York farms honored for Farm-City Week participation BY JOYCE BUPP “More with less” is the message * * L Staff Correspondent of Bay funding, especially in the YORK - Four York County area of nutrient management. Two farms and four local businessmen of the largest problems of the were honored during the annual estuary are nitrogen and manure York seminar, pollution, with manure February 27, at the York management and central focus of Fairgrounds banquet center. spending in Pennsylvania. Recognition went to those farms Swartz says that farmers in the and business representatives who 27,000-square-mile Bay watershed participated in the 1985 Farm-City basin area are applying annually exchange, held on National Ag an extra $9O in nutrients to their Day, March 20. Businessmen spent farmland, or the equivalent of the day with their farm hosts, then $2200 per farm, hosted their farm exchangees to Increasing concentrations of their business at a later date. animal numbers on decreasing Participants were Paul and Gail amounts of land is the concern of McPherson, Maple Lawn Farms, soils specialist Dr. Les Lanyon. Dr. who hosted Bill Groft of the York Lanyon related statistics showing Bank and Trust Company; Martin over half the animal manure in Grey, Sinking Springs Farms who Pennsylvania is produced in the . exchanged visits with Gregrory Southeastern comer of the state, Keller of the Drovers and with up to 27 tons applied per acre Mechanics Bank; Jerry and to some Lancaster County land. Carolyn Rutter of Rutter’s Since 72 percent of the state’s ag Livestock and their exchangee income is directly derived from Walter Jeffers, Agribusiness In- livestock or poultry commodities, surance Center; and Robert L. Lanyon is working with DER Smyser, Smyser’s Richlawn funded measuring equipment to Farms and James Vallosio of the monitor volumes of manure ap- General Telephone Company of plied per acre. Use of this Pennsylvania. technology can help farmers “Agriculture and Its En- pinpoint actual tonnages of vironment” was the theme of the nutrients applied to cropland. The 23rd ag-business session, which aim is to drastically slice the drew about one hundred contribution from the representatives from the business Susquehanna basin of 70 percent of and agriculture communities. the nitrogen and 56 percent of Speakers included state Director phosophorus levels that are of Environmental Resources Paul creating problems in the Bay’s Swartz and Penn State specialists marine environment. Dr. Les Lanyon, Dr. John Skelly Pollution expert Dr. John Skelly and Dr. Karen Mancl. looks up instead of down in the After spending $26 million for a environment, claiming a Chicken five-year study and report on the Little, or “the sky is falling” Chesapeake, the Environmental complex. Protection Agency will now shell What’s actually falling, warns out a couple of million more for a Skelly, is acid rain, a direct result model to shew how the Bay works, of short-sighted theories that “the says DER director Swartz. solution to pollution is dilution. ’ ’ To |^2he@iz@si »wc.^y\ , j y* V' • JSSSRSSSn The York Chamber of Commerce honored participants in the 1985 Ag Day farm-city exchange. From left are Bill Graft. Paul and Gail McPherson, Lome Detter, chairman of the Chamber’s Ag-Business committee, Robert Smyser and James Vallosio. direct coal-fired factory and power plant emissions away from the ground, builders constructed towering stacks to carry pollutants into upper air levels. 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