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The Rural Voice, 1998-01, Page 26Considering a Building Project? Mateial I "It ss D—E—S—I—G—N—S Bvrga 4 Your Michael Van Raay �;�, ,p -i? Home The first step. P 1?Design and to bringing ff Renovation Dreams to Reality ... Specialists •yo SEED & GRAIN CLEANING SERVICES Custom seed cleaning and treating of your own seed Commercial seed brands available from Zeneca, Cargill and Advantage Take advantage now of the early order discounts for January Custom grain cleaning for feed Truck available for pick-up and delivery Bags, totes and bulk available for both seed and feed orders Dealer inquiries welcome! Skid Steer service available, inquire on rates. BRANT SEEDS Cty. Rd. 10 N. of Hanover Phone: 519-364-1525 Fax: 519-364-3835 22 THE RURAL VOICE much complicated legal work to be done. The co-op took possession of the plant on October 8, making some changes to the facility. Finally, the producers held the ribbon cutting for their new plant on November 14. "Chicken producers will now be able to use a processing facility which they themselves own," Judge said at the opening. "We are all proud of the poultry we produce and are pleased to have this opportunity to bring our product one step closer to consumers." Though produced on chicken farms just like all other chickens, the product of the , Farm Fresh Poultry Co-operative Inc. plant will be different than most of the chicken on the market. Most chicken, after it has been killed, plucked and cleaned, is chilled in a cold water bath. In this process it actually gains weight by absorbing water. Poultry afficionados, however, often grumble that flavour is lost in the process. Farm Fresh uses a more expensive air -chilling process. This produces a premium product that often sells at higher prices. Though the bird actually loses a little weight during the air -chilling process, there's a premium for the resulting product, says Kressibucher. To sell the product, the co-op has retained some of the old staff and boosted the sales staff. The next scenario, Kressibucher says, is to increase the allocation of chicken to the plant. The 35 producers currently have quota for two million kilograms of chicken in every eight-week quota period. So far, however, only 267,000 kilograms has been allocated to the co-op, meaning the vast majority of the chickens produced by the partners goes to other plants. There is no quota for each processing plant, but the processing companies, operating under' the Association of Ontario Chicken Processors, recommends to the marketing board who gets how much chicken from each quota period. There's a move, Kressibucher says, to make this "assignment of supply" process more formal, but producers want to see the industry remain more open to new entrants so it will be competitive. Processors see being able to trade this quota just as