A34*Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 17, 1991 State Pricing Orders (Continued from Pago AIS) market power,” Samuel said. ‘The governor says they (the dealers) should pay the over-order pre mium... But they’re big enough that they don’t have to. Because they can’t show that this will hurt them.” The dispute has turned a little nasty in New Jersey, according to Charlie Miller, an official with the New Jersey Farm Bureau. Miller said there is evidence that proces sors have juggled their mUk sup plies to lower their Class I utiliza tion percentages on milk produced in New Jersey, thereby reducing the amount of the premium paid to the state’s dairymen. Both the state Farm Bureau and Atlantic Dairy Cooperative, which has a number of members in the southern part of the state, have filed briefs in support of the New Jersey state order. In addition, the Farm Bureau’s board of directors recently asked the office of the state’s attorney general to look into the overall issue of farm and retail milk prices in New Jersey. Feed Grain Comments Due POTTSVILLE (Schuylkill Co.) The U.S. Department of Agriculture is planning the 1992 Feed Grain program and asking for public comments by August 28 on whether the acreage reduction percentage (ARP) for com should be 5, 7.5, 10, 12.5, or some other percentage within the considered range. Feed grain producers and the general public are also invited to com ment on whether the sorghum and barley ARP should be 9,5,7.5, or some other percen tage within the consid ered range. By law, the 1992 oats ARP must be 0, according to Susan Rhode, program assis tant of the Schuylkill County agricultural Sta bilization and Conser vation Service. She said the depart ment has proposed 1992 1 corn ARP options, along with an analysis that includes estimated planted acreage, pro duction, domestic and export use, ending stocks, season average producer price, and the program participation rate. Comments on the 1992 Feed Grain Prog ram should be mailed to the Director, Commodi ty Analysis Division, USDA/ASCS, Room 3741-S, P.0.80x 2415, Washington, D.C. 20013. Wettlin disputed the contention that the Class I utilization percen tages for June reflected anything out of the ordinary. He also said the dealers are suffering from a kind of character assassination. “We have been portrayed as anti-farmer,” he said. “We’re not We’re pro-farmer.” One indication, he said, has been the processors ’ willingness to pay premiums even before the state (Hieing order became effec tive, at a time when there was no shortage of milk in the marketp lace. In southern New Jersey, where marketing is governed by Federal Order 4, the processors have long paid the $1.05 premium charged by the Middle Atlantic Cooperative Milk Marketing Agency, known as MACMMA. In the northern part of the state gov erned by Order 2, processors have been paying 40-60 cents a hun dredweight even to the indepen dent dairymen (those not asso ciated with a cooperative). The processors are still paying these premiums and holding in escrow only the difference between these Quality Asphalt Paving • Farms * H^ • Driveways pai#»m/s • Parking Lots ro b d « mi , Cfrppfc E«. Earl. PA 17519 OUCCtO Rhone (717) 355 9219 '"l # "" Attention We Are Also Available For Grading, Stoning & Rolling Which Is The First Step In A Quality Paving Job. For Estimates Call 717-355-9219 amounts and 77 cents, Wettlin said. The spokesman said the proces sors have objections to some spe cific features of the New Jersey order as well as a fundamental dis agreement with the imposition of government controls in the marketplace. “This is a market-wide prob lem,” Wettlin said. “This is not a New Jersey problem. There is too much milk in the Northeast, parti cularly in Federal Order 2. We’re not doing the dairy farmers any favor by imposing a temporary premium that may or may not be in existence at this time next year.” The MACMMA premium, which parallels the one established by the Pennsylvania Milk Market ing Board, is one common ground that has escaped the fallout from this latest battle between producers and processors. Bob Dever, the assistant general manager of Atlantic Dairy Cooperative, said the cooperative helped propose and continues to support die New Jersey state order. But he was care ful not to criticize the processors for their concerns about the legali ty and scope of the new slate pric ing orders. MACMMA leaders, meanwhile, remain committed to a bargaining approach^ OM®R WHEAT Chemgro SOB Barsoy Twain Wysor Coker Si 6 Pennco Tyler ALL CERTIFIED AND VITAVAX TREATED Chemgro Union Mill P.0.80x 21»,St«UStr ? t RJ>. 1, P.O. Box 40F *** 1,520 Belltirflle, PA 17004 1*717*5w»32W fj.ft tiU.ll K 1-SOO-346-476S (GROW) 717 W5 * WB DEMANDING JOBS DEMA" KUDO What makes the models in Kubota’s L so unique? They’re th* compact tractors evei innovative “Ever Clutch’.’ It’s a true wet clutch that works hard and long without mechanical failure or maintenance nightmares. Kubota is so sure of the “Ever Clutch” that it has developed a 3 year/1500 hour clutch warranty. The new L-Series with 23-49 PTO HP also has improved working efficiency and overall performance with a powerful hydraulic system and increased front loader lift capacity. 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