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The Rural Voice, 1987-09, Page 30j°FIN RURAL LIFE WORKER KING: T by Joseph Howlett wo years ago, the United Church of Canada started a campaign called Ventures 'n Mission to raise money for special projects to be administrated by the church. One such project was the appointment of a rural life worker to the London Conference of the church in October of last year. The success- ful candidate for the position was John A. King, a dairy farmer fail., the vil- lage of Hickson in Oxford County. The basic function of a rural life worker is to offer emotional support to members of the rural community, par- ticularly farmers, who are suffering the hardships associated with tough economic times. To further this goal, King is organizing self-help groups in communities in the nine southern counties of Ontario, from Oxford to Essex, which make up the area served by the London Conference. For his work, he receives a modest stipend plus an allowance for travel. King applied for the job because he wanted to remain active after trans- ferring the responsibility of running the family farm to his two sons, and he thought he would be useful at this kind of work. Indeed, King's qualifications make him an excellent choice for the job. He is a reflective, articulate man who has worked for various agricul- tural organizations and has been very active in the United Church as well. Raised on a farm which has been in his family for four generations, King graduated from the University of Guelph in 1950 with a degree in agri- culture. He took on the job of assis- tant agricultural representative with the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food in Woodstock. After work- ing for the ministry in that capactity for two years, in Woodstock, Strat- ford, and Alliston, he returned to Hickson and bought the family farm. King has also been involved in the Ontario Federation of Agriculture, the Ontario Dairy Herd Improvement Association, and the Crop Improve- ment Association in Oxford County. In 1984-85 he was the president of London Conference, earning the distinction of being the first layman to hold that office. Before then, he was chairman of Oxford Presbytery. After almost a year as a rural life worker, King says he is somewhat disappointed by the results he has to show for all the effort he has put into the job. Often, he adds, he's frustrated inadvertently in his work by the peo- ple he is trying to help. Farmers are, as a breed, proud and independent, he notes, and even when their prospects are bleak they will not go to other members of the community or to their church for support. Moreover, King says, the ethics of his job prohibit him from approaching an individual to ask if he needs help. But even though many farmers are finding it difficult to make ends meet these days, King is optimistic about the future of farming in Canada, and suggests that farmers are not earning a decent living because of the politics involved in the production of food. What can farmers do to improve their circumstances? King tells the following story about a small group of Mexican farmers who improved their lot through a co-operative effort. When King was president-elect of London Conference, he and 11 other presidents were sponsored by the United Church to attend a workshop 28 THE RURAL VOICE