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The Rural Voice, 2006-04, Page 14Huron Lte Generator Pxo je.muusat t ft 607 rev: 9egezal4¢ Agricultural, Residential & Commercial Gas & Diesel Generator Sales, Service & Repairs Blyth (in the Radford building) Norm Rumpel Office 523-9681 Owner/Technician Home 357-1924 �� 35 yeaaa extieaieoce riirt "Our experience assures lower cost water wells" 106 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Member of Canadian and Ontano Water Well Associations • Farm • Industrial • Suburban • Municipal Licensed by the Ministry of the Environment DAVIDSON WELL DRILLING LTD. WINGHAM Serving Ontario Since 1900 519-357-1960 WINGHAM 519-664-1424 WATERLOO 10 THE RURAL VOICE John Beardsley Say it ain't so John Beardsley is a freelance journalist and crop specialist with Huron Bay Cooperative. I am normally an optimistic person by nature, but I am getting terribly depressed by what I am seeing in the provincial government's dealings with its second largest industry. I have seen how the provincial government toadies up to General Motors and other industrial businesses; how it always has enough money for factories and casinos. Why does the provincial government have to be so patronizing with the businessmen and women who have invested their time, money and lives in the agriculture industry? It is as if, deep down in their hearts, the politicians and senior bureaucrats don't truly believe agriculture is worth investing in. Leona Dombrowsky held a news conference at the Grain and Oilseed Producers' convention in March. Dombrowsky very carefully said that she has never given any sign or signal that they would proceed in any way, shape or form with the Risk Management Program. Dombrowsky won't even call it by its correct name. Dombrowsky will, if pressed, call it "a business risk management program" as if there were a whole range of options being presented. Neither the political nor the bureaucratic side of government will even discuss any type of long-term risk management plan with farm leaders. Dombrowsky will not acknowledge that the Grain and Oilseed Producers' plan is, in any way, shape or form, anything that Ms Dombrowsky will be included in her government's multi-year commitment to agriculture. So Dombrowsky seems to be saying that she has a separate plan that she is pitching to the feds. Shelling out more "emergency" funding, like a businessman to a panhandler, sends the industry the opposite message. It says that there is no long-term commitment to the agriculture industry, so you might as well avoid the rush and get those assets liquidated before the provincial government's mismanagement of this ministry causes the land prices out in the boonies to plummet. (Don't get me started on the greenbelt fiasco...) It has been said, "Rural communities cannot thrive without a healthy agricultural economy". The ironic thing is that Dalton McGuinty himself said this, when he wanted to become Premier (as quoted in www.ontarioliberal.ca/platforndrural. pdf). The provincial Liberals have lived up to very little in the rural platform, except for maybe increasing the public's cynicism for all things political. It was great seeing "Prairie Giant". CBC's documentary on the life of Tommy Douglas. It was interesting to see T. C. Douglas standing up for farmers and hearing his speech about the mythical place called "Mouseland". The problem the mice have in this not -so -fantasy land is that they keep electing cats to run their government. I guess what is really irritating is that the McGuinty Liberals have turned out to be a cat masquerading in a mouse's clothing. I truly thought Dalton McGuinty was going to be different. Before the last provincial election I attended a meeting with McGuinty and several farm families, at a dairy farm near Clinton. Dalton led us to believe that he would actually listen to farmers, because they were the experts in their