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The Rural Voice, 1979-09, Page 25RuraiNews in Brief "Public policy needed to save farmland." Private concern is not enough to "save the agricultural land we so desperately need," said Dr. Robert Hoover, president of the Preservation of Agricultural Lands Society (PALS). Public policy is needed, said the profes- sor of urban studies at Brock University in St. Catharines. The province has left the protection of agricultural land in the hands of local municipalities, he said, but those munic- palities are interested in expanding their tax base - and that means urban and industrial expansion. PALS was developed in the Niagara area when the regional government threatened to take 23,000 acres of prime farmland and turn it into residential and industrial development within urban municipalities, he told the annual convention of the National Farmer's Union in July. Both urban and rural people in the Niagara area joined together to fight this proposal, he said, and it was the effort of both these groups that impressed the provincial politicians. "In a society where votes count, we need the efforts of city and country people together to save the needed farmland," said Dr. Hoover. Members of PALS have raised $40,000 in order to take their case to court via a lawyer. Another $15,000 is needed, he said. The group is opposing a new network of highways that would travel through land that the society wants to save. Blue mould hits half of tobacco crop About one-half of Ontario's tobacco crop has been affected by blue mould, a fungus which spreads by spores and is increased under humid or wet conditions at temper- atures below 16 degrees Celcius. The hardest hit areas are from Tillson- burg to Simcoe, in Oxford, Norfolk and Brant counties. Insurance pay -outs are expected to run between $50-$100 million, depending on whether the spread of the disease exceeds the present damages of half the 230 -million pound tobacco crop in the province. The infection first appears as yellowish spots on the upper surface of the leaves of the plant, and later, a bluish -grey growth appears on the underside of the leaf and spores are produced. This particular strain of fungus is not likely to affect possible host vegetables such as tomatoes, peppers, and eggplant. Other vegetables are not susceptible to the tobacco blue mould fungus. Powers of corn marketing agency debated between OFA and NFU Getting the Ontario Federation of Agri- culture and The National Farmers Union to agree on a corn marketing agency in Ontario is like "breeding a horse to a cow," said Robert King of R.R.2 Rodney. There appears to be little or no chance that the two groups will concur about the powers of a corn marketing agency, Mr. King said after his presentation to the annual convention of the Ontario region of the NFU. The NFU wants an agency that controls the sale of corn produced in the province; the OFA is opposed to any controls over marketing. Both do agree, however, that any agency should do some work finding markets and recommending prices for corn. A meeting between the corn committees of the two organizations failed, he said, and a future meeting seems doubtful. The Minister of Agriculture has the power to appoint a corn commission for the province, but has not done so, even though the NFU requested one, said Mr. King. Chairman of the the NFU committee, Mr. King wants a vote by corn producers with three options: elect a Board, appoint a board, or leave things as they are. Unanimous approval was given to this suggestion by NFU members during annual district meetings,he said. During the collection of signatures, said Mr. King, corn producers expressed the following: they are quite wary of establish- ing another marketing board, they like the idea of having a corn board with the power to price corn and impose import controls, they are violently opposed to market value quotas for corn, and Canadian corn should be Canadian priced and reflect Canadian production costs. THE RURAL VOICE/SEPTEMBER 197B PG. SS