A2O-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 8, 1991 , PDPP Hires Summer Intern her internship with the PDPP and held , from Jul y 14 10 Jul y 20 at learns more about Pennsylvania’s locations across the state, dairy industry.” “I am excited to join the Pen- Corbin will be charged with nsylvania Dairy Promotion Prog coordinating the PDPP’s statewide ram’s efforts,” Corbin said. “I ice cream promotion, “There’s wanted to experience promotion Something About Pennsylvania activities at the state level after Ice Cream .’’The promotion is to be serving as a dairy princess and HARRISBURG (Dauphin Co.) The Pennsylvania Dairy Promotion Program has recently hired a summer intern, Stephanie Corbin, to coordinate the prog ram’s summer ice cream promotion. Corbin, a former county dairy New York, KARL BERGER Special Correspondent FREDERICK, MD. Even as basic milk prices con tinue to stagnate at levels well below the cost of production, local dairy farmers have got ten a boost from several recent state actions supporting higher prices. State officials in both New York and New Jersey moved last month to provide higher prices through the exercise of existing, if little used, regulat ory authority. The actions have given a boost to dairy farmers throughout the Middle Atlan tic region, according to local cooperative officials, by sta bilizing the imposition of so called over-order premiums throughout the region. In New Jersey, lobbying efforts by farmers and farm groups for state action resulted in an order signed May 31 by Gov. James Florio authorizing a statewide premium on Class I milk to begin June 1. Wood son Moffett Jr., director of the Division of Dairy Industry in the New Jersey Department of Agriculture, proposed the $1.05 per hundredweight pre mium for a period of one year. In New York, the state legislature passed a law May 2 to give state Commissioner of Agriculture and Markets Richard McGuire the ability to set prices immediately under existing regulatory authority. McGuire subsequently estab lished $13.85 as a statewide minimum Class I price for June, as well as minimum prices for Class II and Class 111 milk. The New York premium is $1.39 higher than the average Class I price in June for Feder al Order 2, which regulates the New York City-northern New Jersey milk market. The Class II and Class 111 minimum price also is higher than expected federal order prices for those classes. McGuire must still rule for mally on the official request for state-regulated prices - the subject of 12 days of testi mony in April but his emergency response suggests he will rule for at least a conti nuation of the current pre mium, according to observers there. "We do think he's going to rule favorably," said Gregg McAllister, a spokesman for the Regional Cooperative Marketing Agency. RCMA was instrumental in the lobby ing effort that led to the New York action. The over-order bargaining agency formed a subsidiary, the Regional Cooperative Bargaining Agency, expressly for the pur- princess, started with the program on May 21. “We are anxious to have Stepha nie join our staff,” said Brian Ross, PDPP program manager. “Her skills in communications and promotion will be a great asset to the program. We hope she enjoys New Jersey Actions Boost Over-Order Premium Effort pose of requesting emergency action on behalf of more than 35 percent of New York’s pro ducers, as required by the new law, McAllister said. New York's action already has prompted similar responses throughout New England, McAllister noted. In the weeks since the state's action was announced, offi cials in New Hampshire, Mas sachusetts, Maine and Ver- mont also have implemented or boosted statewide mini mum prices. The emergence of all these state- regulated prices has achieved a more uniform and more widely applicable over-order pricing system than RCMA managed by itself during its heyday in the late 1980 s. Likewise, both the New York and the New Jersey actions have shored up the existing over-order premiums implemented through the Pen nsylvania Milk Marketing Board and the Middle Atlantic Cooperative Milk Marketing Agency in Pennsylvania and the other parts of the Federal Order 4 marketplace, accord ing to Bob Yonkers, a Penn State University dairy economist. Indeed, the $1.05 level set in New Jersey also is the over- county promoter.” She is currently a senior at Grove City College, majoring in secondary education and commu nications. Following graduation, she said she hopes to work in publ ic relations/communications or teach high school English. order price that dairy coopera tives and farm groups, at a hearing in May, asked the PMMB to lock into place for the year beginning July 1, said board spokesman Tom Kugel. The current PMMB premium, set at $1.35, is due to expire June 30. The three-member board should rule on the industry's request later this month, according to Kugel. (Turn to Page A2l)