The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1972-06-15, Page 17FORD • • • •
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WHEN IT COMES TO
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HARVESTERS
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Tractors
Equipment
Marketing agreement detail
concerning the 1972 crop of
Ontario winter wheat has not yet
been settled according to a
release this week by the Ontario
Wheat Producers' Marketing
Board.
Board secretary-manager, K.
A. Standing said negotiations
proceedings between the
marketing board, dealers and
processors have ground to a halt
after two sessions with just a
little more than a month left prior
to harvest,
The main obstruction to set-
tlement involves an issue being
pressed by the dealer
representatives concerning
licencing of farm operators as
dealers in wheat.
Ironically, the issue is not a
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indirect and immediate benefits
through price increases to those
producers and areas that do not
need to adjust fowl holdings at
the same time providing direct
assistance to those which do, the
minister said.
culled from laying flocks
normally go to canners and
processors. Producers will have
to provide proof of sale to a
registered poultry processing
plant or .a recognized certificate.
of disposal in order to collect the
subsidy.
liens
AUTHORITY GOES ON TOUR — Members of the Bayfield-Ausable Conservation Authority enjoyed a
tour of the Bayfield River watershed, Thursday afternoon. Shown during the afternoon are Authority
chairman Bill Amos, area representatives, Ted Pooley, Exeter; Bill Cochrane, Grand Bend, Fred Dobbs,
Exeter and resources manager Roger Martin. T-A photo
Winter wheat marketing
negotiations grind to halt
Egg
A minimum price to egg
producers in Ontario, Quebec and
Manitoba has been announced
and a quota system for producers
is in the offing.
The moves are part of a
program designed to stabilize
the troubled Canadian egg in-
dustry and eliminate egg sur-
pluses.
As of June 12, the Ontario Egg
and Fowl Producers' Marketing
Board wil establish each week
minimum prices that egg grading
stations must pay to producers in
Ontario. The price established for
this week is grade A extra large,
30 cents; A large, 28 cents; A
medium, 22 cents and A small, 12
cents.
Ontario Agriculture Minister
William Stewart said this week
the establishment of the base
price is the first of a series of
moves by the Ontario Egg and
Fowl Producers' Marketing
Board which will ultimately see
the implementation of most of the
recommendations of the royal
commission into the egg industry
headed by Judge James F. W.
Ross of Thunder Bay.
The commission in April,
called for a hurried im-
plementation of sales quotas
without going to the producers for
a vote.
Mr. Stewart said the base price
was "hammered out" last Friday
by Manitoba, Ontario and
Quebec.
In another move to cut the egg
surplus federal Agriculture
Minister H. A. Olson offered
producers a subsidy of 90 cents a
bird if the producers slaughter an
extra million hens in the next six
weeks.
The rate of subsidy goes down
with extension of that period and
will drop to 45 cents a bird if the
target is not reached in eight
weeks.
The purpose of the program is
to thin out egg-laying flocks and
bring production closer to market
requirements.
Mr. Stewart said he went to
Ottawa last Monday and obtained
an extension of the Ontario Egg
and Fowl Producers' Marketing
Board's powers. The board in the
past has been primarily a
promotional agency.
Mr. Stewart said that he ex-
pects a quota system for Ontarip
producers will be introduced by
mid-August or Sept. 1.
He said he expects the quota
will mean a reduction in
production of about 10 percent
per producer:
"Even with the reduction
Ontario will still produce 38.6
percent of all the eggs in
Canada," Mr. Stewart said.
Mr. Stewart said that
producers will pay 10 cents a
crate to egg grading stations,
The money will go into a
stabilization fund administered
by the egg board. It will be used
to buy up surplus eggs, which are
then sent to egg breaking plants.
The eggs are then turned into egg
melange for commercial use.
Mr. Stewart said Ontario is
producing 95,000 to 97,000 cases of
eggs a week, resulting in a sur-
plus of 3,000 to5,000cases perweek,
The incorporation of the royal
commission's suggestions
without a vote of producers has
been a contentious issue but Mr.
Stewart said he has yet to receive
a letter of complaint.
vote collapsed, the royal com-
mission was established in
September.
Mr. Stewart said he expects the
500-hen figure will he used as a
dividing line between producers
who will be affected by the new
plan. Those under 500 hens will
likely be exempt.
Mr. Stewart said British
Columbia is also establishing a
base price for eggs, A week ago,
it was charged that eggs from
British Columbia were being sold
in Ontario at 25 cents a dozen,
Some of the principal
recommendations by the royal
commission were:
• Producers with fewer than
500 hens be excluded from the
sales quota system.
o A legal limit should be set on
the number of eggs that may be
marketed by one individual or
corporation,
e Quotas be allocated obi the
basis of recent egg sales and
capacity of facilities,
o An appeal system be created
to deal with unfair quota
allocations,
o Serious consideration be
given to not permitting sales of
quotas.
o A system of minimum weekly
prices to producers be introduced
as part of the sales quota
program,
In the Commons Thursday
Huron MP Robert McKinley,
chairman of the Conservative
caucus committee on
agriculture, estimated over
production of eggs in Canada at
10,000 to 15,000 cases a week.
In answering Mr. Olson's
announcement, Mr. McKinley
said there would have to be a
cutback if producers are to make
a decent living.
In his statement to the
Commons, Mr, Olson said the
program was arranged after
successful talks with the
provinces and producers. An
essential part of the program will
be that the provinces will indicate
to individual 'producers what
flock adjustments they need to
make, or provide a basis on
which the producers can estimate
what adjustments are necessary.
He also noted that producer
organizations have set a target
date of Nov. 1 for establishment
of a national egg marketing
agency.
Ordinarily egg producers
market 250,000 laying hens a
week, They will have to nearly
double that in the next six weeks
to be eligible for the 90-cents-a-
bird subsidy, If it takes them
eight weeks to reach the million
hen target, the subsidy will be 75
cents a bird, and if the target is
not reached in eight weeks, the
subsidy will be only 45 cents.
The program is designed to
stimulate rapid adjustment in
fowl numbers, thus providing
R.R. 2 DASH WOOD, ONT.
• PHONE 238-2481
GRAND BEND
Trying to stabilize industry
legal factor in the terms of the
negotiated agreement but is
being wedged into negotiations
particularly by the dealer body
representing country elevators.
Licencing as explained by Mr.
Standing is under authority of the
Farm Products Marketing Board
and in recent months several
farm operators have made ap-
plication for dealer licences, a
practice not previously ex-
perienced to any great extent.
Mr. Standing said the issue is to
be discussed at a meeting of
negotiating representatives of all
three sides and officials of the
Farm Products Marketing Board
next week.
In the meantime Mr, Standing
advised that in accordance with
the governing legislation and
because deadline fornegotiations
has passed, the markethig
board at a meeting held June 7
appointed board members and
past board chairman, Mr. James
O'Shea, RR 3, Granton, as board
arbitrator when arbitration
proceedings are held.
Mr. Standing said it is hoped
the matter can be settled' next
week in order for necessary
detail to be worked out
preparatory for new crop sales by
producers.
Under terms of the Ontario
Wheat Producers' Marketing
Plan the negotiating committee
is empowered to adopt or settle
by agreement:
(a) minimum prices for wheat,
or for any class variety or grade
of wheat, including discounts and
premiums respecting the
moisture content of wheat;
(b) terms, conditions and
forms of agreements relating to
the producing or marketing of
wheat; and
(c) any charges, costs or ex-
penses relating to the production
or marketing of wheat.
The new crop year begins July
1st and early estimates placed
seeded acreage last fall at
405,000, 8 percent above seeded
acreage the year previous and
with little winter or spring
weather damage it is expected
this years crop will turn out
approximately 16 million
bushels,
Ready Mix
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He said the new plan will be
incorporated without a vote.
Mr. Stewart said there are 1,300
to 1,500 producers in the province
with more than 500 hens each and
about the same amount with
under 500 hens,
One of the problems egg
producers encountered last
summer when a vote was at-
tempted on an egg marketing
plan was a controversy over who
was eligible to vote. When the
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Times-Advocate, June 15, 1972
Page 15
quota system. is near