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The Rural Voice, 1991-11, Page 45Is f e Y e s 1t 1, i 1 e RAINY RIVER Federation of Agriculture NEWSLETTER Box 416, Emo, Ontario POW 1 E0 807-482-2051 • The Rural Voice is provided to Rainy River Federation members by the RRFA. I'm home again for a whole week this time. Ralph and I are both scheduled for physiotherapy and were told that we should expect to be in Thunder Bay for a month. At least we'll be able to come home weekends. The directors of the Rainy River Federa- tion of Agriculture met in the Stratton Hall on Thursday, October 3. Directors present were Linda Armstrong, Kim Hunsperger, Wayne Flatt, Rick Boersma, Gary Esselink, Sue Boersma, Peggy Mason, and Shirley Morrish. Guests present were Gerry Carey and Jack Elliott. Jack Elliott and Rick Boersma presented two resolutions that they would like to have presented to the OFA annual meeting in Tor- onto. They concern fire permits for burning off seed production fields, and compensa- tion for wildlife damage to crops and leaf cutter bees, etc. Rick Boersma moved the resolutions be forwarded, and Gary Esselink seconded. Carried. Jack Elliott will fax the proposed resolutions to the Toronto office. Jack Elliott announced his willingness to run for provincial director at the annual meeting on Saturday evening. Gerry Carey reported on the membership drive. He and Ken McKinnon were able to sign five new members, Peter Spuzak, Nick Mutz, Sam Koski, Brian McCoy, and Doug Anderson. Gerry Carey said that farmers need to get the ear of our people in parliament. "We have to get the decision makers out there to see what really is happening in our area — they are the ones who make the final deci- sions." He feels that there is a great future with the new team on the OFA leadership. Stable funding appears to be on the back burner for the time being. Kim Hunsperger read a letter on a farmer's program for November and Janu- ary. It will be a four to five day learning experience, beginning at 9:45 a.m. and run- ning until 3:30 p.m. with a noon lunch. It is to have a commodity format. The suggested location is in the Stratton Hall. It will possi- bly be funded by N.O.A.D.P., Community Futures, farm organizations, industry, and daily registrations. The Federation is to select five of the possible topics. The Federation will assist with the pur- chase of the beef halters for the new 4-H beef club members. The next meeting will be in the Our Lady of the Way School in Stratton on November 7, 1991, at 7:30 p.m. "One reason your dog can help you so much when you are downcast is that he does- n't demand to know why."—John M. Henry "The man who produces the milk, in reality, produces the butter and cheese. The factory men only separate it after it is pro- duced. It is the milk producer's care, clean- liness, and intelligent management of his cows that controls, in a marked degree, the quality of the goods, and the price obtained." — W. D. Hoard Annual meeting The Rainy River Federation of Agricul- ture annual meeting, dinner, and dance was held in the Stratton Hall on Saturday, Octo- ber 5, 1991. President Linda Armstrong called the gathering to order at 7:30 p.m. An overflow crowd necessitated the setting up of two more tables. Archie Wiersema asked the blessing. Joe Carlson "Wild One" from Devlin provided background music for din- ner, and later in the evening for dancing. Linda Armstrong introduced the head table: Tom and Shirley Morrish — Tom is the president of the Rainy River Cattlemen's Association and Shirley was acting secretary for the evening; Michael and Jo Anne Neil- son — Mike is the farm management spe- cialist in the Emo OMAF office; Linda and Stanley Armstrong — Linda is the president of the Rainy River Federation of Agricul- ture; Peiter Van Ballegooie, provincial di- rector for the Northwestern Region to OFA; Kim Hunsperger, treasurer for the Rainy River Federation of Agriculture; and Gerry Carey, a member of the executive committee of OFA, and guest speaker for the evening. Pei ter Van Ballegooie gave a short report on membership and mentioned the "sale" — sell two memberships at the regular price and get your own renewed for $99. Peiter has been provincial director for three years, and has decided to step down at this time. Kim Hunsperger introduced Gerry Ca- rey, our guest speaker. Gerry thanked Ken McKinnon, Sue Boersma, and Archie Wier- sema for their help on the membership drive over the past few days. He mentioned some areas that the OFA is working on provin- cially: farm tax rebate; the future of farming — stressing environmental concerns. The main part of Gerry's talk was about five elements necessary for a strong volun- teer organization. The five elements are: 1) recruitment of new members; 2) organiza- tional development; 3) leadership training — OATI is such a vehicle. Pat Clysdale- Cornell is involved locally in providing lead- ership training; 4) retaining members — keep members informed —Farm and Coun- try, Rural Voice, OFA Members' Digest, general county meetings; 5) external or public relations — covering in the local papers, effectively telling people about our problems, getting the message out to those who are not directly involved in agriculture. He brought up the Grenville County bill- board that caused a commotion with MTO. It said "JUST THINK — NO Farmers — NO Food — NO Future." Linda Armstrong thanked Gerry for coming and speaking, and for his work on the membership drive. Pat Clysdale-Cornell was election chair- person for the evening. She declared the positions of president, secretary, treasurer, one director from each zone, and provincial director, vacant. It was moved by Todd Weir and seconded by Don McCulloch that Tom Morrish be election secretary. Carried. It was moved by Don McCulloch and seconded by Rick Boersma that the voting be by ballot. Carried. Pat Clysdale-Cornell asked Bruce Ward and Laurie Welsh to be the scrutineers. Linda Armstrong was ac- claimed as president. The position of treas- urer was left open, and will be filled as the board of directors find someone to take the position. The directors elected for a two year term were acclaimed as follows: zone I, Archie Wiersema; Zone II, Jack Van den Brand; Zone III, Michael Zimmerman; Zone IV, by a director at large — Jack Elliott. Jack Elliott was acclaimed as the provin- cial delegate nominee from our area. Don Belluz has been nominated from Thunder Bay, and a mail in ballot will be required. When you receive yours, please vote with your pen, elect the provincial director you want to represent the Northwestern Region. Following the elections, Mike Neilson gave some comments and announcements: leadership in action in Quetico Centre, Nov- ember 20 to 23 — contact Pat Clysdale-Cor- nell; Farm Interest Reduction Program; bus tour to Minnesota November 5 to 7 — con- tact Pat Clysdale-Cornell or Mike Neilson. Jack Elliott outlined the Farm Program meetings being planned for the winter. President Linda Armstrong thanked everyone, and adjourned the meeting. (A complete list of the winners and donors of the door prizes will be published in next month's newsletter.) There are changes of great proportion on the way for the Hunspergers. The quota has all been sold and spoken for. It feels very strange to even contemplate not having to milk cows morning and night. I guess this city bred girl is at a loss to express the strange sensation I feel, but I guess a new chapter in our lives will begin after the new year. I read in the Hoard's Dairyman some- thing that I think fits farming very well. "If you are ambitious, if you have an idea that some other place outside the farm will give you an opportunity to exhibit your talent and your brain and your education, let me advise you that on the farm and in these problems you will find a theater broad enough for all the brains a Webster can bring to bear, and here you will find opportunity for intelli- gence and interesting study." W. D. Hoard. See you next time.0 Jacquelyn NOVEMBER 1991 41