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The Rural Voice, 2002-07, Page 12CANADA STEELY SERVICE CENTRE INC. - 479 MacEwan Street, Goderich • N7A 4M1 - YOUR LOCAL SUPPLIER ISO 9002 REGISTERED FOR YOUR STEEL REQUIREMENTS Beams, Rounds, Hot & Cold Finished Rounds & Bars, Channel, Reinforcing Steel, Square Tubing, Angles, Flat Bar. Expanded Metal, Bar Grating, Matt's for Concrete Work, Primed Beams & Lintels, Stainless Steel and Aluminum Please Call: TOLL FREE: 1-888-871-7330 PHONE: (519) 524-8484 FAX: (519) 524-2749 C , - erth Dust Control Applies Environmentally Friendly Dust Suppressant Great for parking lots, driveways, constructions sites, farm lanes, etc. • NO LEACHING • NO CHLORIDE • NO RUST • NO OIL Non-toxic and non -corrosive. Increases the load bearing capacity of all roads and creates a tightly bound surface that improves traction and skid resistance. Approved by the Ministry of the Environment, Canada Food and Agriculture and the Ministry of Transportation. It provides the safest most effective dust control available. Perth Dust Control uses versatile, calibrated equipment that ensures a hard, durable surface. We can apply close to buildings • of wherever you need it. For a Free Estimate Call STEVE KUEPFER RR 1, 'Newton, ON (519)595-8025 Mobile (519) 272-5296 Fax (519) 525-4441 24 hr. Personal Answering Machine 8 THE RURAL VOICE Jeffrey Carter Pork industry's direction unclear Jeffrey Carter is a freelance journalist based in Dresden, Ontario. It wasn't all that many years ago that the marketing of hogs in North America was a democratic exercise. Farmers with pigs had a good idea of the price on any given day. It didn't matter all that much,if they were big operators or small. The going price was the going price. Things have changed. Today, no knows what the average price a pig sells for is. A veil of secrecy has been drawn over the industry.• In Ontario, provincial directors with the "marketing board" are reluctant to speak their minds publically. Cooperative marketing is purely a voluntary exercise. Most producers chase contracts. Just who are the winners in all this? The traditional producers — smaller family operators — must face wild swings in the marketplace. They haven't asked for this system. In fact, many of their number were against it. And what about the larger producers, like the folks who own Premium Pork? Time will tell as far as their profitability is concerned. Meanwhile, I think they must contend with a fair amount of stress. There's all that debt to consider and they may not be the most popular people in the countryside. The packing industry is still looking for stability in the marketplace. Their margins must not be prodigious, considering industry consolidation and the downward pressure on workers' wages. There's a new group that's emerged in the last few years. The middlemen are back, the drovers of the new millennium, moving pigs from Canada to the United States. Drover may be a term with a negative connotation in farm circles but the drovers of 50 years ago played a similar role as today's brokers and others who facilitate sales. Their potential for profit is related on their ability to move pigs, not the market price. Setting aside the retail industry for the moment, just the public is left to consider. Pork is certainly affordable for the vast majority of North Americans but in a roundabout way there's still a tradeoff. For any member of the public living near a large pork operation this becomes obvious. It's far less obvious to people out of smelling distance. Nutrient loading in the environment is a growing problem. At least that seemed to be the unspoken consensus at the National Conference Nutrient Management held in Waterloo earlier this year. There may be technological solutions to the manure problem but there's at least one other concern North Americans should be concerned with: the growing concentration within the hog industry. There's far fewer pig farmers, just a handful of packers, and the distribution/retail sector in both Canada and the U.S. is controlled by a surprisingly small number of players. Doug Maus of the brokerage firm M&F Trading suggests that the pork industry in North America may follow the same route as the meat chicken industry and become controlled from the top down. Seems a strange place to go, in a society that supposedly believes in a free and open marketplace.0 The Rural Voice welcomes your opinions for our Feedback letters to the editor column. Mail to: The Rural Voice, PO Box 429, Blyth, ON NOM I HO