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The Rural Voice, 1989-11, Page 39„rr Tony Morris, a farm management advisor based in Mildmay, has been assisting with the case since the fall of 1986. He stresses that the Wrights have managed their farm well. If their records hadn't been so good, he says, they would have had a much tougher time stating their case in court. and lab tests, and finally after switch- ing feed companies in April of 1985 and finding their cattle returning to health (gaining more than 2.5 daily), the Wrights took the case to court. The District Court judge found New Life Mills liable for the damage caused to the Wrights' operation, cit- ing a breach of contract and negligent representations to Jack Wright by New Life employees. The use of refuse screenings rather than Western wheat screenings and the presence of four times the amount of Rumensin al- lowed in feed by Agriculture Canada's Medicated Ingredients Brochure were aspects of evidence heard by the court. But since the appeal was launched by New Life in June, and with the Bank of Montreal suggesting that the Wrights sell off 200 acres to pay their loan, the Wrights are between the pro- verbial rock and hard place. "I'm at a standstill,” says Jack. And while the settlement could have put the Wrights back in business, health problems — Jack's had five heart attacks in the past four years, The Wright farm in Huron County. Shirley has developed an ulcer — and a stopped -up cash flow mean that the bank loan at 13 1/2 per cent interest is overtaking the award of $186,566, even if the Wrights do get the money. And the Wrights don't want to sell. They want to farm. Jack Wright has been farming for 29 years — the place was his grand- father's before him. Despite a bam fire in 1978 which took 200 head of cattle and put an end to dairying, by 1981 the Wrights had three barns for feeder cattle, owned all their land, a complete line of equipment, and owed the bank only $26,000. The Wrights were known for promptly paying their bills and had a good relationship with their banker. "I have never in 29 years bought a new tractor," Jack says. Farm management specialist Tony Morris stresses the Wrights' good financial management. If their records hadn't been so good, he says, they would have had a much tougher time stating their case in court. After their experience of the past five years, the Wrights say they are fighting for two reasons: one, they'd lose everything if they didn't, and two, there's a principle involved. They call their struggle a "David and Goliath" confrontation. "If it had been a mistake I had made," Jack says, "that would be a different thing." Not that Jack didn't suffer what Tony Morris calls the "farmer's syn- drome." He blamed himself. "It took quite a while to convince him that it wasn't his fault," Morris says. "I accused myself," Jack says. "I said to myself, 'I should have seen this sooner.' But it wasn't a matter of neglect." "It's been a nightmare." "You have no way of expressing to anyone ... the kind of stress that a family goes through," adds Shirley, who watched Jack pace nights as he tried to pinpoint what was going wrong in the hams. The Wrights have three daughters, two of them married, and the family was there to help throughout the months it took to prepare and present their case. But Jack Wright, who may suffer from "farmer's syndrome," also shares something of that other trait so often ascribed to farmers: optimism. "I have no doubt in my mind that I'm going to win the appeal and carry on." How? He doesn't know. But, says Tony Morris, "There has to be some way of getting support to try to keep this thing alive." The Wrights say they hope that their fight will benefit other farmers. They caution that there aren't enough safeguards on the delivery of feed. "The farmer is basically very trust- ing," adds Tony Morris, who says that not only should farmers be more cau- tious, but that feed mills should be a little more careful and that Agriculture Canada might need to police the feed system a little more. The Wrights recommend that farmers take extra trouble to know what's in the feed they purchase, particularly when buying pelleted feed because it's hard to tell what's in it. They also recommend that farmers periodically keep samples of the feed being trucked in to their farms. And they're concerned about the effect that NOVEMBER 1989 37