December 15, 1991 PA DHIA Board Meeting Summaries At the two most recent meet ings of the PA DHIA Board in July and October, 1990, the fol lowing decisions of interest to DHIA members and others in the dairy industry were made: 1. A joint resolution with Northeast DHIA was adopted that sates; “Whereas, the cost of daa col lection is increasing and there are persistent problems associated with financing the DHIA system, and Whereas, there are internal problems and obsacles to effi cient systems of data collection and operations that need solving. Be it resolved, that Pennsylva nia DHIA and Northeast DHIA Boards, as of January 1, 1992, intend to charge the dairy industry for production records as part of the solution to financing the DHIA system. And, be it further resolved, that the DHI system will continue to seek other solutions to the obsta cles and inefficiencies.” 2. A joint memorandum of understanding with Northeast DHIA was approved that permits PA DHIA to use the Northeast for age testing lab for PA DHIA members with service rates identi cal to those used for Northeast DHIA members. The agreement will return a portion of the testing Heifer Management Made Easy With New DHIA Program 808 ORMSBY Training Coordinator The PA DHIA Board of Direc tors has approved the new heifer management option for release January I, 1991. Several herds from each of the five regions have been involved in the initial pilot program and everything appears m order at this time. The program, which has gone through extensive itRO j 53 U 6)18 rn K«9 Nvmboi 53HU5511 Vl* M wcru 400003: 23F1U0091 CALF-91 400003( 23F5U00H CAIF-91 4000041 29FW0091 caip-9 4000049 jsfsuoo#: crtlr i: 400004: 23F5U0093 CALF-II 100009' i3PSUOOf< cAIF 9' 4000091 23P5U0091 CALF-II 4000091 23)>5U009) CAtr #i 400009: 29PSU00I! CALP-91 4oooo«: 39P5U0091 caO-S 4000091 isptuooot CALF-O 4000071 23P5U0009 cAiF-oj 4000073 23FJ00003 400007) 23FSUOOO' calf-o: CAtT-0< 4000071 93P1U000 CALP-1 ajrsbooo; cAlf-o; CALP-01 dttKrfj lopitlOooi 99P1U0001 CALF-< A NEWSLETTER FOR THE MEMBERS OF THE >0 Vol. 5, No. 2 . PENNSYLVANIA DAIRY HERD IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION Lancaster Farming Pages D9-Dl2 costs to PA DHIA and DHIA 4. Merger agreements with supervisors in Pennsylvania. Cambria, Montgomery, and Ven 3. The Heifer Management ango County associations were System was approved for use and approved, the price was set at $. 10 per cow in (Turn to Page D 11) the milking herd per month. State DHIA’s Help DHIA Services The National Dairy Herd , DHLA Services, which was Improvement Association’s for- f ?“ nded several years ago has profit subsidiary, DHIA Services, a contract w.th Tru-Test, r , 1,. r ’ the New Zealand manufacturer of Sai aU assSfiOTs LS7 to toe * e most widel y used milk meter stole associations mantes to me . DfflA in u s contrac t efforts of Pennsylvania DHIA and Seryices a dealer for the Nort eas . meter in competition with Babson FIHTA Calendar Brothers (Surge) who was previ- L,niA ously the sole distributor of TruT- Of Events esl meters in this country. The agreement was negotiated to create competition for Surge with the hope of improving the field services available to DHIA’s that own and/or service TruTest meters. As a side benefit, there may be some earnings returned to state associations from profits made each year. Based on that opportunity, Pennsylvania DHIA and North east DHIA have each loaned $37,500 to DHIA Services for start-up funding. A third loan for $75,000 was also extended from Luana Bank in lowa to complete toe total needed for start-up. These loans are scheduled to be paid back over 24 months. (Turn to Page DIO) New Year’s Day, Service Center closed. Pa. DHIA board meeting, Holiday Inn, State College, Pa., noon to noon. Supervisor’s Advisory Committee ineetine^te^College^a. Central District Association meet- ing, Family House Restaurant, Southeast District Association meeting, Berks Co. Ag Center, Leesport, Pa., 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m. (Turn to Page Dll) planning and research, was deve loped jointly by PA DHIA and Penn State Dairy Science Exten sion personnel. Emphasis is placed on providing complete and accurate identification and esti mates of genetic merit on heifers grouped by age. The primary objectives of the new option include assisting the member in the management of the heifers in INDIVIDUAL HEIFER LISTING fll-f MmtlllM 930923 WO 191 •22991 29J279: 930933 IJOOII 942003 10020! •39701 2901793 •30923 210033: •3334: 7001S1 140311 ‘ 351551) 117)8787 320729! to/M/ot 3390801 3/29/IM 3391441 9/19/99 340949* 9/27/M 339344' 1/39/99 3917991 2/10/4* 3392441 9/ta/99 39197#! ?/!•/•» 3919793 393 Ull 7/19/99 10/33/9# 9919791 12/10/99 393)411 1/23/iO 3391443 2/29/90 39)2901 2/29/90 991979' 991799! 34)17#: 924991! 9/19/90 7/10/90 9/17/90 i/ 10/96 9/19/90 / FOCUS his herd, improving the accuracy of the identification of heifers and subsequently all animals entering the milking herd, and increasing the efficiency of the progeny test programs conducted by AI units and other breeders groups. The introduction of this option to the dairymen of Pennsylvania is timely as many dairymen have been searching for a comprehen- 4i 4 13# M V OAIE 10/12/90 PAGF 1 Dilr in? 7i6 ■1105317 11715711 29J7793 9/12/90 11/19/99 21*10117 1/20/90 10/29/90 9100397 11/09/90 2/01/90 BJOOM 12/07/90 3/01/90 29J2793 12/21/90 3/15/90 7^01*9 «/ 19/91 9/01/90 Lancaster Fanning Saturday, December 15,1990-09 Barbara Kowalski, quality control specialist, is doing weekly calibration on a Milk-0 Scan 605 fat and protein tester. Laboratory Services Division LINDA SCIBILIA Lab Manager Welcome to the Laboratory division of Pennsylvania DHIA! The lab is a very busy place, and very concerned with the quality of service provided to you, the mem bers. The laboratory division con sists of 11 full-time Equipment Operators, one Quality Control Specialist, one Equipment Techni cian, and the Laboratory Mana ger. The laboratory operates Mon- sivc heifer management system. DHIA has the parental, genetic and reproductive data already stored in their mainframe compu ter. It is only logical to arrange it in a manner that makes it accessi ble as a management tool. By cap turing and averaging parental pro duction and genetic information, each heifer is tracked from birth. Parental averages can be used as a guide for estimating potential transmitting ability of calves and heifers for merchandising, mating and culling. Entire life histories recording every event in an ani mal’s life from birth to death are possible with the heifer manage ment program. Several reports, considered standard each month are pictured here, and in addition, a member may design up to twenty optional action list reports to be generated each month. HEIFER AND COW REPRODUCTIVE SUMMARY SEE OCT MOV DEC JAM FEB MEMO TOTAL AT SIAITT OF MONTH )g y, || _JB El ET MILKING AT START OF MONTH |« |« I* IT l« Dnv AT START Of MONTH | , 1 3 4 E COWS TO CALVE g 0 ) I 4 E COWS TO OTIY OFF o I E 1 b 0 HEIFERS TO CALVE j | ( 2 6 0 MILKING AT END OF MONTH || |j J 17 li. »l DRV AT END OF MONTH j i 4 I 0 ItRO TOTAL AT END OF MONTH >4 1t tl 1 El il El day through Thursday double shifts, and a single shift each on Friday and Saturday. Two hundred to 400 herds (12,500 to 14,000 samples) are received and tested each day. Quality service means different things to different people. In the DHIA laboratory, quality consists mainly of 2 components...speed and accuracy. Both are important, but the importance of accuracy far (Turn to Page D 11) The number of reports and sum maries a member enrolled on this program will receive varies with the options chose. The Inventory of Individual Heifers lists the sire and dam, the parent PTA average, and the reproductive status of each heifer. The Listing of Removed Heifers keeps tabs on reasons for removal. The Heifer Status Sum mary shows profiles by age, gene tic evaluation, and reproductive efficiency and the average PTA of service sires used. One report lists heifers and cows by sire and still another one by service sires repre sented in the herd. The Heifer and Cow Reproductive Summary is a report you can literally “go to the bank with.” It projects ahead the number of cows and heifers due to calve each month for six months and projects herd totals for those months as well. While valuable (Turn to Page DIO)