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The Rural Voice, 1989-11, Page 68GREY 44610th St., Hanover, Ontario N4N 1 P9 519-364-3050 The Rural Voice is provided to all Grey County Fanners by the GCFA. County Federation of Agriculture NEWSLETTER GOALS AND HURDLES by Lome Eccles Grey County Federation of Agriculture President Agri -Food Week has once again come and gone. May we give thanks for the abundance of food available in our country. In Canada you can buy food for less money than in any other country except the U.S. Where does it come from? The man on the land, the farmer. Do we realize that ours is one of the largest businesses in dollars, with only the car industry ahead of us? Twenty people in every hundred in Ontario are connected with agriculture. We export billions of dollars a year in pork, apples, beef, dairy products, etc. Ontario is the largest provincial producer of food products in Canada. We grow every conceivable product from the south to the north of our province. The OFA then asks the question: Why does our govemment want to shuffle up our land tax rebate program? There is no doubt that some do not deserve this rebate, but the money the government is saving will hardly cover the cost of administration. The OFA offered to cut the rebate back to 90 per cent for everyone, but this proposal was not considered by the government. The Ontario government has ruled that the rebate will stay as was proposed this year. The promise from our new Minister of Agriculture is that now and in the coming year the government will sit down with the OFA and negotiate on policy concerning tax rebates, crop in- surance, GATT, and many other agri- cultural issues. This is a step in the right direction. The farmers who generate a large income in trade for this country are still being brow -beaten into a cheap food policy which began back around 1972. We have never kept up with infla- tion. Our members of parliament in this area are good people and do listen to our concerns, but with rural ridings being changed, it is the city sprawl that gives them more members. This in turn makes it much more difficult for them to achieve our goals. In Grey County this year, thanks to hard work by our fieldperson and direc- tors, we are holding our membership steady. Other counties are not so lucky. With city people buying land and farm- ers retiring, the total membership has dropped a little. In Grey County we still ponder the check -off, which would have everyone pay for OFA services. At present, all farmers receive some benefits. If we could put the OFA in a position of hav- ing 80 per cent of farmers as members, we would be a group that could lobby about our concerns very efficiently. Pollution in agriculture is another of our concerns. Livestock manure is one of the most natural fertilizers a farmer can use, and if used properly will not pollute our watercourses. We are blamed for polluting watercourses, and perhaps we do in a small way, but we do not come even close to manufacturers, which have been doing it for years — not only our water, but also the air. And cities and towns and some rural municipalities are burying garbage, thus covering 500 acres a year. With 600 or more of these sites in Ontario, it is a tragic situation. In Grey County we believe that incineration is the only safe method to be used. County government, topsoil re- moval, agricultural education in our schools, animal activists, the Goods and Services Tax, and GATT proposals are on the agenda, with the last two being priorities in the coming year. As President of the Grey County Federation of Agriculture, I would like to see the OFA become a strong, united voice. We have a lot at stake: let us fight for our rights to be citizens with incomes comparable to those of city and urban people.0 66 THE RURAL VOICE TOWNSHIP ANNCJAI AND BANQUETS EGREMONT Annual Meeting and Banquet Friday, November 10 Amos Presbyterian Church Drumore Dinner 6:45 p.m. Guest speaker: Art Clark — slide presentation Tickets $9 per person PROTON Annual Meeting and Banquet Friday, November 17 Dundalk United Church Dinner 7 p.m. Guest speaker: Jim Algie Sun Times Farm Reporter Tickets $10 per person NORMANBY Annual Meeting and Banquet Wednesday, November 8 Ayton Centennial Hall Dinner 7 p.m. Guest speakers: Tom and Joanne Weber — will highlight their trip to Australia and New Zealand Tickets $10 per person