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The Rural Voice, 1998-01, Page 28GRAIN BINS SALES — INSTALLATION — SERVICE — Compare our Prices — We Buy Direct! (K) KONGSKILDE GRAIN VACS AND GRAIN CLEANERS *•mAR: • Cushlonalre 500 1400 - 1800 bu./hr. • Cushlonalre 300 800 - 1100 bu./hr. GRAIN SYSTEMS LTD. 131 THAMES RD. W., EXETER, ONTARIO NOM 1S3 519-235-1919 or call Brad Marsden, evenings 519-235-2018 LONG LASTING & COMPETITIVELY PRICED trx ISMIrrYZ WE HAVE CHAINS TO FIT EVERY MAKE & MODEL 1111;14siril "SIMPLY THE BEST" A:'r ._ _ice LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT CONSTRUCTION LTD. John Baak, President RR 1 Hanover 519-369-5478 24 THE RURAL VOICE follow the lead of some of the new northern U.S. co-ops where members buy delivery rights, says Akalay. It means that members pay according to the volume they want to have processed. Larger users of the co-op invest more than the smaller users. While the size of the investment has made some producers reluctant to join the co-op, Kressibucher points out those dollars wouldn't buy much additional quota (at the current rate of $25-$26 per quota unit). The investment buys some insurance against future loss of supply management, he says. "For $20,000 you can bring your farm into the next phase of the marketplace." While the new co-ops are different than the old, Akalay says the inspiration is the same one that has been behind the growth of co-ops over the past century. Farmers today realize that they can't afford to lose control of their products at the farm gate. To keep agriculture viable there must be some sort of integration of processing with production. On some level farmers have always known they had to work together if they were to succeed, he says. There are considerable differences in the two co-ops Akalay has been involved with. Emu producers had to create a market while chicken producers had a well-established market. There were no production restrictions for emu producers but strict quota regulations for the chicken producers. But there are also a lot of things in common between the new co-ops, Akalay says, even in unlikely areas. He's working with aboriginal peoples in Northern Ontario on a forestry co- op and some of the problems are remarkably similar to the Farm Fresh situation. And through all the new generation co-ops is the recognition that you can't do it alone, Akalay says. You can't afford to build your own chicken or emu processing plant, but if 20 or 30 or 100 producers get together, they can make it work. The dollars may be bigger, the commitment may be bigger, but the movement plays on the same strength of rural co-operation that built barns and schools and communities ... and co-ops, in the past.°