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The Rural Voice, 1991-11, Page 10PURE WATER FOR AMERICA man.. Gown P.tl...s. DW. AM.. o. For service call your professional Goulds dealer for a reliable water system. CLIFF's PLUMBING & HEATING Lucknow 519-528-3913 "Our experience assures lower cost water wells" 91 YEARS EXPERIENCE Member of Canadian and Ontario Water Well Associatio • Farm • Industrial • Suburban • Municipal Licensed by the Ministry of the Environment DAVIDSON WELL DRILLING LTD. WINGHAM Serving Ontane Since 1900 519-357-1960 WINGHAM 519-886-2761 WATERLOO 6 THE RURAL VOICE FARM CRISIS IS RURAL CRISIS TOO Keith Roulston, a newspaper publisher and playwright who lives near Blyth, is the originator and publisher of The Rural Voice. Sometimes, even when you know something in your heart to be true, you have to see it with your own eyes before it sinks in. On a recent family trip along the 401 from Kitchener in the west to Newcastle, east of Toronto, along a stretch of more than 100 miles, I realized just how immense the urban sprawl has become. You can't help but contrast that explosive growth with what you see back home in Huron County, where population growth for the county's largest municipalities will be only 16 per cent by 2035. By then, unless free trade backfires completely, Toronto may have doubled or tripled in size. In fact, Huron County might only see growth if Toronto, Kitchener -Water- loo, and London start converging on it from different directions. I've attended meetings recently where farm leaders have reacted bitterly to talk from planners that the local economy needs more diversity. Trends show there won't be as many people farming in the future, while farmers, already feeling swamped by the trends of the past decade, plead that their rural county, at least, should continue to rank agriculture high in economic importance. But the sad facts are: we produce more corn, beans, eggs, and meat than ever before, but for a host of reasons, it's taking fewer people to do it. The snowballing effect of declining farm populations is shrivelling our hamlets too. In my lifetime, I can re- member when little crossroads comm- unities like St. Augustine, White- church, and Holyrood were viable communities with stores, garages, community halls, and schools. There were larger thriving hamlets like Auburn or Bluevale with their own business centres, while villages like Lucknow and Brussels bustled with activity. Today, the hamlets have declined to the crossroads of 30 years ago, and the villages to hamlets. It all happened because the number of families living on farms declined, and with better roads it became convenient for those who remained to travel further in search of cheaper goods. The trend , begun at the end of World War II, was accelerated by the high interest rates and low product prices of the past decade, and has turned into an avalanche by the cur- rent farm cash crunch. The danger isn't that we'll not only lose a huge .flunk of our farm population, but that we'll also lose the whole structure of the communities built to serve that population. For many in the "shrug -and -say - that's -progress" school of economics, this is how it ought to be. They'll make noises about how sad it is to see the rural lifestyle lost, but they'll say we must have rational economic decisions in the marketplace. But as I drove 401 and saw all those factories and houses, I had to question the rationale of the economic system. It surely costs more to buy land and build a factory in Missi- ssauga than in Mildmay or Markdale. And we all know that businesses have to pay more to employees to work in Toronto, because of the higher cost of housing, than in Teeswater or Zurich. But still, the factories locate there, and rural communities starve for jobs. If one year's worth of factory construc- tion along 401 were divided among Ontario's small towns, it could replenish the rural economy for years to come. The crisis on the farm is a crisis for the entire rural way of life. The job alternatives aren't coming. If we can't make farming prosperous, we all may one day be moving to the factories and the high-rises in Picker- ing.0