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The Rural Voice, 1981-01, Page 17RURAL NEWS IN BRIEF Federal ultimatum a blow to Canfarm "Canfarm is in the final stages of a marketing plan that would have carried it through to its goal of financial indepen- denced in the very near future. These efforts have been dealt a severe blow by a recent decision of the Minister of Agriculture, the Honourable Eugene Whelan, not to extend further finances to Canfarm to allow it to reach this goal," said Canfarm President, Peter Hannam. "Prospects have never looked better for Canfarm," he said. "More than 300 accounting firms and bookkeepers have joined our agency program and they are counting on moving a large number of their farmer clients onto the Canfarm Service in 1981. There are strong indications that our operation in Quebec could be expanded by the addition of several thousand farmers as clients through the U.P.A. We are negotiating international licensing arrangements for use of Canfarm programs in other countries." During the last year and a half of this co-operative's two year operation of Canfarm, directors and management have regularly pointed out to the Minister that the original estimate of the capital requirement would not be enough to carry it through to self-sufficiency. Edwin Plohr is stongly opposed to further aid by the taxpayer. Plohr, who is general manager of the competing Farmfax Management Systems Ltd., said recently in a letter to the minister that his firm can provide all services Cantarm provides now, and do it better and at '/. to '/J of the cost and without any help from governm ent. On November 13, Mr. Whelan notified Canfarm that his goverment would not extend further support and that this co-operative should take immediate steps to either sell the operation or find another source of finances. The deadline given for this final step was December 31. 1980. In light of this decision, Canfarm is now developing a proposal to devote the funds the government has set aside for close -down to establishing an independ- ent and completely self-sufficient operat- ion. This plan will be presented to Mr. Whelan in the next few weeks. "But we will do everything we can to assure Canadian farmers that they will have a continuing Canfarm service," said Hannam. "This modern technological advance in farm management and record keeping is essential if Canadian farms are going to compete on the world market. All other developed countries are heavily subsidizing these services to make them available to their farmers. We cannot afford to let our farmers drop behind." John Hazlitt gets first soil conservation award John Hazlitt of R.R 4, Goderich, is the first recipient of a new Huron County soil co,nservation award, named in honour of Norm Alexander Londesboro. Hazlitt was presented with the award at the annual meeting of the Huron Soil and Crop Improvement Association, in recognition of his project of planting trees on odd shaped areas on his farm and practising conservation tillage. Association members passed a resolution at their meeting asking the Plant Products Branch to control seed companies in guaranteeing seed quality and to amend crop insurance regulations to cover grower loss due to poor seed. A second resolution approved at the meeting asked for greater funding for extension services in the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food budget. Jim O'Toole, of Centralia College, reported on proso millet, a weed which has been spreading rapidly in Huron County in the past two years. O'Toole indicated two other weeds are also becoming more common in the county - poison hemlock which appears in alfafa seeded in 1979 and Indian hemp, which resembles milkweed. 4 Thames Bend Lady 1979 Pork Congress Bred Yorkshire Gilt Back Fat 10.5 m.m. CI 2126K Champion 161 Days 136 index sEAsoivk osSETIAlcs)d Thank you to those who attended our Open House Boars, open gilts, bred gilts of Yorkshire, Hampshire, Duroc, Landrace and hybrid breeding. Government R.O.P. tested and health approved. THAMES BEND FARMS LTD. R.R.6, Woodstock, Ontario N48 7W1 519-655-2942 or 462-2704 RICHARD AND WARREN STEIN THE RURAL VOICE/JANUARY 1981 PG. 17