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The Rural Voice, 1987-11, Page 22time, he says, if he wishes to supplement his income by teaching, he should have the option to do so while retaining the status of farmer. "I see it as irrelevant, frankly, the fact that I have an off -farm job ... I put out as much food off my land as some full- time farmers do." "As a farmer, I put a pile of money into the economy, and I don't think I should be treated any differently. In fact, I think we (part-time farmers) are the majority of farmers." (In Canada, 150,000 commercial farms produce Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food Jack Riddell almost weekly for 18 months to protest his ineligibility for the Ontario Family Farm Interest Rate Reduction program (the Whit- more's make too much off -farm in- come to qualify) and other govern- ment policies. "It does not make sense for government policy to move farmers off the land when the rural infra- structure is already in place. There are homes, schools, churches, arenas, and ball parks already in our rural Murray Clarke, Grey federation president: "It's becoming more of a fact all the time that a significant portion of our food comes from the part-time farmer and I believe we need all farmers joined together ... if we are to achieve price for product and our just returns." more than 80 per cent of our food. An additional 168,000 farms are operated as part-time ventures. In terms of Ontario, one-half of the approximately 80,000 census farms produce less than three per cent of the total agricultural commodities, and their operators essentially derive all their income from non-farm employment.) But part-time or not, Whitmore believes strongly that farmers must command a fair price for their product. "I don't see why my colleagues here at the school," he notes, "should eat cheaply off my back." "There really is no cheap food. They pay very high taxes to support the subsidies to business and agri- culture as well as the welfare mill. When you underpay your natural resources, the lost income has to be made up somehow — hence debt, printed money, and high taxes." Anyone, Whitmore says, who is living on the farm and working it should be treated as a farmer — a definition that excludes absentee landowners who, he says, destroy the community. In the name of part-time farmers, Whitmore has written to communities. Why destroy them? I can't understand why no one has wondered why food banks and home- less people in our cities became a real- ity at the same time that the underpay- ing of agricultural products became a crisis. And isn't it funny that they can raise the minimum wage in spite of unemployment while the return from a bushel of corn isn't even close to minimum wage — machinery prices have come down or manufacturers have gone out of business because a bushel of corn at $2 won't buy the production of a $4 minimum wage." Whitmore also objects to Section 31 of the Income Tax Act, which requires (although it has been said that there are loopholes) not only that a farm show a reasonable expectation of profit (or no loss is deductible), but restricts a part-time farmer's loss claim to $5,000 in aggregate per year. Full-time farmers can deduct the full amount of farming loss against all other income without restriction. But other business ventures and invest- ments, Whitmore says, are not similarly restricted, and the restriction amount is unrealistic in view of the high capitalization and risk of farming in 1987. Add to that, he says, the fact that the Farm Credit Corporation wouldn't lend him money as a part-time farmer. "I believe the FCC used poor judge- ment in not providing people like me with long-term fixed-rate financing. It's not surprising that the FCC is broke today when they only took high- risk clients. FCC financing would have allowed me to avoid 23 per cent flf .,ting bank rates from which it has taken us five or six years to recover." In the name of all farmers, Whitmore supports the concept of parity pricing. Until a bushel of com is priced such that a farmer selling it earns sufficient buying power, there will continue to be more part-time farmers, he says. The analogy he draws comes from Henry Ford's assembly line — Ford doubled his workers' pay to $5 a day so they could afford to buy the car they were pro- ducing. And he cites the recently announced Farm Management, Safety, and Repairs Program as proof that parity is needed. Farmers ought to be earning enough to be able to afford improvements to farm machinery without government subsidization, he says. "This program shows that gov- ernment realizes that $2 corn won't buy many parts, tools, or farm mach- ines produced with labour at industrial wage rates of $10 to $15 an hour." "These little handouts keep the farmers from getting too restless and at the same time continue to irritate the consumer." In short, Whitmore says, he empathizes with farmers' problems because they're his problems too. Full-time farmers, he says, shouldn't look upon him as a threat, but as an ally. "If we pull together and influence government policy, we can have a real impact. But if we don't pull together, we're all going to lose. As far as I'm concemed, if you don't treat us as an equal, more and more full-time far- mers are going to become part-time farmers." "As long as we are divided, policy will be determined by politicians, bureaucrats, and academics rather than by farmers. It is evident from the advice in the '70s to plant fence to 20 THE RURAL VOICE