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The Rural Voice, 1993-08, Page 23financially self-sufficient. The operation was losing $7,500 a week in 1992. On top of that, the government was paying another $300,000 a year in grants in lieu of taxes to the City of Toronto for the 35 -acre operation. Part of the plan for having the stockyards support itself, OSY Board Chairman Jack Riddell explained, would be in leasing out 20 acres of land no longer needed by OSY to a large company. There were hot times in Ontario Cattlemen's Association (OCA) annual meetings across Ontario this winter as the plan for the future of OSY was discussed. While a discussion paper put out by OCA didn't come out against the renovation plan, it did indicate it favoured all the OSY land be leased and the money used for a "livestock industry development trust fund". Despite the fact the OCA proposal got a downright hostile reception in the northeastern part of the province, and even in Huron County the OSY renovation plan was supported by producers, the anouncement of the closure of OSY by OMAF on June 17 could almost have been written by OCA. The land will be leased and the money will go to a "Livestock Industry Trust Fund" to benefit all livestock producers. So now both livestock producers and packers will have to depend on independent yards like Brussels. Already Gamble has been handling nearly as many cattle as OSY. In 1992 60,000 slaughter cattle went through the Brussels yard as well as 60,000 stockers. OSY, according to OCA figures, handled 48,782 slaughter steers and heifers, 39,801 cows and bulls and 56,075 stockers. The big difference between OSY and Brussels has been in sheep and lamb sales. Lamb producers were desperately disappointed at the announcement of the OSY closure because many felt it provided North America's best market for sheep and lambs. With its high ethnic population, Toronto provides a special market for lamb. Even as OSY's cattle numbers had dropped, sheep and lamb sales had declined only slightly, totalling 61,116 last year. By contrast, Brussels handles anywhere from 70 to 150 sheep and goats on a typical week, though on one week near Easter this spring 939 sheep and goats went through the yard. Gamble has met with and there's less shrink (because of the shorter travel time)," Gamble maintains. "They've just got used to the Toronto market. We're just trying to do the best we can to help lamb producers. If we get the volume and we get the buyers, we can do a good job for the producers." Doing a good job for producers is one of the keys to running a successful operation, Gamble says. "When you're selling livestock it has to be as if you were selling your own livestock," he says. At the same time, an operator has to treat the buyers well so they'll keep coming and keep buying, so the producers will get good competition between packers. "You have to be kind of a middle man," Gamble says. Catering to cutomers also is exhibited in other ways. For the Friday stocker sale at Brussels, Gamble sends a bus out to Mennonite country to pick up farmers who couldn't otherwise travel that far by horse and buggy. Staff are also out in the field calling on farmers, seeking their business. They'll also help sort cattle for sale, Gamble says. eeping first class facilities is also important. As well as the new, well -ventilated barn, he has made numerous repairs and improve- ments since he took over what had once been a well-regarded operation that had fallen on hard times. The Brussels facility had been started back in 1958 when Brussels residents Hugh Pearson and Jack Bryans bought a farm on the outskirts of the village and opened a sales barn, then called Brussels Livestock Sales. In 1970 a five -man group, led by Bruce McCall of Embro, bought the operation and renamed it Brussels Stockyards Limited. By 1984 it was selling 51,000 head of cattle a year, 60,000 pigs and selling 14,000 western feeders directly to farmers. Success in an operation like his, Gamble says, depends on treating livestock as if it's your own. Above, he works in the ring at a stocker sale. Good facilities and an excellent location at Brussels (below) attracted him to buy Brussels Livestock. representatives of the lamb producers who are worried that all the little packers in the Toronto area (there are 162 packers of lamb in all) may not journey so far from the city. "If they can't buy in Toronto they'll come out where they can buy," Gamble says of the packers. "We've got to have the lambs before we get the buyers. It's hard to get four or five packers if you only have 125 lambs for sale." There is plenty of lamb raised in easy driving distance of the Brussels yard. "It's easier for them to get here AUGUST 1993 19