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The Rural Voice, 2001-07, Page 191 sustainable approach because that way we could always get better. We rely on a voluntary effort by every farmer, back that up with a good educational component, and after that was exhausted, we could always go to a regulatory approach for some areas that needed some consistenity or areas where a voluntary approach simply wouldn't work. We thought these would be very minimal and so far we're been proven right." The other ongoing issue has been water quality, specifically high nitrate levels, Verkley says. "You can't grow crops with 10 parts per million (ppm) in the root zone and yet for drinking water, you have to be under 10 ppm (of nitrates)." Farmers are on the front line of this issue with problems showing up in their wells first. Though pathogens like E. coli are also a concern, not as much was known about the dangers in the early '90s so the OFEC looked at the nitrogen problem, feeling if they could find the ways nitrates made their way into wells, it would also point the way to how bacteria Farmers are in the front line of infected water wells could infect the groundwater. Ontario didn't have the livestock density in the early '90s that parts of Europe and the U.S. did and didn't , have many regulatory restrictions. The groups set out to make sure things stayed that way. "We didn't want to be the ones to have to say in any given watershed 'there's too many animals here, the natural system can't cope, you have to start getting rid of them'. That was going to put a lot of strain on some farmers," he remembers. "We decided that kind of decision would be done by government. It was not going to be up to farm organizations to impose controls on a farm -by -farm basis. "We decided we could handle this through the proper nutrient management strategy. The real pillar of our nutrient management strategy is that we want sustainable production — and sustainable production is long-term, viable farming. You grow the crop, you 5000 TWENTY Series Tractors 45- TO 75 -PTO HORSEPOWER More comfort, more control, more everything LOADED WITH FEATURES Choose the 45- to 75 -PTO horsepower straddle mount, isolated open operator station, or cab model that's right for you. Exciting new advantages give you more convenient controls, a quieter operator environment, easier loader hookup, and enhanced safety features. You can equip these tractors with a broad range of implements and attachments to meet your needs. Loaders, rotary cutters, box scrapers, tillage implements — there's virtually no end to what you can attach to a new 5000 TWENTY Series Tractor, ELMIRA FARM SERVICE (2000) LTD. Elmira 519-669-5453 Ospringe 519-833-9332 LMS Listowel 519-291-5390 IVAN J.H. CARMICHAEL LTD. Chatsworth 519-794-2480 C!, JOHN DEERE HURON TRACTOR LTD. Exeter 519-235-1115 Blyth 519-523-4244 RR 4 Thamesford 519-285-3845 DAVE HOLLIDAY LTD. Mount Forest 519-323-1340 .mn JULY 2001 15