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The Rural Voice, 1988-05, Page 26JOB SATISFACTION: EMPLOYERS AND EMPLOYEES ON THE FARM by Lise Gunby Getting good employees — and keeping them — entails creative management. Exempt from key sections of the Employment Standards Act, farm employers don't generally have a positive image out there in the work force. But some farmers, realizing the importance of keeping skilled workers in an increasingly complex indus- try, have come up with some creative ideas on their own... Note: Agriculture's exemptions from the Employment Standards Act are under review, and a provincial report released last month recommended that farm workers be eligible for vacation pay and paid for statutory holidays. F or Amilia Orlinski, the opportunity to work in the Canadian agricultural industry was attractive enough that she decided to stay in this country rather than return to her native Poland. But for many young people in Canada, farm work is perceived as belonging to something of a ghetto: the pay is low, there are few oppor- tunities for career advancement, and the prestige value is nil. For farmers looking for qualified people in an increasingly sophisticated industry, that perception is a source of frustra- tion. As Doug Grant, manager of Agricultural Employment Services in Owen Sound, puts it "We don't hold in much esteem those who are invol- ved in producing our food. It's sad." Annlia is employed by Avon Swine Inc., a limited company owned by the Lichti family of R. R. 1, New Hamburg. With four years of univer- sity training as an animal care special- ist and several years of experience John Lichti (left), who handles much of the administrative end of the Lichtis' family-owned company, Avon Swine Inc., talks to Lloyd Schmidt, acting sow herd manager at Avon Swine, who says he doesn't miss the financial worries he experienced owning his own farm. Says John Lichti: "It seems to me a waste of money for government to train people to get out of the industry when the industry is crying for labour." (photos by W. Merle Gunby) working on state farms, she came to Canada as part of an agricultural exchange program. When martial law was declared in Poland, she declared her choice of Canada as a home: "The Life here is really good." Amilia, who has become "part of the family," says John Lichti, has been with Avon Swine since 1981. The Lichtis, who employ five full- time employees in their operation, have dealt extensively with issues of farm labour. Hired labour, as John Lichti notes, is becoming more of a factor in all sectors of agriculture, not least in the hog industry, and infor- mation and guidelines are scant. Not only are many farms becoming larger and production more intensive, but more farms are being organized along corporate lines: people are talking about employee ownership and shareholding as in- centives for workers and as a way to bequeath the operation when the traditional transfer between gener- ations isn't possible. The Avon Swine shareholders include the three Lichti brothers, John, Roy, and Dan, and their spouses as well as parents Laverne and Nelda. Avon Swine operates a 440 -sow swine herd; some of the pigs are sorted as market hogs, some are kept as breed- ing stock, and the company sells F-1 gilts as well as purebred and crossbred Landrace, Yorkshire, and Hampshire boars. The structure of the Lichtis' company allows John, who looks after the business end of the farrn, to spend 24 THE RURAL VOICE