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The Rural Voice, 2001-12, Page 17station for all calculation.l. Incredibly, drought hit the area again that summer. Hay crops again suffered. Ellicott, who keeps historical records of every year's crop, calculated she'd harvested 66 per cent of her normal crop. Since insurance payments kick in for crops below 80 per cent of the 30 -year average, she calculated she should get a payout of about $1,400. When the Agricorp final report arrived on December 15, she was shocked to see there would be no payment. According to the computer simulation she should have received 84.9 per cent of her normal crop. At first, Ellicott remembers, she thought she was alone in her frustration, but then the grapevine started working. People began to realize that more and more people who thought they should have received payouts had been disappointed. By January the issue had started to snowball. Ellicott called together a group of people she'd come to know had received no payment despite a depleted crop and they began to realize how many farmers were in the same boat. The group soon learned about Smith and his drought relief committee, still active from the summer before and filled with unhappy Agricorp customers. The two groups came together to form a united committee. The sense of frustration after being turned down for government aid in 1998 because farmers didn't take out crop insurance, followed by a sense of injustice at not getting any payouts in 1999 fueled the anger and determination of the original group of about 20 farmers, says Blake. "People had been trying to let Agricorp know they had a problem (with forage insurance)," she says. Thus began a process that saw a group of 38 farmers fight the issue all the way to a Crop Insurance Tribunal last spring, at which they presented more than 130 pages of documentation, much of it researched and assembled by Ellicott. "Harriet did basically all the research," says Blake, who helped organize the massive amounts of research material Ellicott assembled. "If I'd known what I was getting into I'd never have gone there," she HYDRA -SPREAD vaztri=-E7sF 285 BU. — 368 BU. — 421 BU. — 465 BU. — 550 BU. Eliminate some of life's problems (like chains, worn gears, shafts 8 bearings) with HYDRA -SPREAD The Canadian alternative in spreaders. N. E. HAGEDORN & SONS LIMITED - Pa'sley, Ont. website www.manurespreader.com 1-800-707-7271 Uteindeee au Yaaae - Came toAl`4F;ot%i i.. v gaunt toeeat 544 duality. ,?eanaputr �. 2000 DURANGO SLT 4 X 4 Fully loaded including leather seats. Five passenger seating. Finished in silver, 57,400 kms. $32,995. Mint Condition 1998 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LAREDO 4 wheel drive, finished in black and grey, 87,000 kms. $19,900. 2000 GRAND CARAVAN SPORT ' Fully loaded including 3.8 L engine, quid bucket seats, rear spc'ler and more. Finished in white. Only 24,000 kms. S23,900. 1999 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER 3 L - V-6, power windows, power locks, cruise, tilt, dark glass, finished in light green, 57,000 km. $16,995. • Many others to choose from • Bank financing available O.A.C. ARTHUR CHRYSLER Q SALES aSic LEASING Hwy. #6 North, MOUNT FOREST (519) 323-1981 or 1-800-461-2632 DECEMBER 2001 13