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The Rural Voice, 1991-10, Page 58BRUCE County Federation of Agriculture NEWSLETTER 44610th St., Hanover, Ontario N4N 1 P9 519-364-3050 • The Rural Voice is provided to Bruce County farmers by the BCFA. IT'S GREAT TO SEE ALL FARMERS ARE WORKING TOGETHER AGAIN The dust may have settled on the "Line in the Dirt" meeting in Lucknow, but the storm remains. For anyone that was at that meeting, the frustration was evident in farmers from all commodity groups. To the farmers of the province, it was a breath of fresh air to go to a meeting where there was unanimous support for a comon cause. Just to offer "congratulations" to the organizing farmers hardly seems sufficient. The fruits of their efforts may never be fully appreciated, but they can be assured it gave the farm leaders of this province renewed vigour in the fight for the fam- ily farm, and fora better deal for the men and women that work the land. For someone who, for many years, has been pushing for farmers to unite, it was an evening that has been a long time in coming. From cash crop to dairy, hogs to beef, the message was the same: we need our governments to respond to the dire straights in which many farmers now find themselves. We need to put an end to policies which are continuing to erode the very foundaiton upon which this country was built. "Where do we go from here?" is a question many farmers are asking. If there was ever a time to put your trust in the elected farm leaders of this province, it is now. There is no doubt the role of leadership for the likes of Roger George, president of the Ontario Fed- eration of Agriculture, becomes ever more important. For it is up to him, the executive members of the OFA, and the leaders of the commodity groups, to- gether ith all other interested parties, to carry the ball on behalf of Ontario farm- ers. This does not, however, relinquish the responsibility of Ontario farmers to accept their role in the future of the industry. Elmer Buchanan, Ontario Minister of Agriculture and Food, in his opening address at this year's International Plow- ing Match in Lambton, spoke of his gov- emment being open to discuss and to 54 THE RURAL VOICE listen to new visions and innnovations for the agricultural industry. If we are to see true benefits for the future, we must act in a unified manner for the good of our industry. We must not allow Mr. Buchanan's invitations to go unansw- ered. Likewise, he and his counterparts must consult with those who have the ultimate stake in changes —farmers. The Ontario government just an- nounced an interim payment under GRIP for this fall of some $93 million. There is no doubt this will be useful for those devastated by this year's abysmal prices. However, we can not sit smugly back and think this provincial govern- ment has come to the aid of our farmers, as this is nothing more than a loan from next year. This government must accept their responsibility for the farmers of this province. We hear only hollow promises, and the continuing rhetoric of the cupboards are bare. These are the same cupboards that found millions for the people to keep an inefficient mining company going in Northern Ontario, the same cupboards that are considering the infusion of mil- lions to keep an aircraft manufacturer afloat. Have they not yet learned, if your back is breaking, it is not worth treating a bruise on your knee. The family farm in this province is breaking — we are the backbone. You don't treat a symptom without address- ing the cause. Our industry is respon- sible for one in five jobs. If the people want jobs, then they can not ignore the farmers. We must all be vigilant and maintain the pressure on our elected govern- ments. We will not be held out to the winds of global trade, just to satisfy the egos of some of our leaders who believe we shall be the shining example of how world trade shall be conducted. To believe the U.S. or EEC will abandon their farmers by cutting out their rural social programs, is to believe in tooth fairies. A big round of applause to the farm- erss of this province: finally it appears we are working together. In the words of Roger George: "individual freedoms require collective action." Now to fix that breaking back! This country was built by farmers. I wonder if it's time we took a role in re -building it? The United Farmers movement was a significant political force ... think about it.0 NISA OATI - Ontario Agricultural Training Institute Courses will be held in Bruce/Grey Counties for anyone interested starting in October. Will explain the concepts and completion of the NISA application. Recommend for all who wish to understand the program. Will require registration. Please call the OFA office at 364-3050 or Tony Morris at 367-2136. BCFA REGIONAL MEETING October 3, 1991 8:00 p.m. OMAF Boardroom, Walkerton Guest Speaker: Bill Weaver OFA 2nd vice president BCFA Directors' Meeting Monday, Oct. 28, 1991 OMAF Boardroom, Walkerton 8:00 p.m. Members are welcome to attend