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The Rural Voice, 1986-02, Page 571 KEITH ROULSTON Always on the defensive All the talk about the pros and cons of free trade has most Cana- dians bewildered and not knowing what it all means. For farmers it means one thing though, that the very instruments farmers have come up with to keep them in business, are under attack again. Farmers who belong to com- modity groups that don't have marketing controls must wonder if there's any sense trying to get agreement for more orderly marketing if the whole thing will be torn apart by government negotiators trading off agriculture for industry again (like they have so many other times). Meanwhile, those groups, such as the feather industry and the dairy industry (who already have marketing boards), are likely to be so busy defending themselves they will, once again, be diverted from need- ed reforms. If your neighbour is criticizing your kids all the time, you're likely to stand up for them and ignore their faults even if you know they have plenty. There are plenty of things wrong with our current marketing boards but they have been under attack so much of the time that farmers belonging to them, haven't had the time to ex- amine the faults and try to remedy them. Chief among the faults is the ever -escalating cost of quota in controlled market items that is do- ing just the opposite to what it was intended to do. Quota was sup- posed to keep the family farm in business and it has helped. But as current producers get older, we see more and more that the high price of quota is only postponing a pro- blem. What young farmer can hope to buy quota, cows, buildings, land, and machinery these days and turn a profit in dairy? On the other side of the coin, often, the most valuable asset an existing farmer has is his quota. If all else fails, he can sell his quota, get a fair chunk of cash and either go into some other kind of farming (thereby creating surplus produc- tion there) or get out of the business altogether. When they sell, the chances are the only buyer they can find is an operator getting larger reinvesting profits, and thus centralizing the industry more and diminishing the number of family farms. Farmers who want to see the future, can look at the other end of the quota business in dairy. When the milk marketing board was formed, there were little cheese factories and dairies all over our area. Many were immediately caught in a quota squeeze that saw them having to buy more quota just to get the same amount of milk they had previously been get- ting. Soon, many of the operators realized that the most valuable thing they had was their quota and they began selling it to big, often multi -national companies. Today, all those little dairies and most of those little cheese factories and creameries are gone and with them the jobs in our communities, lessening the benefit of agriculture to our own economies. Unless something isn't done about high quota values, the same kind of drastic result in controlled commodity sectors is inevitable. The marketing boards should be looking at solutions that will phase out open bidding on quota and put it back in the hands of the marketing board itself to be loaned out for the lifetime of the farmer. It must be a solution that doesn't penalize those who have a big in- vestment in quota they've already bought. It's a big problem and it must be tackled but if farmers are always preoccupied in defending themselves, they can't get on with finding the solution. What farmers need right now is a little peace.C7 Keith Roulston is the originator and former publisher of The Rural Voice. ATTENTION Commercial Pork Producers: In March of 1984. we began the purchase o1 purebred Landrace gilts from Tony Vandendool. Clinton and purebred York boars from Bodmin Ltd.. Brussels. both of which are rated "Excellent" under the Ontario Herd Health Policy We are using the facilities of Bev Brown. Bluevale. plus our own barn at Wingham Our health status is rated "Excellent" under the Ontario Herd Health Policy. Our average carcass index is 107 A select number of these F-1 Landracelvork gilts are available Enquiries are welcome Please call 357-2096 (home) or 335-3182 (barn) anytime SANDY & SUSAN FAIR FAIR FAMILY FARM R.R. 4, Wingham — 519.357.2096 hisex 11# DAY OLD CHICKS and STARTED PULLETS from FISHER POULTRY FARM INC. AYTON.ONT. NOG 1C0 519.665.7711 SCOTT DRAINAGE WATER MANAGEMENT SPECIALISTS • DRAIN TILE SYSTEMS • EROSION CONTROL STRUCTURES • FREE ESTIMATES SCOTT BROS. CONTRACTING COMPANY LTD., RIPLEY, ONT. 519-395-2992 Tile Drainage FEBRUARY 1986 55