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The Rural Voice, 1982-04, Page 27INN VOICE OFA FARMER Notes of aggravation by Adrian Vos When defenders of the Ontario government's agricultural budget discuss the Tile Drainage Loan program, they always give the impression that the government. in their innate goodness, give some 530 million annually to hard-pressed farmers so the latter's land will be worth more money. This is simply not true. It is a LOAN program and the money returns to the treasury to be lent again. There is some subsidy in the low interest part of the program, which, I was told, amounts to about 57 million annually, a quarter of the total ,...' amount. _ When the milk committee presented their brief to the Huron federation's MP Dinner. they claimed that for the last four years the supply had been in balance with demand. That is a moot point. By fixing prices, the balance is automatically destroyed because price is the pivot of the scale. Without price fixing, supply would always be in balance of demand. because demand increases when price decreases. Farmers are just as great in defending their position as the oil companies and the doctors. So did, at the same meeting, the representative of the egg producers claim that supply management was responsible for a decease in the relative price of eggs. That is, of course, false. If the price would be higher without supply management the whole hassle about quotas would be unnecessary. The question is, how much would the price have dropped without quotas. Defenders of quota are on much stronger ground when they advance the other argument, that there wouldn't be an egg or broiler industry without the protection a supply management system gives. They really don't need far-fetched, hard -to - defend arguments. Why did the representative have to claim that under supply management subsidies are not necessary, when the dairy industry gets 5300 million annually? And by fixing prices, isn't that also a subsidy paid for by the user of eggs? They'd be better off to stick to simple facts. That's good enough for most of us It was a sad moment when Bob Eaton told the farm commodity people at that Huron meeting that he would support legislation against foreign absentee ownership, if it could be shown that it is a cause for higher farm prices. Preservation of our heritage doesn't seem to mean anything anymore His opinion was supported by reeve Simon Hallahan of East Wawanosh township, who said he couldn't care less who owned the land, as long as he can rent if from them at six per cent of its value. It appears our people have been away too long from their old countries, and have forgotten what it is to be a tenant farmer. Farmer/writer Adrian Vos likes to be provocative, "to make people think... they don't have to agree". He welcomes comment and suggested column topics from readers. W.D. HOPPER & SONS Water Well Drilling ' erl R.R. 2 Seaforth Members of the Ontario Water Well Assoc. • Prompt Reliable Service • Free Estimates • 5 Modern Call Collect Neil Seaforth 527-1737 Durl Seaforth 527-0828 Rotary Rigs James Seaforth 527-0775 'Where Hopper Goes The Water SINCE 1915 Flows' H. KUNTZ MANUFACTURING INC. Gates, Feeders & Equipment Ontario's Quality Green Line Made from high tensile steel tubing and "dip" painted to last years and years. All items mig welded for superior strength. ,u m Cholce of spear or fork front or rear Mount Rugged 8' dia. Feeds 18 head. Also available In Tombstone 1 r style. Made from 1" Sq High Tensile steel tubing. Welded hanger ferrules and optional spring loaded latch o ve trouble-free service. Available to 20' lengths and weight 9'/2 lbs. per toot. H. Kuntz Manufacturing Inc. 46 Isabella St., St. Jacobs, Ontario (519) 664-2820 NOB 2Nu THE RURAL VOICE/APRIL 1982 PG. 25