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The Rural Voice, 1990-12, Page 32AGRICULTURAL EMPLOYMENT SERVICES Provide employment planning assistance to the agricultural industry Recruit workers for agricultural employment Assist worker orientation and transportation Promote good employment standards Provide information about government employment programs OWEN SOUND WALKERTON 371-9522 881-3671 HURON BRUCEFIELD ONTARIO NOM 1JO AgVise. Mervyn J. Erb Agronomist Independent Crop Consultant TELEPHONE: (519) 233-7100 MOBILE: (519) 661-9451 If you are considering the purchase of land in Manitoba, there are many bargains available - some with excellent terms. However, as with all things, buyer beware. Corn, white beans, pinto beans, sunflowers, lentils, potatoes, flax, canola, wheat and barley, are all cropping possibilities. Excellent renters can be found and operator share crop arrangements can be made. If I can be of service, please call.CROP PfmFIT STRATEGIES 28 THE RURAL VOICE I'M FED UP TO HERE! by Mervyn Erb Sometimes I think an "open - season" for just one day is what's needed. This year, I'd bag the mangy carcass of a guy named William Johnson, who happens to be a columnist for the Montreal Gazette. An article of his entitled "Farmer's gain is Con- sumer's loss" appeared in the October 17 issue of the London Free Press. Like those of his ilk, he be- lieves that anything food producers gain is a loss to them- selves. It's not enough that Canadian consumer's have one of the lowest food costs in the world — now they want food to be free! Well I'm sick and tired of it. We've been fooling ourselves, convincing each other to be nice to consumers. Let's educate them. Let's get them down on the farm. Enough is enough. In his scathing column, Johnson insulted every farmer and his family in the country — every farmer who holds down an off -farm job so he can generate enough income to pay his farm expenses — every farm wife who does double duty, running the kids to the babysitter every morning so she can hold down a day job besides doing the farm work when she gets home at night, only to see her hard-earned paycheck get eaten up to help make machinery repairs. Johnson says farmers and their families make up less than five per cent of the population of Canada. Also, that Canadians are made to "cough up" money for the minister of agriculture's extravagant generosity to farmers for programs which ensure that Canada will continue to have far more farmers than it needs. Johnson also contends that Canada's GATT proposals are timid when it comes to our domestic market, which affects all Canadian consumers. He also says the current proposals would leave almost intact Canada's so-called (his own wording) "supply management programs, which practically exclude foreign producers of milk from the Canadian market, thus ensuring that inefficient Canadian farm producers will be guaranteed a quota of production at higher than free-market prices." Johnson continued " ... that Canada will continue to have an excessively expensive agriculture until politicians are made to respond to consumers' interests." That's it! That's the last straw! I'm fed up to here with consumer watchdog groups; Greenpeacers, animal rights activists, environmentalists, artsie-fartsies, and any others who want to stick their nose into my business. They are crying with their mouths full. I'm told that each farmer in Canada feeds 96 people. I want to know who's feeding William Johnson. Stop it, will you. The way he talks, I thing he'd be happier eating someplace else — maybe Bucharest or Baghdad!O 1