Environmental quality (Continued from Page D2B) last year produced the first drop since 1974 in gasoline demand, which accounts for 40 per cent of all oil used. air Up. All across the country last year, millions of Americans were breathing air that was cleaner than it had been m a decade. Also 'last year, there was relen tless pressure on the En vironmental Protection Agency to lower its air standards, because many FARM AND COMMERCIAL Buildings ★ Low-Cost, Low-Maintenance ★ Wood Column Buildings ★ Completelly erected on owners site FARMCO Buildings Box 145 Plainfield, PA 17081 Phone 717-249-6835 For additional Information or estimate - No obligation write FARMCO BUILDINGS P.O. Box 145 Plainfield, PA 17081 ~ Name Address Phone Farm Building Commercial Building Other More farmers are turning to controlled manure manage ment to save valuable nutrients and to make manure handling easier. And Patz has the equipment to help you move, store, spread and inject manure on your farm. The Model 100 manure pump handles free-flowing manure and U.S. pohcy-and auto-makers claimed that antipollution costs are inflationary. What are the costs and benefits of air pollution laws? According to the President’s Council on Environmental Quality, the U.S. spent $l3 billion in 1978 to clean up the air. But, CEQ add°d, cleaner air may be saving Americans as much as $22 billion annually in damages. slurry with fine-cut bedding. Both the plunger and plunger sleeve can be serv iced without concrete breakup. The hopper loads by gutter cleaner or scraper. And a flapper valve at the end of the 12-inch PVC pipe in the storage facility prevents manure backup. The Model 200 compressed air manure mover features a manually operated hatch cover and a one-way valve at the bottom of the under ground tank, so wear is minimal. An air compressor provides air pressure to agitate manure in the 1,700 U.S. gallon collection tank and then air pressure moves manure to your storage facility. Want to know more? Your Patz dealer will show you how to make daily manure handling push-button easy with Patz. WATER No Change. Many in dustries and communities are now moving toward, rather than away from, the Clean Water Act’s goal of “fishable, swimmable” waters by 1985. Industry is reponsible for much of the cleanup progress that has been made. About 85 percent of the nation’s major industrial polluters are complymg with the law. But there are rising problems. Many en vironmentalists claim that conventional sewage treatment plants use too much energy and don’t really get the water clean. Nearly 800 industrial polluters have failed to meet EPA’s 1977 cleanup deadline and fewer than 200 have been taken to court. And every day, vast amounts of urban and agricultural poison enter the nation’s water supplies from “nonpoint” sources. SOIL No Change. The outlook for America’s hard used soil may be better these days. For one thing, erosion in many areas apparently isn’t as bad as many experts once feared. For another, there’s a good chance that the use of harmful pesticides can be drastically curtailed, due to a strategy called integrated pest management. IPM could reduce crop losses to pests more ef fectively than today’s pesticides-without harming human health or natural ecosystems. On the negative side, the massive runoff of fertilizer and pesticides into streams and rivers remains one of the nation’s most stubborn pollution problems. And the conversion of cropland to suburbs continues unabated, the study said. LIVING S^ACE Down. Even with a lower birthrate, the U.S. population is expanding rapidly (it passed 220 million last year), and the strain on living space is relentless. Despite the suggestions of an urban renaissance in many of the nation’s largest cities, the 35-year-old migration to the suburbs continues, ac companied by development in scores of agricultural areas. Fortunately, some states have passed their own land use laws, and last year Congress passed an Om nibus Parks bill, which designates two million acres as wilderness. But benefits from these efforts will be limited as long as the primary cause of the living space crunch-population growth-conbnues. FORESTS Same. Last year the U.S. grew more timber than it cut (except in the West). The U.S. Forest Service proposed to set aside more than 15 million additional, acres as wilderness, and to open up another 36 million acres to timber and other kinds of development. While some en vironmentalists said that was not enough wilderness, developers complained of a lockout. But the USFS’s new five-year management plan provides for more public say-so on how forests are run. Most important, the plan gives higher priority to watershed protection, wildlife habitat and recreation. American forests may Patz Slurry'Manure Pump (left photo) and Compressed Air Manure Mover (above photo). Patz Performance Strong as Steel Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 15,1980—D29 face increased pressure from the energy shortage. Spot shortages of firewood are already showing up in parts of the U.S. Commenting on the report, Thomas L. Kimball, NWF executive vice president, Berks 4-H County Council Meets HAMBURG The Berks County 4-H County Council’s February meeting was a get acquainted night with the older members being in troduced to the newer members. The officers of the council played County Squares, a version of Hollywood Squares. Prizes were given to the winners. The business part of the meeting included preliminary plans for a pre teen intercounty exchange and an interstate exchange for teens. Preparations are still underway for 4-H Boscov’s Days which will be held on March 21-22 at all three Boscov’s stores. A Teen Recreation Weekend will be on April 18- 19 in Montgomery County. Anyone interested in 'at tending should contact the Extension office. A 4-H slide presentation is now available for use. Anyone can use it; it is an excellent way to inform new members, parents and organizations about the 4-H program. At a recent 4-H bowling tournament, nine trophies were given for outstanding bowling. They were: mens: warned that the existing “quality of life” is threatened by present trends in Congress. “As we enter the 1980’s the overriding question is this: Will we let energy and inflation wipe out our environmental gains?” Kimball said. High single, Kevin Sat tazahn, 182; Runner up, Joe Crisafulli 179; High triple, Joe Crisafulli 492; and Runner up, Scott Miller 461. Also women’s: High single, Darlene Dietrich, 168; Runner up, Debbie Troutman, 157; High triple, Darlene Dietrich, 404; and Runner up, Dorene Hertzog, 403. Team Champs were: Todd Miller, Scott Miller, Cheryl Adams, and Darlene Dietrich, 1457. Jayne and Judy Malsbury entered their jams, jellies, and preserves in the 4-H Display at the Farm Show and came home with five premiums. The were guided by their 4-H project book “Make and Eat Jams, Jellies and Preserves.” The next County Council meeting will be held March 20.