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The Rural Voice, 1998-01, Page 25Workers (above) process chickens at the new Farm Fresh Poultry Co-op at Harriston (seen from the outside, below). Taking production the next step 35 chicken producers have invested in a new poultry co-operative in Harriston, part of the new breed of co-ops springing up in North America By Keith Roulston Different farmers have reacted in different ways to the continued concern over the future of supply management. For a group of 35 Ontario chicken producers, the solution has been to take control of their future by processing and marketing their own chickens. The result was the opening, in November, of the Farm Fresh Poultry Co-operative at Harriston, the first step, the group hopes, in processing all the chickens produced on their own farms. Urs Kressibucher, one of five directors on the co-op's board, says the new co-op grew out of a meeting of chicken producers in District 8 (located in the Lake Simcoe area) of the Ontario Chicken Producers Marketing Board about a year and a half ago. The producers set up a study committee to look at options for taking their products all the way to market. They called in consultant George Akalay, a former government bureaucrat who had been involved in the incorporation, regulation and development of co-operatives during his days on the govemment payroll. He had since gone out on his own, setting up Northfield Ventures Limited in Snowball (a hamlet near Aurora), a consulting company specializing in finding solutions to such farm and rural problems. He had earlier helped the Canadian Emu Co- operative organize and acquire its own processing plant. Akalay estimates he put in several hundred hours during the early stages of the project, then spent 60-70 hours a week between May and October as, the project neared completion. The first challenge, he says, was to bring the membership together and discover a shared vision of what they wanted to do. They looked at several options, from leasing a plant to entering a joint venture with existing companies. Along the way the circle of producer -members also widened beyond the District 8 originators, taking in producers from Lake Huron in the west to Simcoe and Grimsby in the south and Sterling in eastern Ontario. Eventually, he says, it became evident that the members really wanted to own their own plant 100 per cent, even if it was a smaller facility. They began to look around for a plant, requiring such utilities as municipal water and sewer services. They found Ungerman Thompson Poultry Products Inc. in IIarriston was for sale. Next, Akalay says, came negotiations for a mutually beneficial deal and putting together a credible business plan. With this in place it came time to talk to the bank. Akalay says the Royal Bank was very supportive of the idea. Still, the process was very paper intensive. (Jim Judge, the co- op's president joked that Akalay had broken his fax machine with all the documents he sent.) This was a frustrating time for the producers who are used to doing business on a handshake, backed by trust, Akalay says. Now there was JANUARY 19°R 21