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The Rural Voice, 1987-12, Page 26SCOTT'S INDUSTRIAL & FARM SUPPLY Nuts & Bolts (all cam) Hydraulic hose & fittings V•belu Bearings Rolla Chain Westward Torii Epp Procure Walters R. R. 4, Tara 519-376-0283 8 mi. W. of Owen Sound off Hwy. 21 Evenlnps—Wayne Walker 519.371.4677 ACI71LJ WAS BORN... Let every heart rejoice in the hope and promise born on that Holy night. Season's Greetings and sincere thanks for your continued patronage. u R.R. 4 WALKERTON, 519.881.2231 24 THE RURAL VOICE qualification two, which defined a farmer as someone who has spent the majority of time or earned the major- ity of income farming his or her own assets. The Farm -Starter will not necessarily earn the majority of in- come or spend the majority of time farming. There is no requirement to produce a set amount of product. But the Farm -Starter will be expected to make a profit of $8,000 before grants. The profit will be determined on an accrual basis and not on how much cold hard cash is being added to the family coffers And, if the farmer lives on the farm itself, the necessary contribution to family living will be reduced by $2,500 to $5,500. It is assumed that this will generally be the case. So we know that the program will produce successful farmers because being successful is the most important prerequisite of the program itself. There is some speculation that a stream of profitable new farmers will fuel investor confidence and, in time, encourage investment by the non - farming community into agribusiness in Ontario. This qualification, along with the declining flat -rate payments, is struc- tured to wean participants from farm subsidization. A criticism of BFAP, on the other hand, is that it leaves participants "high and dry" after their grant expires. (It has been necessary to extend an additional $7.5 million to BFAP, which will be allocated in the form of two additional flat -rate pay- ments of $2,000 and $1,000 in years six and seven.) Al Scott of the Perth OMAF office suggests that although BFAP will accept applicants up to December 31, 1987 (closing must have occurred and funds must have been drawn), it is only beneficial to new farmers incur- ring an initial debt load in excess of $180,000. QUALIFICATION SIX (?) The initial Farm -Start press releases included a sixth and final qualification which read: "All per- sons sharing a principal residence are considered to be one entity for the purpose of this program." This was a change in wording from "husband, wife, and dependent children," who were considered one entity under BFAP. This wording in BFAP caused the government a great deal of trouble. But the new wording for Farm -Start was at once equally controversial. Dorothy Middleton, an Ottawa spokesperson for Women for the Survival of Agriculture, called it "absolutely incredible" that the provincial government is confusing social criteria with business criteria. "The legality," she says, "of ruling out a certain segment of the population because their marital partner is already farming, even though they themselves have no control or investment in the operation, is certainly questionable." The ministry obviously has some concerns as well, and is returning to cabinet to get approval for a rewritten, and as yet undisclosed, wording. If the intent is merely to allow only one grant per household, the new clause should be relatively straightforward, but if the wording reflects an intent to disallow spouses from either joining existing operations on a legal partner- ship basis or to disallow farm spouses aspiring to independent and separate operations, the government will be looking to avoid legal action such as resulted from the BFAP clause. Whether the participants in this program are farm spouses, farm chil- dren, agricultural students, or business majors, we are assured that in the year 2003, as the program winds to a close, there will be a couple of thousand farmers in Ontario who have demon- strated their ability to clear at least $5,500 a year, thereby contributing "significantly" to family living. At the same time, they will have to budget in damaging weather conditions, possible falling commodity prices, and unfore- seen accidents or personal injuries. The program is, as its name implies, a start. It remains to be seen if it will be enough.0