a good living is to permit use of any farmland, at random, for urban or non-farm development, is pure fantasy. Yes, we do need some additional urban land to house an expanding pop- ulation. For environmental and cost of servicing reasons, it's best to use land on the edge of existing urban lands , and to develop it at urban densities. . But not a lot of land is needed — for example, in the Niagara Peninsula where I live, 5000 acres or less (out of hundreds of thousands of acres) is needed in the next 20 or 30 years. Some rural landowners may gain a windfall profit, but the majority