Loading...
The Rural Voice, 2002-07, Page 58BRUCE Email:bruce@ota.on.ca 519-364-3050 or 1-800-275-9551 website::wwwwww.ota.on.ca/bruce 446 10th St., Hanover, Ontario N4N 1P9 County Federation of Agriculture NEWSLETTER • The Rural Voice is provided to Bruce County Farmers by the BCFA. Government should support family farms A recent article in the local newspaper contained the following headline "Vanclief Lashes Out During United Nations World Food Summit". Federal Agriculture Minister Lyle Vanclief said the $190 billion U.S. Farm Bill will undermine international efforts to reduce world hunger. However, in a previous article Minister Vanclief was reported as saying the United States and European support for their farmers have caused overproduction of subsidized products and driven down world prices. Common sense would have a person to believe cheaper food inputs should mean cheaper food on store shelves which should be more affordable to more of the general public. Therefore it appears Minister Vanclief is contradicting himself at a time when he should be working hard to ensure Canadian farmers are supported to level the playing field for Canadian farmers. One part of the U.S. subsidies that is very disturbing is that in the past years 90 per cent of the subsidy dollars went to 10 per cent of the farms. The new U.S. Farm Bill recently signed by President Bush has a limit of $390,000 on individual payments. I am sure that the large corporate U.S. farms will find loopholes that will allow them to collect much more. BRUCE COUNTY FEDERATION OF AGRICULTURE PLEASE NOTE: There will be NO Board of Directors' meeting in July Next meeting will be Monday, August 26, 2002 54 THE RURAL VOICE This allows multi -national companies to continue to expand and over produce. Take, for example Smithfield, the world's largest pork producer and packer. Last year Smithfield bought significant beef packing plants in the United States and is currently trying to purchase the profitable meat business from the troubled 600,000 -member Farmland co-operative in the United States. Glengarry County had a resolution presented for the Ontario Federation of Agriculture June Board of Directors' meeting asking OFA to research and document the social, economic, and human resources contributions of the independent family farm. The most accepted concept of a family farm is an independent farming unit that draws most of the labour required from the family, and in turn supplies the income necessary to'support that family. I believe that public support is definitely for this type of farming. This type of operation buys locally, supports local events including local government and organizations including churches, schools, hospitals, etc. thus enhancing our rural infrastructure. Most media articles on farm crisis refers to saving the family farm. I think it is time for our government to change its mindset of economy of scale and realize the contributions of the independent family farm. The way that existing programs currently work promotes over production, mega barns, and growth of large corporate farms. All government assistance should be used to support the independent family farm with a definite cap on the size of operation eligible for support.° — Submitted by Allan Smith OFA Regional Director Bruce West AGRICULTURAL ENVIRONMENTAL STEWARDSHIP INITIATIVE (AESI) AESI funding is available to assist farmers with rural water quality improvement initiatives in the County of Bruce. AESI is an incentive program for farmers within the sub -watersheds of Deer/Pearl Creek; Otter Creek in the Municipality of South Bruce; areas of the Teesv:ater River and includes Alps Creek, Kinlough Creek, Formosa Creek, and Greenock Creek. It allows them to undertake projects and adopt Best Management Practices (BMPs). The program is designed to improve water quality by implementing BMPs that reduce the potential for pathogen entry to surface and groundwater. Projects that can be considered for contribution by AESI include: • Livestock Restriction to Watercourse — 50 per cent fencing — 50 per cent alternate water systems — 50 per cent waterway crossings • Filtration and Buffer areas — 50 per cent planting/creating natural filtration particularly where manure runoff is a problem. (Not restricted to livestock) • Water Diversion — 50 per cent BMPs to reduce runoff from manure storage, exercise yards, leachate reduction from pit, bunk, tower silos. Divert rain water and snow melt. Controls for potential fertilizer runoff Maximum $3,000 grant per farm operator (only one operator per family is eligible.)°