Gring Proposes Flat Assessment on Class I and II Land Four Pennsylvania legislators spoke and answered questions at an educational meeting spon sored by the Farm and Home Foundation at the Farm and Home Center Wednesday night. State Senator Richard Snyder was panel moderator and spoke on the problem of growing crime and welfare; State Senator Clarence Manbeck spoke on environment and the problems it causes farmers; Representative Harry Gring made a. proposal for - lowering real estate tax burdens on class I and II land in order to keep it in production, and Representative Sherman Hill expressed concern about the increasing pressure in the state to relax liquor and gambling laws. In proposing a new state law on taxing valuable class I and II land, Gring emphasized the “terrific pressure on open land in Southeastern Pennsylvania.” He noted that 15 counties in the area contain over 50 per cent of the state’s more than 11 million people. He also emphasized the high value of class I and II land for producing crops. In terms of comparative production ability, class 111 land can produce six units, compared with 13 to 16 units bn class II and 25 units on class I, he said. Gring emphasized that his proposal for saving land “assumes people want to preserve land, or else the state wouldn’t have spent $2OO million to preserve public land.” He said , his proposal also assumes that one of the reasons for taking land out of farming is because of high and increasing rates of taxation; it assumes there are a sufficient number of people who want to continue the land in farming, and it assumes that farmers want to pass the land on as farmland. But he stated that keeping the Dairy Manual Available How much'hay storage space is needed for 30 cows, 24 heifers, and six calves? The formula to find the answer to this question and many similar ones cap be found in a new “Dairy Reference Manual” published by Penn sylvania State University College of Agriculture. “This publication could be referred to as a catalog of facts ’for the professional dairyman and personnel who furnish supplies and services for the dairy industry,” said Donald L. Ace, Penn State Extension dairy specialist and author of the book. The professional dairyman, he points out, needs many facts in reference form so that he can make sound management decisions. Management based on specific information is the one unique feature of any business which no competition can exactly duplicate. Topics covered in the publication include milk quality and product technology, diseases and parasites, breeding and selection, physiology of reproduction, feeding, milking equipment, structures and bam equipment, and farm management data. The 216-page book may be purchased for $3 plus 6 per cent Pennsylvania sales tax. Make check or money order payable to Pennsylvania State University and send with your name and address to DAIRY MANUAL, Box 6000, University Park, Pa. 16802. best farm land in farming must be made ln Southeastern Pennsjdvania where taxes are going up con stantly, something must be done about taxes in order to keep the land in farming, he said. He stated that while the problem is growing in Lancaster county, “The greatest pressure in the state is on Bucks County farms” where farmers are literally “paying so much taxes that they have to pay for the privilege of farming.” He emphasized, however, that anything done on taxes under the new state constitution must be done at the state level. The proposal which Gring said is in the preliminary stage of development, has been worked out with several other persons, will possibly become a bill for consideration by the state legislature sometime in the future, and would apply only to class I and class II land. He said farms with more than 50 per cent of their land in class I and II would be assessed on the following three part basis: farm houses would be assessed as any other house; all other buildings would be assessed as warehouses and would be assesed at their full value the same as other such properties, and the land would be assessed at market value, and would be given a “locked-in” assessment at a fixed rate of say $4OO an acre. Under this formula, houses and buildings would continue to be assessed at their true value, but class I and II farmland would be taxed at a fixed rate which would be low enough to make it feasible to remain in production as farm land. As an example of what he was talking about, he said a farm which is now valued for tax purposes at $lOO,OOO would be broken down under the three part formula as follows; $16,000 for the house, $16,000 for the warehouse or buildings, and 80 acres of land at $4OO an acre, or $32,000 for the land. This would be a total taxable value of $64,000. Gring explained that the state must act on the proposal because under the new state constitution, the state must reimburse the counties for funds which they would lose under such a proposal. He said that if such a system is adopted, the county probably would continue to collect the full value of the tax, but the state would reimburse the difference between full market value and the new tax formula directly to the farmer. Asked if it is possible to expect the urban areas in the state which dominate the legislature" to support such a bill, Gring replied that he thinks it is possible, as a trade-off for something which the urban areas want, such as monies for their financial aid repressed school systems. Manbeck, who noted the “ecology in the past 10 years has become almost as important a word as Sputnik was,” com mented on several issues in volving the new environment and conservation movement. He said farmers are “caught between consumers and ecologists.” He noted that if the original Clean Streams Act had- been passed the Pennsylvania Department of Health “could have prosecuted any farmer whose soil ran into a stream after a heavy rain.” He said he helped get farmers exempted if erosion occured in such instances “as a result of an act of God.” State Senator Richard Snydef makes a him: left to right, Representative Sherman point during an educational panel at the Hill, Representative Harry Gring, and State Farm and Home Center Wednesday night. Senator Clarence Manbeck. State legislators who participated with Hill, in commenting on the mushrooming numbers of liquor and gambling bills in Harrisburg, said he wonders if the bills will benefit people. “It frightens me that people think government can be taxed in great proportion by gambling and drinking.’’ But he noted that many state legislators in Pennsylvania are forced to favor these new laws because of pressure from their people back home. Therefore, he said, he doesn’t expect much improvement until people in general improve. While the gambling bills have been labeled as a means of fighting crime, he offered “to bet that within a year the illegal gamblers will make more money off the Pennsylvania lottery than the state does.” He also said the proponents of the liquor bills “never tell you the Ornamental Horticulture Teachers Heeded, Educator Says High school seniors hoping to make a career of education should consider the opportunities in teaching ornamental hor ticulture in the high schools and vocational technical schools of the Commonwealth, says Dr. David R. McClay, head of the Department of Agricultural Education at Pennsylvania State University. Opportunities for such teaching careers have expanded more than any other high school program in vocational agriculture, Dr. McClay reports. This is largely due to establish ment of Area Vocational Technical Schools since 1965. Presently, there are 24 Penn sylvania high schools offering full-time programs in or namental horticulture. Currently, one or two new programs are opening each year with such expansion expected to continue for at least five years. Pennsylvania secondary schools need an average of six to eight new teachers of ornamental horticulture each year, Dr. McClay states. Opportunities exist in the expansion of vocational-technical schools, the normal turnover of teachers, and the addition of a second teacher to expanding school programs. The number of high school students who received some instruction in ornamental hor ticulture increased sharply from 440 in the 1967-68 school year to Lancaster Farming, Saturday, November 13,1971 cost of these things.” He labeled the danger from drunken drivers as one of the costs which need to be considered m studying the proposed Sunday liquor laws. He concluded, “I don’t think we can build anything solid on gambling and drink.” Noting he’s not for prohibition, he said, “I don’t think we should be doing anything to encourage it (gambling and drinking).” In commenting on what he described as a “startling in crease in crime” Senator Snyder said he’s increasingly concerned that the growing amounts of money being spent to solve the problem is not getting at the root of the problem On the Welfare issue, he noted that welfare rolls began mushrooming “five years ago when there was a high level of jobs open. Why?” He said the 16,533 in 1970-71. There are currently 108 teachers in structing at least one course in ornamental horticulture in high schools of the Commonwealth, Dr. McClay affirms. Girls are taking advantage of such teaching opportunities. The first female teacher of vocational-agriculture in Penn sylvania is Beverly Buzas of Eastern Montgomery County AVTS in Willow Grove. Sylvia Buckey teaches similar courses at Derry High School, Derry, in Westmoreland County. Both are graduates of a combined major in agricultural education ornamental horticulture at Penn State. High schools in other states sometimes have more need for teachers of ornamental hor ticulture than are available from their own colleges and univer sities. At such times inquiries come to the Department of Agricultural Education or the Department of Horticulture at Penn State. Ornamental horticulture is a relatively young program in the total vocational-agriculture program of high schools. Dr. McClay says. The first such programs were offered at the Lower Bucks Area Vocational- Technical School in Bucks County in 1965. Pennsylvania is among the leading states of the east in developing such high school curricidums. answer has largely been the growing number of broken homes, resulting in growing numbers of mothers and children on the rolls He noted the latest figures show over 800,000 of the states 11 million people are drawing welfare. During the question and an swer period in which some citizens commented that the welfare problem cannot continue to grow without eventually .making it impossible to finance, Gring noted, “I’m convinced that the only way under the sun that the situation is going to be corrected is to break the wagon down.” In commenting on ways to save farm land, Senator Manbeck urged every township to get zoning as fast as it can as a means of saving farm land. As the high school programs in ornamental horticulture grew, teacher education programs also expanded at Penn State. Dr. Richard F. Stinson joined the faculty of the Department-'of Agruicultural Education in 1967 to help develop teacher materials for secondary schools. Dr. Stinson has prepared teacher and student manuals and handbooks for retail flower shop operation and management, landscape maintenance and establishment, landscape design, turfgrass maintenance and establishment, greenhouse crop production, and nursery production. He has also developed outlines for courses in ornamental hor ticulture, a listing of facilities for instruction in ornamental hor ticulture, and slide sets for use with the manuals hnd handbooks. Summer Fruit Drinks Lift your spirits with a cool, tangy fruit drink when summer heat starts getting you down., Extension consumer education specialist at The Pennsylvania State University, Catherine Love, suggests using fresh limes with a new twist. Add sparkling water or ginger ale, instead of water for variation. Squeeze the juice of one lime into a glass. Pour the sparkling water or ginger ale into the lime juice and add sugar to taste. 17