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The Rural Voice, 1998-11, Page 48GREY County Federation of Agriculture NEWSLETTER 446 10th St., Hanover, Ontario N4N 1P9 Email: gcta@greynet.net Website: headwaters.com/gcta 519-364-3050 or 1-800-275-9551 • The Rural Voice is provided to all Grey County Farmers by the GCFA. By Bob Brassington OFA Regional Director Grey East Just how fast are things changing in these times in which we live? Monumental changes are taking place all over the world. Big banks taking over small banks. Gigantic stores moving into areas all over and rendering small businesses impractical, and uneconomical to a point where they can no longer justify staying in business, thereby changing the economy and character of that town, village or city. These places change so much that they are unrecognizable from what they used to be just a few short years ago. Far too often the locals don't stand and fight. Rather they just look for somewhere different to do their business. With the galloping rate that biotechnology is racing across the world, I sometimes wonder if farming will be recognizable, as we know it now, in let's say 10 years hence. The germination terminator technology, with options still to purchase conventional germinatable seed is fine with me. However, if that option should no longer be there, then I think we should all be a little more than just concerned, and maybe we should stand and fight before it is too late, rather than just look for an alternative, because in this case, there just may not be an alternative to turn to. When we have Monsanto taking over and buying out other larger and smaller companies at the fast rate they are doing, they are closing doors to us and vastly reducing any options left open to us. Remember how we all flocked to see the first calf born to artificial insemination and now it seems like 44 THE RURAL VOICE Changing times old hat, but some farmers still own their own bulls. Remember how some viewed no -till with skepticism, and now it is accepted everywhere you go, but some still prefer to use the plough. Roundup -Ready canola, beans etc. raised some eyebrows, yet we accepted it as part of the changing times. But we still have the options not to buy these products. I, for one, hope we will always have the option. We must never lose sight of the fact that ever since Adam and Eve, farmers have had the choice to keep seed from one year to the next, and that in my opinion, is how it always must be. It seems sad to me, but never the less a fact of life, in these times, that we are increasingly told what we as farmers can or cannot do. A neighbour of mine recently told me that he was compelled to sell his dairy cows because the cream he produced is no longer wanted by the big creameries. He feels he is too old to change to liquid milk production, so reluctantly he sells, and looks elsewhere for his livelihood. These changes are not only characteristic of the agricultural industry, but are taking place in all facets of industry. How many rural villages have suffered at the hands of progress? Can many say that no changes have taken place in their village in the past decade, and what of the next decade? In this small rural village where I live, two prominent businesses are no longer in existence. A car dealership was forced to dose its doors, and they now have jobs in the big city of Owen Sound. A longtime gas station and fuel delivery business is no longer run by the family who founded it so many years ago. It is now run by a larger company whose office is in, you guessed it, Owen Sound. Some rural schools may have to close. What impact will the closing of rural schools have, not only on our children but on the economy, and the long term future of these areas? I know you can please some of the people some of the time, but you cannot please all of the people all of the time. But will there be any rural people left to please, if we keep losing the lifeblood of these communities at such an unprecedented rate?0 GREY <COUNTY FE ....................................................... DIRECTORSMEETIN Thursday, November 19, 1998 8:00 p.m. OMAFRA Boardroom, Markdale Members are welcome to attend, i