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The Rural Voice, 1991-07, Page 14AGRICULTURAL EMPLOYMENT SERVICES Provide employment planning assistance to the agricultural industry Recruit workers for agricultural employment from across Canada Assist with worker orientation and mobility costs Promote and develop education needs for employees and employers Provide information about government employment programs OWEN SOUND WALKERTON 371-9522 881-3671 WAVW Canada CANADIAN CO-OPERATIVE WOOL GROWERS LIMITED ACCEPTING WOOL CLIPS ON CONSIGNMENT , Skirted Fleeces * Well Packed Sacks For more information contact. RIPLEY WOOL DEPOT John Farrell R.R. 3, Ripley, Ontario 519-395-5757 10 THE RURAL VOICE ODDS AND ENDS: DUCKS AND DEREGULATION Adrian Vos, from Huron County, has contributed to The Rural Voice since its inception in 1975. Ducks Unlimited (DU), the orga- nization that spends millions of dollars annually in North America to preserve wetlands, has added its voice to that of the CFFO. Both organizations are concerned that the GRIP program will cause farmers to plant from hedgerow to hedgerow. The CFFO fears addi- tional over -production. DU fears far- mers will be tempted to drain even more wetlands, valuable for both wild- life and groundwater retention for farmers, and will farm more marginal, erosion prone land, which, without the GRIP, would be unprofitable. As long as Mazankowski was at the helm of Agriculture Canada, sup- ply management was relatively safe. Bill McKnight, the new agriculture minister, doesn't have the pull of the deputy premier. To add to the threat, Mike Wilson, the advocate of dere- gulation, is now our trade minister. Maclean's magazine reports Wil- son as saying: "The world is trading. Competition is tough. We did not make it that way and we cannot wish it away," and "... There is no argu- ment of ideology here. It's reality." It's not known yet what Wilson plans to do, but rumours are surfacing that "marketing boards" must go, along with inter -provincial trade re- strictions announced in the throne speech. Both issues are closely rela- ted. All supply managed commo- dities rely on protection of provincial quota. (To address American concerns, we could rename marketing boards "marketing orders" as is done in the U.S. for peanuts, hops, and, ... yes, milk in Texas. It just may make U.S. legislators realize that they have simi- lar systems at home). Regrettably, we haven't heard Wil- son propose to let the Canadian dollar drop to its rightful value, estimated to be below 0.80 U.S. Should that hap- pen, the nation's industries, including agriculture, would experience an ex- port boom. The jobs created would be well worth the higher cost of imports, and also stop cross border shopping. Farmers have little cause to be con- cerned about the looming FTA with Mexico. That country has a land base too small to even feed its own popula- tion, let alone compete with us. Now we buy out of season vegetables and tropical fruits and nuts. Nothing indi- cates this will change, but they may buy more wheat and meat from us. Even for those farmers whose wives (or sisters) lost their jobs to low wage Mexicans, a free trade arrange- ment can't be any worse than what we have now. Fleck industries of Huron Park, the often quoted example, moved out long before free trade. Before plowing this fall, farmers should take a good look at conserva- tion tillage. Until now, many wanted to adjust to the new realities but were reluctant to buy new, expensive equipment. This need no longer be the case. SWEEP reports farm tests with moldboards cut by 75 per cent, show old plows can do the job. The controversy about methane belching cattle is not going to stop. The environmental fundamentalists will suck to their dogma like any other fundamentalist, despite evidence to the contrary. For those with an open mind, the following calculation. In Bruce county, a 100 acre pasture feeds 100 cows and calves for six months. During that time the grass produces enough oxygen for 69,700 people, according to figures from the Professional Lawn Care Association and DowElanco. Each cow and calf unit looks after the oxygen needs of 2,323 people for six months, or 1,162 people a year. At the same time, the pasture absorbs an equivalent amount of carbon dioxide, the stuff which is, along with methane and other gases, causing the greenhouse effect.0