NS? Farm Calendar (Continued from Page A 10) Host Hotel, Sturbridge, Mass., thru Dec, 16. Dairy-MAP winter meeting, Somerset County Area Vo- Tqch School. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Leadership Lebanon Valley Ag Day. Lebanon Valley Ag Center. \\((l!ICSll.H. |)('l fillin': 15 Dairy-MAP winter meeting. Bonanza Family Restaurant, Lyndora, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Westmoreland County Coopera tive Extension dinner meeting. Mountain View Inn, Greens burg, 7 p.m. Veterinary Nutrition Forum. Days lage Conference, Ramada Inn, Hagerstown, Md. Pa. Holstein board of directors meeting. State College, 10:30 a.m. Pa. Seedman’s Association annual meeting, Eden Resort Inn, Lancaster. Dairy-MAP. Washington County Extension Office, Washington, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. National Satellite Videoconfer Farm Forum (ConUAuad from Pago AID) per ewt on the milk you produce. Now, from what I’ve read in the papers the U.S.D.A. says it might be one cent per cwt. What a dif ference! National milk says they want another National Dairy Board to two R&ibn of milk from the so-called surplus pile. The board will attempt to develop new markets, both domestically and in foreign coun tries. This scheme will be financed by another $.lO per cwt assess ment oft dairy farmers milk. According to news releases issued by Pro Ag and other organizations these two billion lbs. of milk were removed from the so-called surp lus pile by the commodity credit THANK YOU TO THE 1993 SOLANCO FAIR LIVESTOCK BUYERS • Herr and Leaman • Messer’s • P.L Rohrer • Joe Strickler • B & R Cattle Co. • New Holland Sales Stable • Fowl's Feed Service • Blue Ball National Bank • C.B. Hoober • • Keystone Farm Credit * Darcie Stolz VMD • Walter and Dunlap • Edgefield Farms • Fred Crider • Herr Hope Farms • Lancaster Ford • Hess Mill • Edgar Herr Inc. • Hostetter Grain • Agway • Hamilton Bank • Century 21 Wagner Hatton • Bill McCauley RMP • James G. Kreider & Son • Fowl's Feed Service • Welk Livestock • Herr Foods • Pre-Vent Distributors • Bank of Lancaster County • • Keystone Farm Credit • James G. Kreider and Son•Agway • Farmers First Bank • Hostetter Grain • Fowl's Feed Service • Walter and Dunlap • Bank of Lancaster County • Robert and Donna Kreider • New Holland Sales Stable • Ross H. Rohrer and Son • Huber Builders«Welk's Livestock • Lancaster Ford • C.B. Hoober • Pre-Vent Distributors • Welk's Butchering • Maplehofe Dairy • Hamilton Bank • Larry Housekeeper • Representative John Barley • K and S Equipment • Jerome Rhoades • Risser Grain • Donald Sweigart • Enck Bros. Drywall • Bart-Star Farm • Triple H Equipment • Rye-Ridge Farm • New Holland Sales Stables • Herr and Leaman • James Hostetter CPA • Welk Crest Holsteins • Hess Mills ence. Worker Protection Stan dard for Agricultural Pesti cides, Penn State Great Valley, Malvern; Berks Campus, Read ing; and Allentown Campus, Complex, Harrisburg, 8:45 a.m. Dairy-MAP winter meeting. Somerset Area Vo-Tech U. of Md. Eastern Shore, Prin cess Anne, Md., 9:30 a.m.-4 Miind.n, 1)t 'i tinlKi 2(1 I ikml.i \, I>> i cipilh i - 1 Breeding Priorities for the Com mercial Dairyman, Franklin Co. Human Services Building, 10 a.m.-noon. Swine meeting. Country Table Restaurant, Mount Joy, 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Alternative Field Crops Seminar. Begins Fire Company Hall, Begins. 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m. corporation. So what difference does it make who removes die two billion lbs. of milk from the pile. Well it does matter, because under Self-Help all dairy farmers will be assessed to help fund the Dairy Boards Program. ■ -r Even with the milk out of the way; dairy farmers prices were still at the 1979-1980 period, c That’s what I call progress. Now it’s revealed that the Self-Help . Program calls for the market administrator to deduct even more money from our milk checks to “balance the market”. Recently, the market admini strator revealed that on January 1, 1994 we will have class m A pric ing. This means milk used for STEERS GRAND CHAMPION FERGUSON AND HASSLES RESERVE CHAMPION K & S EQUIPMENT LAMBS GRAND CHAMPION DR RICHARD ALBRIGHT RESERVE CHAMPION WEAVER INSURANCE AGENCY HOGS GRAND CHAMPION HATFIELD QUALITY MEATS RESERVE CHAMPION HESS BARBEQUE Auctioneer: Lloyd Kreider Ridge Presents Ag Issues At Forum EVERETT NEWSWANGER Managing Editor STRASBURG (Lancaster Co.) —The featured speaker at the monthly Ag Issues breakfast was Tom Ridge, Republican guberna torial candidate, and U. S. rep resentative (PA-21). Ridge has been an announced candidate for neatly a year, and the first coalition he developed in his campaign was with agriculture. Ridge said that often agriculture and business are projected as hav ing separate interests, but he said agriculture is big business, and when you merge at the bottom line, the'motivation for both is the same. “Businessmen and farmers both want to make a profit, and they want government to get out of their way so they can operate and make investment decisions,” Ridge said. “We have to have a new mind-set that the needs of agriculture are the same as the needs to operate a busi ness. You need a consistent public policy that has stability and predtc-. lability so you can go about the operation of your business.” Ridge pledged a well-staffed department of agriuclture in his administration with people from agriculture and agri-business to non-fat dry milk powder will com mand a cheaper value. Even pos sibly lower blend prices. Early in the fall the co-ops bloc voted the other National Dairy Board into continued existence. Didn’t the co-ops also support 8.5. T.? I’ve checked it out and it’s true. All dairy fanners in order #2 lose at least three cents per cwt on our blend price, so the market administrator can pay the order #2 cooperatives four cents per cwt. to help fund the co-ops for market wide services for all dairy farmers. Class 111 A juicing, B.S.T. 2 National Dairy Boards Self- Help Program (worth 1 cent per cwt.).. Farmers paying for the cost of balancing the market, and dairy farmers pay price at the 1979-1980 level. Is this what our co-op jrayment provision money goes for? i.ilcp. I said Something is wrong! Lloyd Gustin jge, iepu , gi sent* ideas at the Ag Issues Forum. help oversee and operate the department. He also made a differ ence between promoting and marketing agricultural products. “Pennsylvania is not doing as good a job as it should be doing in selling Pennsylvania made goods, includ ing exports,” Ridge said. “We are the fifth largest state in the country, but we only rank 11 or 12 in exports. With all the agriculture in Pennsylvania, the number one industry, only five percent of the value of goods we export are agri cultural products. We can do bet ter, and I will run an export {nog ram directly out Of the governor's office.” On the subject of wetlands, Ridge said four points are impor tant; we need standard definitions, consistently applied; we need one agency to make the call; we need to recognize that all wetlands are not created equally; we need to ack- nowledge this fact and classify wetlands according to environ mental and ecological importance; and we need to have no taking of private property without just compensation. Ridge called DER a job crushing, community-harassing, regulatory agency that would be restructured into a service agency in his adminstration. “We need rigorous enforcement, but we need to use some energy and commit ment to help Pennsylvanians to understand and comply with the law,” Ridge said. “DER will no longer exist in my government The agency needs to be more than enforcement police. DER should work with and for the people.” The Ag Issues Forum is a group of farmers and agri-business lead ers who meet each month to hear and discuss subjects of interest to agriculture. KEN CLUGSTOM (717) 665-6775 CRAFT-BILT CONSTRUCTION INC. FARM-HOME BUILDING 1242 Breneman Road MANHEIM, PA 17545 PH: (717) 665-4372 BUILDING & REMODELING FOR DAIRY RESIDENTIAL SWINE POLE BUILDINGS BEEF STORAGE HERNIA? No hernia is unrepairable, even after sev eral previous failed attempts. We special ize in outpatient hernia repairs, and most patients are able to return to full work with in several days. 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