The Rural Voice, 1989-07, Page 72BRUCE
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County Federation of Agriculture NEWSLETTER
OPINION
THE PEOPLE AND THE LAND
Ontario's rural communities have
been both blessed and challenged by
The People and the Land. This 16 -page
document, released by the Catholic
Bishops of Ontario, provides much food
for thought and reflection.
The document was produced to
stimulate the urban people into in-
formed solidarity with Ontario's rural
communities. The bishops address
themselves to the human or social is-
sues, then to the economic problems,
and finally to the issue of ecological
balance. The document also includes
some of the church's social teaching,
some recommendations, a conclusion,
and a biblical reflection. Here we high-
light parts of the recommendations:
TEN AREAS OF CONCERN
AND RECOMMENDATIONS
1. Wise Use of Land: We ask for an
immediate commitment by government
to limit and restrict development on
prime farm land in Ontario.
2. Debt Restructuring: The govern-
ment of Ontario should establish lend-
ing mechanisms complementing the
Federal Debt Review Board to help with
the re -arrangement of debts for insol-
vent farmers. The goal should be to help
keep insolvent farmers on modest -sized
but viable farms.
3. A Beginning Farmer Program: A
beginning farmer needs the assurance of
long-term credit at reasonable interest
rates as well as substantial interest re-
bates during the first five to seven years.
In justice, these cannot be tied to pro-
duction or profit requirements.
4. Economic Support Programs:
We would recommend, as a help to
moderate-sized family farms, enhanced
stabilization programs, de-escalating as
production increases.
5. Improved Marketing Structures:
The farm community should initiate
better marketing mechanisms that allow
farmers to set just prices for production,
regulate the level of production, and
exercise careful control over the import
and export of their particular commodi-
ties. Supply -managed commodities
must be safeguarded in any bilateral or
multinational trade agreements.
6. Monitoring of Imports and Ex-
ports: Commodity export and import
must respect the right of domestic pro-
ducers of both countries to a just price.
7. Self -Reliance and Sustainable
Agriculture: Long-term goals should be
set on self-reliance based on a sustain-
able model of production.
8. Co-operation: We do need more
human and Christian solidarity if justice
is to prevail. The farm community
needs the understanding and support of
the urban population.
9. Education: We need an educa-
tional policy that stresses for our stu-
dents and adults the importance of the
gifts of land and food and the need for
appreciative and wise stewardship.
10. Collective Action: Finally, we
recognize as legitimate all non-violent
collective measures by farmers to cor-
rect the present injustices of the socio-
economic order and make true progress
in justice, peace, and security.0
Respectfully submitted,
Bruce Federation of Agriculture
Public Relations Committee
Note Each month this page will
contain an opinion on a current;
farm issue.; We would like to knoui
what YOU think. If your opinion
differs from the one you have read
here, or if you support our view -
-
the office at 364-3050.
CATHOLIC BISHOPS CHALLENGE FARMERS TO PROMOTE ETHICS
by Diane Baltaz, Kitchener -Waterloo Record
Ontario's Roman Catholic bishops are
challenging farmers and urbanites to restore
ethics and respect to farming.
Speaking to 80 farmers from various
denominations at a Catholic Rural Life Con-
ference meeting, auxiliary Bishop Matthew
Ustrzycki of Guelph warned that the Ontario
fann crisis, if it remains unchecked, could
eliminate 40 per cent of Ontario jobs in food
processing and packaging.
Yet he said he suspects that the 97 per
cent of Ontarians who do not farm are un-
aware of this interdependence. Nor do they
know the depth of the environmental, social,
moral, and economic crisis that threatens
farmers.
The bishop was speaking about a 16 -
page document of the farm crisis, The People
and the Land, which the Ontario bishops
released in March. The document, which
Ustrzycki co-authored, criticized various
70 THE RURAL VOICE
structural injustices that result in low returns
for farmers at the cost of environmental
stewardship. More than 14,000 copies have
been distributed.
The bishop said that these problems, if
they remain unchecked, could tum Ontario
into another California, where family farms
have been replaced by corporate farms.
"And I hate to say this, but corporations'
concern isn't for indiv iduals, but for profits."
The church is partially at fault for today's
abuses because it has not developed a theol-
ogy of nature or agriculture, he said, but it
has an ancient tradition that emphasizes that
mankind as co -creators with God must
"bring creation to perfection, not abuse it."
He blames the industrial revolution of
the past 450 years, which created a philoso-
phy of domination instead of stewardship.
This mentality fostered today's emphasis on
profits over people and the land, he added.
"This same pressure (for profits) affects
the farm community now. Therefore, farm-
ers are losing a sense of why we are here."
Ustrzycki challenged farmers to find
creative solutions and to build community.
Bishops will challenge urbanites to unite
with farmers because "we don't want you to
have to do it alone."
Some of this awareness will be fostered
through the promotion of a parish study
guide on The People and the Land which the
bishops hope to release this summer, he said.
Rev. Bob Bulbrook, chaplain of the
Grey -Bruce CRLC, said farmers in his asso-
ciation will be launching their own urban
awareness program this year. Farmers hope
to visit urban parishes in groups of three to
explain today's farming situation, he said.0
FOR SALE: Globe "Short Snorter"
self-contained breathing apparatus
for silos or manure pits. Best offer.
Please contact the federation office In
Hanover: 519-364-3050.