Legislative roundup By DICK WANNER HARRISBURG - Lots of behind the scenes action this week m the Capitol as the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Public Welfare and the Department of Justice all took careful looks at House Bill 1535, a lands management bill, which would transfer responsibility for state owned farmland from Welfare to Agriculture. HARRISBURG - The number of eligible fanners who registered to vote in the upcoming beef referendum totalled 9790 on Thursday morning, reported Richard Pennay, Agricultural Program Specialist for the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service. The registration penod officially closed Wednesday afternoon. Although their normal records management system required them to discard the 1977 referendum files, Pennay said he feels the turn out for this referendum exceeded the previous one. The county with the largest number of registrants was Lancaster County, with 479 cattle USDA seeks to change foreign disclosure act WASHINGTON, D.C. - Proposed changes in regulations governing the Agricultural Foreign In vestment Disclosure Act which would alter the reporting requirement for foreign investors-were announced Friday by Ray Fitzgerald, administrator of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Stabilization and Con servation Service. Fitzgerald said one change would raise from five to twenty percent the aggregate foreign interest in a company. That would constitute “significant in terest or substantial con trol,” and make clear that when regulations refer to a “combination,” they mean only a group of individuals or Kennedy to manage local soybean office HEBRON, Md. - Jerry Kennedy of Hebron, Maryland, has been named field services regional manager by the American Soybean Association ac cording to Jeffrey W. Gam, ASA executive director of Government Relations and Field Services. In bis new position, Kennedy will assist state soybean associations and promotion boards in their activibes and programs. Welfare farms to transfer to PDA Welfare farms are all just outside state hospitals, and for many years were tended by patients who grew food for the people living in the hospitals. Court rulings over the past decade have virtually eliminated stoop labor therapy, and the Welfare farms are now being run out of a department headed by a Lancaster Co, highest in state Beeferendum registration nears 10,000 owners. The next highest number was in Franklin County, where 375 people signed up to vote. Pennay noted the big days were Monday through Wednesday of this week, even though the registration penod began on January 28. “In Lancaster County, for example, there were less than 100 registered last Friday, and now there are close to 500,” Pennay added. Most of those who registered to vote m the Beeferendum requested to use the mail ballots. Pennay said the county ASCS offices are busy getting ready to send out the ballots and the rules for the voting penod of February 19-22. Several other county totals governments who are acting in concert. The other change would generally exempt all agricultural, forestry and timber land not exceeding 10 acres in the aggregate from reporting requirements. However, if products grown on these under-10-acre tracts yield annual gross sales of more than $lOOO, the land must be reported to ASCS, Fitzgerald said. Fitzgerald said the public is invited to comment on the proposals which appeared in the January 25 Federal Register. Deadline for submitting written com ments is March 25. Comments should be addressed to the ad ministrator, USDA-ASCS, Room 218-W, P.O. Box 2415, Washington, D.C. 20013. The newly created regional office will be located in Salisbury, Maryland, and will work with soybean organizations in Delaware, Maryland, North Carolina, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Virginia. Kennedy assumed his dubes with the American Soybean Association last Friday. secretary, Helen O’Bannon, who thinks they’d be better placed with the secretary of agriculture. Governor Thornburgh is in agreement with his welfare chief, and so is Secretary of Agriculture Penrose Hallowell. It will be a com plicated transfer involving thousands of acres, millions of dollars worth of equip ment and buildings, and 135 state employees, most of are: Berks - 320; Lebanon - 169; Dauphin -104; Chester - 110; Adams - 207; York - 300; Cumberland - 213; Butler - 223; Bradford - 210; and Washington - 297. SM. *■ whom are members of the American Federation of State and Municipal Employees Agriculture has also an nounced its willingness to ac cept any lands deemed surplus by the Department of Justice, which operates farms m conjunction with a number of the state prisons. Justice’s farm chief, Robert Williams, does not believe they will be declar ing any lands surplus. And while he feels the Welfare farms might be better plac ed with the Department of Agriculture, he does not believe the prison farms, with their convict labor force, should be taken out of the Department of Justice. Noxious Weed Bill A Grange supported measure which has yet to be assigned a bill number would simplify the mechanism for pinning nox ious weed labels on really troublestome plant pests. Presently, the legislature must approve and the gover nor roust sign noxious weed legislation. That is a cumbersome system, at best, and pro bably accounts for the fact that only one weed, Canada thistle, holds the solitary distinction of being an of ficial public enemy. State Grange Master Charles Wismer would like to see multiflora rose and johnsongrass added to that list. Incredibly enough, Wismer said, the Penn sylvania Game Commission is still selling multiflora rose plants for use as wildlife shelters. A casual observer’s im pressions of state govern ment as slow and unwieldly could have been shattered in a meeting on Monday m the office of Senate Ag Commit tee chairman Pat Stapleton. The meeting was hghtmng-fast and efficient. It opened at noon and ad journed ten minutes later after the committee members present had voted to put on the floor of the Senate three different bills. They were: Clean and Green House Bill 725 would amend Act 319, the Clean and Green Act, to allow preferential tax treatment to continue when forest or farmland is divided for sale as long as the parcels sold continue in open space uses. The measure passed the House by a vote of 164 to 5 on October 31. Alien Ownership HB 1778 would restrict the acquisition of farmland by non-citizens. Neither alien nor foreign governments could aqure an interest in any agricultural land ex ceeding 100 acres. Passed the House on December 5 by 185 to 4 vote. Inheritance Taxes HB 1176 would amend Act 319, Clean and Green again, to allow use value assess ment, rather than market value, at the time an estate is settled It would provide safeguards to insure that the land would continue in agriculture. Passed the House on October 23 by 140 to 42 vote.