A24-Lanc«ster Farming, Saturday, July 30, 1994 GAY BROWNLEE Somerset Co. Correspondent SOMERSET (Somerset Co.) It was a typical late-aftemoon June workday when Brendle Farms employees switched off the systems at the farm and began the usual end-of-day cleanup in the candling, grading, and packing de partment of Somerset County’s biggest egg operation. Another day was over. It was time to go home. Friday would be a repeat, with some workers helping to construct the new third bam to house an ad ditional 180,000 white leghorn chickens. At his Colorado mountain re treat, owner Robert Brendle was enjoying some isolated peace, knowing his experienced son, Mike, Brendle Farms landowner, would easily handle the operation in his absence. From the poultry bams, Mike’s home is about a mile and a half away. Minutes after 7 p.m., Mike’s telephone started ringing. It was the second call made by a neigh bor located near the bams. The first was to 9-1-1 to summon local volunteer firemen to the scene be cause smoke and flames were coming from the bam. Sipesvillc firemen and Mike, coming from opposite directions, minutes later, arrived simultan eously. “The flames were 30 to 40 feet high when I got here,” said Mike. “I knew it must have started in the back end where the fans are locat ed.” Other volunteer fire companies arrived 11 of them but Sipcsville Fire Chief Mark Zam banim was in charge. The situation posed extreme risk for firefighters because of po tential entrapment poultry bams have long aisles and high tiers of chicken cages around which the unfamiliar firemen must move in thick smoke and heavy gear. “If the cages collapse, buckle and fall, they are trapped,” said Brendle. “It’s awful risky to go in to the building.” Brendle knew at best all the firefighters could do was protect the connecting structures. The bams arc conjoined for automa tion. But it was imperative to save the methane digester. That the bam would be lost was a certainty. “I told him (Zambanini) I had never heard of one being saved,” said Brendle. Mike Brendle stands beside a hold that firemen cut in a poultry barn when fire broke out in June. Brendle Farms lost above 30,000 chickens to fire and smothering In the Fire Puts Expansion On Hold For Brendle Farms So he was unprepared for what happened when the Class A foam took over. Still amazed, Brendle said, “By the time they threw that foam in there, it was only five minutes until they put it down. It did a spartan job. TTiey did an im possible job.” Later, it was learned that while Class A foam smothers flames like a blanket, at $l5 a gallon it is much 100 expensive for the ma jority of rural volunteer fire com panies to afford in great quantities. Mike Brendle wishes that situa tion was different because he can’t contain his praise for the local volunteer fire departments. He wishes they had funding sources other than fund drives and fund raisers that would enable them to purchase the foam. Although only half the bam burned, the loss was hefty, at $333,000. Thirty thousand birds perished as a result. And now, it’s as if they weren’t expanding be cause the Brendle-raised pullets entering the new bam can merely keep egg production where it was before the fire. Brendle said it will take another year, but they will continue work ing to rebuild and expand the operation which serves four sur rounding counties with fresh eggs Cambria, Bedford, Somerset, and Westmoreland. “It takes a year to start a pole building,” said Brendle, “until you install the wiring and insulation put on the aluminum skin and chipboard inside.” Brendle said the fire was traced to the newest of the 17 fans work ing full tilt to ventilate the now partially-destroyed bam. He said that despite the loss, eggs contin ued to be produced and shipped to market the next day. “We didn’t miss one day of pro duction,” he said. “We picked them out by hand Friday, Satur day, and Sunday.” Brendle said he’s responsible for the Brendle crops. “Dad owns the birds and I take care of the fields,” he said. “We’re blessed that my father is here and that we can work together.” Although Brendle raises 20 pci cent of the poultry feed on the 550-acre spread, trucking the rest from Ohio has proven the most economical option, he said. Robert Brendle wasn’t always a poullryman. In fact, he was a dairyman, milking some 90 head of the big Holsteins. After his wife A fire on June 16 was stopped halfway in the poultry barn of Brendle Farms, Somerset, when volunteer firemen threw Class A foam on It. Here Is the outside of the barn showing damage at the far end. Robert Brendle, left, and his son, Mike Brendle, stand at the entry of a new poultry barn that’s under construction. It was Intended to expand the egg operation, the larg est in Somerset County, until a recent fire destroyed half of another barn, causing death for some 30,000 birds. took a nasty kick from one of the an d relaxing Colorado had been, resentative on the Agricultural cows, Robert decided dairying die loss to his business wiped out Advisory Board to the stale De was not for him. It was “for the his pleasure in being there, he partment of Environmental Re birds (pun intended). said. sources, and also president of the “This is more like an eight to Robert’s wife is Betty. local water company, five job,” Robert said. He said that Mike and his wife, Harriet, Brendle Farms employs seven as soon as he learned about the have four children ranging in age full time and seven part lime, in fire, he had to return to Somerset from 13 to one year. He is the eluding dad and son, according to County. No matter how beautiful governor’s appointed poultry rep- Mike. Lebanon Dairy Refunds Total $149,000 NORTH CORNWALL (Leb anon Co.) Lebanon County Dairy producers who reduced or did not increase their 1993 milk marketings filed 96 applications and received refunds totaling $148,998 according to Jenifer Minnich, county executive direc tor of the Agricultural Stabiliza tion and Conservation Service. The cash payments were issued to dairy producers in the county under the Dairy Refund Payment Program (DRPP), authorized by the Omnibus Budget Reconcili ation Acts of 1990 and 1993. “Producers who provided evi dence that they did not market more milk in 1993 than in 1992 were eligible to receive the entire amount deducted from their milk proceeds if they met the eligibility requirements and claimed the re fund by March 15,” Minnich said. The 1990 Act provides that the 11.25 cents per hundredweight origin, sex, religion, age, disabili milk marketing assessment will be ty, political beliefs, and marital or increased on May-Dcccmbcr milk familial status. (Not all prohibited marketings each year to compen- bases apply to all programs.) Pcr sate for refunds made for the pre- sons with disabilities who require vious year. alternative means for communica- Thcrefore, effective May 1, fion of program information 1994, the assessment was increas- (Braille, large print, audiotape, ed by 8.03 cents for a total of etc.) should contact the USDA, 19.28 cents per hundredweight. Office of Communications at ASCS official Minnich said this 202-720-5881 (voice) or rale will remain in effect through- 202-720-7808 (TDD). out the remainder of this year, and To file a complaint, write the will revert to 11.25 cents per Secretary of Agriculture, U.S. De hundrcdweighl on January 1, partment of Agriculture, Wash -1995. ington, DC 20250, or call The United States Department 202-720-7327 (voice) or of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits 202-720-1127 (TDD). USDA is discrimination in its programs on an equal employment opportunity the basis of race, color, national employer.