A24-Laocast#r farming, Saturday. May 1.1993 Land O’ Lakes Presents Fourth Butter Award to Holly Milk BETH MILLER Franklin Co. Correspondent MOUNT HOLLY SPRINGS (Cumberland Co.) The Holly Milk plant has a lot of proof hang ing on the wall that it makes better butter. Thc,plant for the fourth year in a row has won the coveted Land O’ Lakes Award from the nationally-known butter company. The workers at the plant east of Mount Holly Springs are pretty proud about that, said Bill Schreiber, the company’s chief executive officer. They should be. To win the award, the plant had to beat the five other plants in the country that make butter for Land O' Lakes, Schreiber said. Holly Milk and four of the other plants are independent operations that work under contract with Land O’ Lakes. The other plant is owned by Land O’ Lakes itself, said Schreiber. Land O’ Lakes sponsors the annual contest to boost the quality and standards of the plants that make its product, he said. Shcreiber said the award is given based on the physical char acteristics of the butter each plant makes, a plant’s personnel prac tices, general sanitation, record keeping and the condition of packaging. He said inspectors from Land O’ Lakes come to the plant unan nounced six times a year and com plete a full-scale audit. They check the entire system and give the plant a numerical seme, he said. The winning of the Land O’ Lakes Award means Holly Milk will have an increase in the amount of butler it will make for Land O’ Lakes, Schrcibcr said. He said his plant makes butter Commodity Board Nominations Sought HARRISBURG (Dauphin Co.) State Agriculture Secretary Boyd E. Wolff has announced that nomina tions are being accepted for positions on several commodity promotion and research boards. The boards include apple marketing, peach and nectarine research, potato research, sheep and lamb marketing, and vegetable market ing and research. “This is a great opportunity for produc ers to get involved with marketing and research programs that affect their livelihood,” Wolff said. “Decisions are made here that prevent losses and increase sales.” Producers affected by the programs are eligible to serve on the boards. To nominate someone for member ship to one of the boards, submit the per son’s name, address, and area of interest to Pennsylvania Depart ment of Agriculture, Bureau of Market Development, 2301 North Cameron Street, only for Land O’ Lakes, both salted and unsalted butter. The plant is Land O’ Lakes' largest supplier of unsalted butter, he said. Workers at Holly Milk have more to crow about than just the Land O’ Lakes Award, however. The buttermakers also recently entered a competition at the Min nesota State Fair after the fair opened that contest to competitors from other states. Buttermaker Jeff Kutz finished first in the fair’s competition. The buttermakers also entered four other contests and four of them finished in the top 10 nation wide. One finished in third place overall. Holly Milk is a division of the Atlantic Dairy Cooperative, which has 3,500 members. The plant receives its milk from a seven state area that includes Pennsylva nia, New Jersey, New York, Vir ginia, West Virginia, Delaware and Maryland. Holly Milk opened in 1978 with just 30 employees. Today it has 118 employees. The plant, whose motto is “Together, We Achieve” also makes other products besides butter. The whole dry milk products it makes ate sold mainly to the con fectionary industry, like the Her shey Chocolate Co., Schreiber said. He said its non-fat dry milk pro ducts are mainly sold to compa nies like Kraft for things like ice cream mixes. Holly Milk's buttermilk pro ducts, which are a by-product of the butter-making process, are sold to ice cream producers and the bakery trade, Schreiber said. And the plant also makes con densed products which it supplies to Borden’s for sweetened con- 17110-9408. Nomina tions will be accepted until May 13. P. L. ROHBER & BR0„ INC. Smoketown, PA A worker operates the packaging machine at the Holly Milk plant which wraps the plant’s prize-winning Land O’ Lakes-labeled butter. . n . Jlfc , h • j ter an hour that is made by the 2u make whole condensed milk, 266 AMn-all Holly Milk, which in thc butter million pounds goes to non-fat dry oa hnnrs » erven de P artmcnt - milk, 11 milium pounds goes to m Uk powifcr and 234 mil vLb of MJ. . im vm comes out to 7,400 pounds of but- Qf that, 57 million pounds goes to Eastern Milk Pays Storm Losses SYRACUSE, N.Y. The board of directors of Eastern Milk Producers Cooperative voted Wednesday, April 28, to pay member farmers for any milk they lost in the “blizzard of *93” this past March. “We’re paying 100 percent of the stopn losses,” said Board Pres ident Lewis Gardner, who himself runs a family farm in Galeton, Pa. Eastern General Manager Michael Donovan said 135 of Easton’s 3,000 members lost a PH. 717-299-2571 combined total 353,000 pounds of milk to spoilage when the March snowstorm cut power or kept milk trucks from getting to farms for up to four days. The most severely hit areas were in eastern and south eastern Pennsylvania. Donovan said two thirds of the farmers suffering los ses were from Pennsylvania, and the rest were split among Ver mont, New York, Maryland and Delaware. Gardner said the board decided to pay fanners $l2 per hundred- __ low maintenance, durabil- m m —i ity and long-life. 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