AlO-Lancastw Farming, Saturday, July 11, 1992 OPINION Agencies Must Pay Compensation The U.S. Supreme Court recently ordered that a state regulat ory agency must pay compensation to a private landowner for its “regulatory taking” of his private land. The court ruling means that if land use is regulated for the public good, the public must bear the economic burden of restrictions, not the landowner alone. This decision reaffirms that property rights are guaranteed by the Constitution. Dean Klechner said the ruling is “a clear-cut victoiy for all Americans, including America’s farmers and ranchers. This is especially important in the way the restrictive wetlands regulations are administered. In the future, regulators will have to be very careful about what they decide is in the public’s interest. If they decide to restrict property rights with regulations, they’ll need to figure out how to pay for it. In the past, farmers have been subjected to government regula tions that diminish the land’s value and the ability of the farmer to use the land. In some cases, the value of the land has plummeted at the stroke of a regulator’s pen, leaving the farmer without the resources necessary to earn a living and without the assets earned over a lifetime. Owners receive compensation when their property is taken through eminent domain. Now compensation will be mandated when private property is taken through regulatory action. We applaud. Farm Calendar Pennsylvania Ayrshire Breeder Field Day, Maulfair Acres, Fredericksburg. International Floriculture Short Course, Cincinnati Convention Center. Ohio. Sunday, July 12 Exchange Group from Oklahoma Arrives; Citizenship Washing ton tours leave Lancaster. Landisville Weed Science Field Day, Southeast Pa. Research Center, Landisville. Pa. Purebred Dairy Cattle Associa tion Judging Conference, Clinton/Centre counties, thru July 14. Susquehanna Holstein Club bam meeting, A 1 Longacres Farm, 8 p.m. Derry Township Ag Fair, New Derry, thru July 18. Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Fair, Pocono Downs, thru July 18. Holstein Club Bam Meeting, A 1 Animal Housing Expo, Lebanon Area Fairgrounds, thru July 15. Weed Science Field Day, Rockspring. Lebanon County Ice Cream Day. Ice Cream at the Park, Bland’s Park, Tipton. Woody Ornamental Plant Identifi cation Course, Lehigh County Ag Center, Allentown, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., repeats July 15,21, and 22. Focus On Tree Identification, Farm and Home Center, Lan- Animal Housing Expo, Lebanon Area Fairgrounds. Adams County Holstein twilight meeting, Jeff King Farm, York Springs, 7 p.m. Lehigh Valley Beekeepers’ Asso- '<* i- ciation, Leser Lake, Jacksonvil le, 7 p.m. Dairy Twilight Meeting, Pleasant Acres Farm of King family, Bedford County Holstein Club picnic. Marrtinsburg Memorial Park, Martinsburg, 7 p.m. Lycoming Co. Fair, Hughesville, thru July 2S. Summer Nursery Picnic and Edu cational Program, Acorn Ridge Nursery, Doylestown, 4 p.m.-7:30 p.m. Northumberland County Wool Pool, Furman’s Warehouse (Old Freight Station), Northumberland. Pa. Young Fanners Summer Con ference and picnic, Blue Moun tain H.S., Schuylkill Haven, 8 a.m.-6:30 p.m., banquet at Blue Mountain Banquet Hall, Sum mit Station and July 18. Farm Forum Editor: The description of the new state budget as a Senate-amended House version is misleading. Make no mistake there were three budgets before the Legisla ture this year: a House version, a Senate version, and the Gover nor’s proposal. The budget that was signed was written by the Pennsylvania Senate. The Senate version provided the lowest funding for the Depart ment of Agriculture, while the Governor’s proposal would have provided the most. The Governor reluctantly signed the Senate budget so that the Commonwealth could operate without disruptions. He used his line-item veto power to scratch .To Read “The Covenant Of the Wild” Animal Rights continues to be a growing movement in the United States. Agriculture needs to deve lop a positive response to this movement The book, “The Covenant of the Wild” by Stephen Budiansky, offers a very good essay on how animals became domesticated and how agriculture evolved. The author used archaeological and behavioral research data to deve lop his thesis that animals chose to be domesticated. Budiansky takes a look at nature and discusses man’s role in nature and how the human-animal bond evolved over time. He was bom in Boston and was graduated from Yale. Budiansky is currently a senior writer for U.S. News and World Report. He became interested in the top ic through his experiences as a small sheep flock owner near Fre derick, Md. This book will give you good insight to how agriculture evolved and how man and animals benefit from each other. Any major book store will special order this book for you. To Be Prepared For An Emergency An emergency may strike at any time. The difference between sav ing or losing a life could depend on how a phone call for help is made. By your telephone, keep a list of emergency phone numbers. These numbers should be easy to read and visible. Beside the numbers 1992 Keystone Chapter Soil and Water Conservation Society annual meeting, Penn State Annual Menges Mills Historic (Turn to Pag* A 36) out $73 million in order to insure that essential services could con tinue and that a balanced budget is maintained during these difficult economic times. There are many outstanding issues left to be resolved, and the Governor is asking the Legislature to immediately begin work on an acceptable supplemental spending bill. The Governor’s line vetoes make it possilbe for the Legisla ture to correct the spending plan without raising taxes. I urge the members of (he House and Senate to enact that supplemental budget when developed. Sincerely, BOYD E. WOLFF Secretary of Agriculture should be written directions to your home. Include address, land marks, mileage distances, and road names. At the time of an emergency, be emotionally prepared to give the following information: 1. Type of emergency. 2. Number of victims involved. 3. Directions to the emergency. 4. Treatment that has already been provided. Stay on the phone until the dis patcher discounts. Today’s com munication’s equipment, if pro vided enough time, is able to iden tify where a call is being made. If the emergency site is isolated, have someone meet the emergency response personnel and direct them to the scene. Make sure your address is easily visible from the road. When seconds count, your abili ty to call for help the correct way is crucial. To Attend Animal Housing Expo Are you thinking about build ing, remodeling, or expanding I AND NONE ELSE July 12,1992 Background Scripture: Zephaniah 1 through 2. Devotional Reading: Proverbs 14:26-35. Unless you are partial to cosmic-size “destruction deibys,” the picture that the prophet Zepha niah draws is not a pretty one. The whole book bearing his name is based upon his expectation of the terrible “day of the Lord” which, with the exception of a small remnant, will bring universal destruction: “I will utterly sweep away everything from the face of the earth,” says the Lord...” I will cut off mankind from the face of the earth’”(l:2,3) There are lots of doom-laden prophecies in the Old Testament, but none more sweeping and devastating than these by Zepha niah: “In the fire of his jealous wrath, all the earth shall be con sumed; for a full, yea sudden end he will make of all the inhabitants of the earth”(l;18b). WORDS OF DOOM What was behind these words of doom? Zephaniah spells out God’s judgment upon the morality of all people in general and the people of Judiah in particular. There is a long catalog of private and corporate sin: the adulteration of devotion to God, the adoption of pagan ways, rampant material ism and greed, and galloping mor al decay. Whenever people flaunt their evil in the face of God, the potential for the Day of the Lord grows stronger. At the hear of Zephaniah’s con demnation. however, is the under lying arrogance that characterizes many of the people. This is not just a matter of the corrupt things they did, but of the sinful persons they became. The key to all of this is a disastrous pride. Some of these people assume that their financial wealth will exempt them from God’s judgment. But God says through Zephaniah: “Neither their silver nor their gold shall be able to deliver them on the day of the wrath of the Lord”(l:18) your animal housing facilities? Do you have questions about storing and handling feed and manure, animal traffic and handling, ani mal comfort, ventilation, or con struction materials? Do you want to know who the providers are of various supplies and services, how to get your plans approved, and how to secure necessary funding? If so, you will want to attend the Animal Housing Expo, sponsored by Penn State Cooperative Exten sion and local agricultural indus tries, onJuly 14and 15at the Leba non County Fairgrounds. The program will be the same each day. Speakers will be discussing site selection, remodel or build new, environmental requirements for dairy, swine and poultry, manag ing manure, regulations affecting animal housing, and what the banker expects. In addition, there will be exhibits and sample build ings to visit. Plan to attend and learn the latest in animal housing. Feather Prof s Footnote: “It takes months to find a custom er . . . seconds to lose one." What God is looking for is true humility, not the arrogance he finds at every level of society. That arrogrance finds is ultimate expression in these words: This is the exultant city that dwelt secure, that said to himself, “I am and there is none else"(2:15). You may have to read that a few times to grasp its meaning. It is the ulti mate of ego gone rampant It is simply another way of saying: In this world there is only one who counts Me. WHO IS SECURE? Lots of people today believe that and, to the best of their ability, live it out in their lives. Not only individuals, but groups can exhibit this arrogance. Zephaniah men tions ? whole city; “That is the exultant city, that dwelt secure..” (2:IS). There will be nothing over which to exult on the Day of the Lord and no one should be so pre sumptuous as to feel “secure.” God also despises the depreciat ing remarks that are meant to undermine his reign among peo ple. “I have heard the taunts of Moab and the revilings of the Ammonites, how they have taunted my people and made boasts against their territory” (2:8). Even the people of Judith have made disparaging remarks about God “those who say in their hearts, “The Lord will not do good, nor will he do ill” (1:12b). These people of Judah think of God as one who either does not care or who is impotent to do anything. Actually, there are lots of us today who, although nominally Christian, take pretty much the same attitude. We do not deny the reality of God in fact, we might be scandalized if anyone should do so but we speak or act as if God were of no consequence in this world, as if sin will forever go unpunished and without consequ ence. That is truly the ultimate blasphemy. Better to deny God than to underestimate Him as if “I am and there is none else.” Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building 1 E. Main St. Ephrata, PA 17522 by Lancaster Farming, Inc. A Stwnrrmn Enltrprkt Robert G. Campbell General Manager Everett R. Newswanger Managing Editor Copyright 1992 by Uncutor Forming