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The Rural Voice, 1992-07, Page 29property while they built a solar - heated house facing south on the hilltop. They installed an electricity - generating windmill and battled with Ontario Hydro to get the kind of agreement that is now accepted for private power generation: allowing small generators to sell electricity to Hydro when they had a surplus, and buy when they needed additional power. They were one of the first farms in the region to be totally organic and still don't have a flush toilet, yet were also into computers when most of their neighbours were still using adding machines. That strange combination earned respect from some farmers for the couple's committment to their ideals without forcing them on others, but suspicion and ridicule from others. One wag, on hearing McQuail had been named Executive Assistant to the Minister suggested that OMAF would now be giving research grants for designing PTOs for horses. Many people feared McQuail would force his environmental ideals on all Ontario farmers through his influential position. But many who knew him worried more about the effect the high- pressure lifestyle would have on a man deeply devoted to his family, his community and his land. Could the fish out of water survive in the strange world of Queen's Park? The answer, he says, over a lunch of brown bread, ham and cheese in his hilltop kitchen, is yes, and no. There's something exciting and even addictive about the world of top-level politics, he says, but after 18 months he was missing the things he thought were important in life. His two daughters were growing up and as he looked at some of the long-term planning in his department, he could see their birthdays fly by. "You can't put your kids on hold when they're eight and 10 and say `I'll have time five years from now'." Knowing the life he enjoyed, why did he take the high-pressure job in the first place? "I don't think we, including some of the new MPPs, had a clear idea of what a big life change we were getting into," he says. One of the first major changes was to close down the farming operation. With the time he'd tied up with the Hydro hearings, he knew it would be ca U E _ CC ca 42 a) cU U Cabin Crafts Carpet BAECHLER li%tc�l��•�a$ t iftstvoi tics 150 The Square, Goderich 524.8600 Benjamin Moore Paints (AVontie ccAr JULY 22 & 23, 1992 This program: • gives you a taste of what you will learn at College • has you choose a farm operation you would like to study and spend an afternoon at the farm collecting information on farm management • has you evaluate your findings and make recommendations • join in an evening of social time with some "planned fun" Age: 16 - 20 years of age Cost: $40.00 + GST ($42.80) — includes meals, overnight accommodation, travel to and from farms and refreshments Apply by: July 10, 1992 — limited to 24 delegates Anyone who attends AgVantage receives 1 credit towards their diploma in Agricultural Business Management al Centralia College. For more details — contact John Stephens, (519) 228-6691, Ext. 252 Ministry of Agriculture and Food ONTARIO CENTRALIA COLLEGE Huron Park, Ontario NOM 1Y0 JULY 1992 25