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The Rural Voice, 1985-01, Page 10Preparing to -morrow's rural leaders The latest project of The Foundation for Rural Living is a program designed to give the future leaders in Ontario's farming community a push in the right direction. While the good works of the well -endowed Ford and Rockefeller Foundations attract international attention, rural Ontario is much more likely to benefit from an ambitious new pro- ject sponsored by a humbler founda- tion. The intensive, two-year Advanc- ed Agricultural Leadership Program, designed to give the future leaders in Ontario's farming community a push in the right direction, is the latest pro- ject of The Foundation for Rural Liv- ing, launched in 1979. Peter Hannam of Guelph, founda- tion president and one of its founders, says the organization's mandate is "to undertake projects of a research or educational nature for the benefit of the agricultural com- munity." It's hoped that an offshoot of the foundation's educational work will be improving the reputation of agriculture in Ontario's urban com- munity. The inspiration for the foundation, which numbers farmers, academics, and agribusiness executives among its membership, came when Hannam was still president of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture. Because agribusiness and the OFA were at odds on certain issues, and because the farm organization didn't want "to be seen to be in bed with" business firms, Hannam says, "we searched for a way, a vehicle by which we could co-operate and bring a lot of resources together to benefit new projects which would benefit agriculture." The Foundation for Rural Living was the result. The foundation's membership is drawn from three areas. The Ontario Federation of Agriculture, as "an ac- tive sponsor," pays a $1,000 annual membership fee and elects three directors to the foundation's board. 8 THE RURAL VOICE Foundation patrons, who come from the agribusiness community, pay a $200 to $1,000 membership, depend- ing on their company's size, and elect three board members. Businesses belonging to the foundation include The Royal Bank, Dow Chemical, Maple Leaf Mills, Ontario Harvestore and Bell Canada. The third group of members is made up of research and rural organization experts, such as academics, rural planners, or good farmers, who are invited to join the foundation. The invited members in- clude Dr. Tony Fuller of the Universi- ty of Guelph's School of Rural Planning and Development, and Lambton County farmer (and OFA director) Jack Wilkinson. These foundation members pay a $20 an- nual fee and they must be nominated by another foundation member. Funds for the foundation's opera- tion are modest, coming from membership fees and donations by farmers, farm organizations, and agribusiness. In the long term, Han- nam says, members hope that the foundation will also be assisted by be- quests. No government money funds the foundation proper, but the On- tario Ministry of Agriculture and Food is providing some financial aid for the first advanced leadership pro- ject. In 1981, the foundation tackled its first ambitious project, funding the Ontario Federation of Agriculture's Emergency Task Force on Agri- culture. The resulting report led in- directly to the Ontario government's redirecting of $60 million from pro- vincial coffers to the short-term On- tario Farm Adjustment Assistance Program. Last February, still con- cerned with the financial problems facing the farming community, the foundation sponsored a three-day "think tank" conference called "Agriculture: Financing Our Future Opportunities." Now the foundation has launched two more projects which should have wide -reaching effects on both the rural and urban communities. The first project is the publication of a comprehensive textbook titled "Farming and The Rural Community in Ontario: An Introduction," which should be available later this winter. Edited by Dr. Tony Fuller of the School of Rural Planning and Development, Hannam says that the book is intended "as a reference manual for agriculture." Written by 20 invited authors including pro- fessors, farm leaders, and agro- logists, it can be used in high schools and universities, or by any farm leaders who want an overview of the history of Ontario agriculture. Because much of the book deals with issues facing the farming community today, Hannam says that it should also be helpful to urban residents "who want to learn more about agri- culture but don't have an opportuni- ty. ," Chapters include "Rural Farm Community Participation in Rural Planning," which is about outreach work in Huron County, "Women Strengthening The Farm Community: The Case of the Concerned Farm Women in Ontario," and a chapter on "Absentee Ownership of Ontario's Farmland." To prevent the possibility of one membership group, such as agri- business for example, controlling the selection of the foundation's pro- jects, at least one director from each membership group must approve pro-