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The Rural Voice, 1990-03, Page 68PERTH Paul Verkley, President, R. R. 1, Atwood NOG 1B0 356-9022 County Federation of Agriculture NEWSLETTER * The Rural Voice is provided to farmers in Perth County by the PCFA Perth Federation of Agriculture members were given an update on the changes to crop insurance at our January meeting. In 1990, crop insurance will offer additional coverage, yield buffering, trend adjustment, and hail spot loss on many crops. The number of contracts has grown steadily in Perth. There were 1,789 contracts in 1980 compared to 3,141 contracts in 1989, which is a 43 per cent growth in crop insurance use. With improvements to the crop in- surance program and the government's commitment to use only crop insurance for disaster relief, enrollment in the program will probably increase. In 1989, funding from farmers was $27.5 million. The federal government spent $27.5 million, and the Ontario governments administration costs were $6 million. In 1990, the program will be funded jointly by the provincial and federal governments, with each of them contributing approximately 27.5 per cent. The other 45 per cent will be paid by the farmer. New in 1990: you will be able to purchase additional coverage of 5 per cent or 10 per cent regardless of whether you are a first-time insurer at the 75 per cent coverage or a previous insurer with 80 per cent coverage. This could bring you to a maximum of 90 per cent cover- age. Yields have improved over the past 10 years because of technological im- provements in farming. To make aver- ages fair given that some farmers have ten years of history and some have only two years of history, crop insurance will be raising yields for a 5th to 10th -year average. Since one really disastrous year can affect your average for 10 years, crop insurance is now going to buffer exces- sively high or low yields. If one or more of your yields is 30 per cent higher or lower than your average, then that year will be adjusted on a percentage basis. Also new in 1990: crop insurance will be offering hail spot loss coverage on some crops. Farmers will be paid an assessed amount of damage from hail. This amount will be deducted from your insurable limit so you will not be able to collect double. The OFA has been pressuring for changes to the crop insurance act for some time now. These changes have been slow in coming, but we feel they are a step in the right direction and hope that over the next few years crop insur- ance programs will continue to improve, and that with higher participation from farmers we will receive better, lower- cost coverage.0 COMING EVENTS March 22 — Meeting of the Perth federation at the Downie Mutual Fire Insurance Office in Sebringville. 8:00 p.m. Update on the National Farm Women's Conference held in Saint John, N.B. February—We visited members in Blanshard and put up OFA gate signs. If you were missed, contact Agnes at 229- 6430. March — We will be around to put OFA gate signs up for all the members in Downie. The executive will be meeting with Perth County Council. The county federation will be holding its annual spring meeting with Harry Brightwell, MP, and Hugh Edighoffer, MPP. Perth County Federation of Agricul- ture office: Agnes Denham, secretary - treasurer, 229-6430 — OFA field repre- sentative office: Blaine Stephenson, 273-2032.0 and funds, academics saw an opportunity to get ad hoc funding for their little graduate student empires, industry saw an opportu- nity to update aged plants, and producers saw an opportunity to buy a pressure sprayer to clean their tractors and trucks. The lack of vision, leadership, and co- operation among all players in this program was and is appalling. It has accomplished little except the generation of a useless mass of data on which future taxpayers' monies will be spent in trying to justify the program and if possible get more funding so that little selfish empires can be continued. Even worse, OPIIP and other programs like it have lulled the industry into believing progress is being made, whereas we are losing ground at an increasing rate. The evolution of an effective industry organiza- tion capable of giving solid leadership is paramount. The unduly politically motivated struc- tures in which groups patronize each other while they protect their own self-interest are 64 THE RURAL VOICE very serious obstacles to building our future competitiveness. 4. Technical Depth The pork industry must develop its own in-house technical depth. It cannot depend on leadership from the outside. It must have the capacity to be much more self-sufficient. This means a greatly expanded in-house physical and human technical resource. The lack of adaption of competitive tech- nology is particularly disturbing. I have two colleagues, Dr. Howard Swatland and Dr. Brian Kennedy, who have developed world- class technology in carcass grading and swine breeding. These technologies have been picked up and adopted by our European competitors. We have the sad situation where Canadian pig research and develop- ment financed by Canadian taxpayers and, in particular, Ontario pork producers, is being ignored by the Canadian pork industry and used by others to compete against us. Conclusion: Our organizations and in- stitutions must adapt to emerging chal- lenges. If they do not, our pork industry will shrink to a secondary cottage industry. A total overhaul and a complete restructuring of the industry's leadership teams and the organizations and institutions through which they operate should commence immedi- ately. The world is not waiting for us.0 SULPHA RESIDUE TEST ERRORS: John de Kron, a pork producer near Dublin, had a battle going with Agriculture Canada for about six weeks this fall over sulpha residue tests. His hogs showed positive for sulpha even though he had never fed the drug to them. He checked with his feed supplier and any other possible routes and found everything passed inspection. In the end, it was found that one of the chemicals used in the sulpha test was the cause of the false posi- tives. If any producer has reason to believe he is getting false positives, contact a county or board director immediately. (Faxing generously provided by Elma Mutual Insurance, Atwood.)