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The Rural Voice, 1987-04, Page 18getting into mass production and trying to market their product nation- ally, internationally, or even province - wide. They end up adding product lines to serve the local market rather than the big picture. They may have a unique product ... but they don't have those marketing skills." "Part of the problem ... is that there is not a strong association on the manufacturing or the processing (food processing, which the centre is also involved in) side," Boyle adds. "There are strong groups on the retail side, like ORFEDA. There is also a manufacturers' association, but basic- ally they're made up of the represent- atives of the big three or four." (see story, Small Manufacturers: Success in the West) At the centre which Boyle man- ages, technicians work on a project basis with smaller manufacturers who don't have in-house technical expertise. A provincial crown corporation, the centre is one of six originally set up in 1982 (there are now seven) to deal with various technologies. The Chatham centre has dealt with about 200 projects in its four years, Boyle reports, and has about 23 technical experts on staff — design engineers, mechanical engineers, food chemists, microbiologists. The CFIEI, "to some degree," says Brent Hamre, does represent the inter- ests of shortliners. And small indepen- dents, says Glen Peart, are welcome at ORFEDA. "In fact," he says, "we're looking very shortly at doing some- thing in a special farmstead division (for the smaller manufacturer/retailer). We'd like to put together a special insurance program — general insur- ance and also a group benefit program — that we can offer to these farmstead dealers. Our bulletin covers most of their problems, but we would get more into their particular concerns if it's a sales tax problem or a tax problem. And we're also considering doing the SMALL MANUFACTURERS: SUCCESS IN THE WEST At its recent convention, the Prairie Implement Manufacturers' Association (PIMA), which repre- sents small and medium-sized farm equipment manufacturers in the West, defeated a motion that PIMA be ex- panded into a national association, but its general manager thinks that Ontario shortline manufacturers might soon initiate their own group. And if PIMA's success is any indication, Ontario would do well to follow its lead. In fact, says general manager Ron Zimmer, the motion was defeated mostly because PIMA has been so successful. Members reason, Zimmer says, "that they have a winning com- bination and the work that we do in the West is very beneficial to them. They felt that by going East it would water down what they were receiving for the money they're putting in." But during a recent visit to Tor- onto, Zimmer says, he met with rep- resentatives on the Ontario Centre for Farm Machinery and Food Processing Technology, a crown corporation that offers technical services to smaller manufacturers, and "they're very keen on maybe getting something organized there. In fact I met with them to talk about some of the work that we do as an association." T'ne bulk of that work is lobby- ing, but the organization also offers services such as seminars and a mem- bership directory. Its members across the three prairie provinces total 153, and PIMA also has the support of 265 associate members. PIMA's convention this February marked its 18th year and 17 years of expansion as an association. "We've had tremendous growth as an organ- ization," Zimmer says, "even though the industry has been stagnant. To give you a perception of that growth, in 1980 we had 75 manufacturers as regular members. Since 1980 we've basically doubled our regular member- ship. It bodes well for the type of work that we're doing." On PIMA's list of things to do in the immediate future, for example, is working toward freer trade for the shortline manufacturing sector. "We basically do have free trade arrange- ments with the U.S. with respect to farm machinery and parts," Zimmer says. "We want that to be extended because there are some duties placed on parts and some products and wed like to see that removed." Other primary concerns, he adds, are liability insurance and the deregu- lation of transportation. PIMA's work in the prairies is carried on elsewhere by the Farm Equipment Manufacturers' Association (FEMA), which draws most of its 600 members from the U.S. but also welcomes Canadians and members from other countries around the world. Despite hard years, Zimmer says that market share for some small man- ufacturers has actually increased. Such manufacturers fill a "niche market," he notes. They're also doing well across the border. "For example, our auger man- ufacturers have been just chewing up the competition in the U.S. One of the main reasons is not only that they have quality products, but that the strong U.S. dollar has made it very attractive for exports in the U.S." They've had their casualties, Zimmer says, but the more than 300 products manufactured by PIMA members find a ready enough market. While the market for "large -ticket" items has been depressed, the products offered by smaller manufacturers — anything from truck boxes and rock pickers to soil testers and corrals — "tend not to be in a price range that farmers are shying away from." "The growth of our association and the growth of manufacturing in the West is an indication that once this recession ends — and we will get through this recession — once the good times come back to us, while we may never have the good times as we had in '79-'80, you're going to see the industry mushroom in the West, you're going to see the transformation of many of our mid-sized companies into large companies and smaller companies going into the mid-sized range. "And that may include Ontario as well."OLG 16 THE RURAL VOICE