SCC To (Continued from Page Al) carried out by the local conserva tion districts, which have a historic reputation for good relations with the farm community, unlike DER. Under the current administra tion, DER has been undergoing a realignment of approach to pro tecting the environment Instead of just saying, “No,” to landowners and entrepreneurs seeking to alter local environs in order to create business, the agency policy is now to say. “How may I help you com ply with regulations?” The Nutrient Management Advisory Board consists of rep resentatives mostly from agricul ture and agribusiness, along with a representative of the general citizenry, the lending industry, and environmental concerns, such as the Chesapeake Bay Foundation. For more than 18 months, the board has worked to create a set of regulations to recommend to the board. The effort is considered to be an example of the concept behind the “Reg-Neg” type of negotiated regulation-making. This type of effort attempts to curb public outcry after regula tions have been proposed by including the to-be regulated com munity early in the process. The goal of nutrient manage ment is to prevent the uncontrolled flow of nutrients into surface and groundwaters. The problem is yet to be fully identified, but the symptom has been increasingly degraded water A NEW DIMENSION IN ELECTRONIC FLY CONTROL Patented Control Unit Patent-pending “Killer Cord” * Plugs into any 110 V outlet * Uses no light* or attractanta * Uses lees power than a 40 watt bulb * Utilizes fly’s natural instincts * Operates 2,500 feet of‘Killer Cord* * Uniform, full-facility coverage * Micro-amperage, safe A effective * Stainless Steel, Kevlar. Nylon DEALER AM. EX. 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The first phenomenon created a situation in which all livestock producers and those applying man ure to their fields became sur rounded by people with no or little exposure to the actual conditions of production agriculture. the result has been intolerance of normal agricultural practices by local government officials,-who either are, or were pressured by, recently urbanized commuters liv ing in residential developments built on former farms in farming country. Local ordinances carried var ying degrees of local government intrusion into farming operations. Further, many farms operate in several different municipalities and were becoming subject to a variety of regulations, depending on where political boundaries cross fields. The second phenomenon the concentrated production facility has created a rapid departure from the traditional ratio of manure production-to-acre on farms. ‘ This has been caused because of low commodity prices, which some blame on government food policies, and the application of “industrial” techniques and atti tudes to raising livestock. The competitive demands on livestock production favors higher production with lower overhead. With no controls on manure handling, large production facili ties have been built on properties with insufficient acreage to allow plants to use the nutrients adequ ately on site. Further, with less and less crop land available locally to raise feeds for the increased livestock popula tions. and land juices having skyr ocketed because of the first phe nomenon, it has become more competitive for some large lives tock producers to import forages and feeds. Nutrients contained in feeds which livestock don’t utilize are passed on through manure. In operations which import the majority of livestock nutrients through purchased feeds, the nutri ents leave the farm in one of three ways through the environment, through the sale of crops raised using the manure from the lives tock, and through the exjjort of the fjfhfi COPENHAGEN SKOAL PULLING rtifr ' CIRCUIT FREESTATE SHOWDOWN TRUCK & TRACTOR PULL SAT., JUNE 3, 1995 Harford County Equestrian Center, Bel Air, MD BROUGHT TO YOU BUY KEENE DODGE & Heart of Maryland Tractor Pullers Assoc. 4 WD • 2 WD • Modified • Super Stock/Pro Stock Tickets: $7.00 Sold at Gate Food Available BARTVILLE WELDING SHOP 1 , \» i| 'I \' ■ 1 ( ii[ M i 111 i 1 ' \ I '( v * i ,ti I ’..i ii> 1 i i 1 - Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 27, IMS-A29 livestock. This is a situation used by those who argue for something called, “sustainable agriculture,” though some of the initial concepts prom oted by those who supj»rt “sus tainable agriculture” seemed removed from the practicalilities of profitable agriculture. The Nutrient Management Act defines agricultural oj)erations which are out of balance between the amounts of nutrients manipu lated on the farm and the amount of cropland suitable for its applica tion as “Concentrated Animal Operations.” For ease of understanding, the law sets a cap on slocking rate of 2,000 pounds liveweight per acre, on average, j>er year, as the thresh hold level before being required to develop a nutrient management plan. However, the Nutrient Manage ment Act allows for any size oper ation and any density of livestock, as long as a plan is developed to bring the operation within a close balance between nutrients and land. That calculation does not include farm residential land, but the amount of land to which man ure and other plant nutrients can be safely applied. The Nutrient Management Act and its framers wanted to be cer tain that concern for responsible nutrient management didn’t end with government regulating just the production agriculture community. It does allow for expanding the scope of the law to include other sources of nutrients, such as resi dential on-lot underground septic systems, non-agricultural opera tions that use nutrients to grow grasses, for example, for recrea tional or aesthetic activities, such as golf. The packet of regulations that the state Conservation Commis sion is to review in June addresses production agriculture, except for a last minute attempt by some advisory board members to get those who board horses included. It was argued that some horse boarding operations seem to have much more than 2,000 pounds of horse per acre per year, and thus represented an “animal operation” if not exactly a production agricul ture operation. It was suggested that production agriculture farmers may become upset if they see neighbors with horses not being subject to the same types of government oversight. As a result, board members pre sent at the April meeting created a definition in the recommended regulations with the intent to include those who board horses, though if it were to remain, could probably equally apply to dog ken nels, mink ranches, pet shops, etc. However, the commission staff advised the board that its attempt to include those who board horses by attempting to change the scope of the law through regulations would probably be ruled illegal. Nevertheless, the board approved the package. It was said by several board members, that due to the overall agreement on the majority of recommended regula tions, the completeness of the package, and die time restraints (Turn to Pag* A 32) Lamb And Wool Checkoff [(Continued from Pago A2B) “A self-help check off program is an oppor tunity our industry has to continue promotion of our products and to secure economic viabil ity,” wrote Mawhinney. But work being undertaken by ASl’s headquarters in Englew ood, Colo, and by lob byists in Washington, D.C. is helping to soli dify a working program, according to the sheep producer. She indicated that the organization needs combined contributions to stave off the impor ters, who are ‘‘right there, sitting on the doorstep” of many pro ducers,' she said. As a result, more effort is being undertaken by ASI to include die needs of the producers on the 1995 Farm Bill. Vogel said that the producers east of the Mississippi River account for most of the total sheep producers in the nation. Forty percent of the lambs sold in the country are sold in the Northeast.