14—Lancaster Farming. Saturday. Sept. 11, 1976 9- WASHINGTON, D.C. - Farmers warned a panel of top level congressmen and government officials recently that “a day of reckoning is coming” unless federal influence on land use is reduced. Comments such as this one by John Bamitia, a small beef producer from Moun tain Home, Idaho, came over the Agriculture Council of America’s “Farm Line” and were heard by a special panel headed by Senators Jim McClure (R-Idaho), Carl Curtis (R-Neb.), and Representatives Mo Udall (D-Ariz.), George Mahon (D- Tex.), Tom Harkin (D -lowa), John Melcher (D- Mont.), Fred Richmond (D- Vote set for milk order funds NEW YORK, N.Y. - The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) will hold a mail referendum to determine if affecterd dairy farmers approve of a rate of seven cents per hun dredweight for advertising and promotion under the Middle Atlantic federal milk marketing order. H. L. Forest, dairy official in USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) said the rate of deduction for funding the advertising and promotion program would be increased from five cents a hundredweight to seven cents a hundredweight. He said evidence from a public hearing held last May showed that the increase is needed to offset rising costs of conducting the program. This is a deduction, Mr. Forest siad, on all milk delivered to the Middle Atlantic market each month, before returns are paid out to producers. The money is used for research and Land use is strictly local issue N.Y.), and James Santini (D-Nev.). Bamitia went on to say that the “federal govern ment had better change its approach concerning agriculture. Land use is strictly a local issue, but like many others is important to our future.” He said most senators and representaives respond only to the majority of con stituents who “holler about high food prices,” but unless Congress recognizes the needs of the five per cent who produce it “Mr. and Mrs. America will be sitting at dinner with knife and fork at an empty table.” _ Interest in the issue “was about as strong as anytlung development, advertising (except brand advertising), sales promotion, nutrition education, and other programs to improve the domestic marketing of milk and its products. The program provides for quarterly refunds to any producers not wanting to participate. Mr. Forest said farmers who supplied milk to the Middle Atlantic milk marketing area in June 1976 will be eligible to vote. Two thirds of those voting must approve the amended ad vertising and promotion provisions. TRY A CLASSIFIED AD! ACA Farm Line we’ve experienced,” ac cording to ACA chairman E.L. “Shug” Hatcher, a wheat and beef producer from Lamar, Colo. During the four hours the program was in operation over 500 calls were received from at least 25 states. The heaviest volume of calls came from Nebraska, Idaho, Texas and Kansas. Many calls, particularly from the Rocky Mountain sttes, centered on whether the federal government should restrict or eliminate grazing rights on public lands. McClure who has first hand knowlege of grazing problems in his state where 60 per cent the land is publically owned said his calls centered around the “serious conflicts” over the use of Federal lands for agriculture versus preserving the areas for non Jamesway® Volume-Belt® cattle feeder—the Quiet One—belts feed out fast without feed separation for in-barn or outdoor feeding. AGRI-EQUIP. RD2. Farmersville. Ephrata PA 717-354-4271 ROY 0. CHRISTMAN H jL NRY ?■ “ PP RDI (Shartlesville) Hamburg PA 19526 717-442-8134 215-562-7218 or 215-488-1904 ERB & HENRY EQUIP., INC. C ** L 1 t L ? I J IR , K , „ 22 26 Hen,y A.em,e N,, Berl’nvdle PA m L ''’*™ n PA 215-367-2169 /1/-2/4-14J6 I. G.'s AG. SALES Rt 113 Box 200, Silverdale. PA 215 257-5135 farming uses. One Idaho rancher said, “Either the government must begin to look at the problems we face or we’ll be forced out of business.” Concern also centered on the government’s role in dealing with urbanization and other development, which in the past decade alone claimed over 22 million acres of farm land. Ap proximately two-thirds of the calls related to land use. Other questions and com ments dealt with estate taxes, government regulation and the impact Of embargoes on farm prices. Mahon, chairman of the House Committee on Ap propriations, said that from calls he took “farmers still rankle under the impact of the damaging grain em bargo last year.” One caller, though, W. Harlan Micklebost, a banker Look neighbor... you con BELT IT OUT FAST from the “near total disaster” drought area of Ramona, South Dakota said that there is a place for the government to “step in. Farmers here need finan cing relief with the delivery charges of emergency feed for their starving cattle.” Farmers are forced to pay as much as $llO a ton for alfalfa hay, more than double last year’s price, including a “whopping” $l2 shipping charge for a 90 mile trip from its source. The farmers aren’t asking for free hay, just help with the shipping charges, as the government has done in less critical times, he said. This is one time the government “should step in where help is clearly needed ■ otherwise it should stay out of farming operations,” Micklebost said. Other panelists included representatives of the - LANDIS BROTHERS INC. 1305 Manheim Pike, Lancaster, PA 717-393-3906 STOLTZFUS WELDING SHOP SWOPE & BASHORE, INC. RDI Fleetwood. PA 1215) 944-7807 Departments of Agriculture, Interior and HEW, as well as various planning and public interest groups. As a non-political and non legislative organization, ACA operates the monthly toll-free Farm Line, open nationwide, not to advocate any position of its own but to provide a vehicle for discussion of major agricultural issues. The July Farm Line on “Government Regulation” received nearly 400 calls from people across the country, talking directly without any “go-betweens” with experts on the issue. The Agriculture Council of America, founded in 1973, is made up of individual far mers, farm and commodity organizations and com panies that supply the far mers. Its purpose is to im prove communications between farmers and urban consumers. * h M. S. YEARSLEY & SON 114 E Market St West Chester. PA 19380 215-696-2990 ATLEE REBERT R 2, Littlestown, PA 17340 717-359-5863 HARRY L TROOP Rt 1 Cochranville, PA 19330 215-593-6731 Frystown Rl, Myerstown PA 17067 717-933-4138