JOYCE BUPP York Co. Correspondent WILLIAMSPORT (Lycoming Co.) An informational hearing held last week on proposed Dairy Compact legislation for Pennsyl vania brought out a standing room, nearly 200-head strong, crowd of dairy farmers and indus try representatives. The hearing, called April 3 by the Pennsylvania Senate Agricul ture and Rural Affairs Committee and hosted at the Pennsylvania College of Technology, was to ga ther input on Senate Bill 170. The Northeast Interstate Dairy Com pact bill, if enacted by the Senate and Legislature, would lay the groundwork for the state’s dairy industry to become part of the Northeast Interstate Dairy Com pact The bill was originally intro duced to the Senate on January 21, 1997, by Bradford County Senator Roger Madigan and referred to the Agriculture and Rural Affairs Committee for consideration. Because the Dairy Compact is structured for only contiguous stales to join, with mirror enabling laws. Pennsylvania participation hinges on die passage of similar legislation in New York. New York’s state Senate has already passed its version of Compact legislation, but it has yet to be acted upon by the Empire stale’s Assembly side. The Northeast Dairy Compact was authorized by the 1996 Farm Bill and first used for pricing milk in late summer 1997. Included in the origin al Compact borders area are Vermont. New Hampshire, Maine, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut New Jersey recently had en abling Compact legislation signed into law and more than a dozen other states either have, or are working toward, similar compact proposals. Maryland’s legislation, thwarted in previous at tempts, was working through the state’s Senate earlier this week. While some daily hearings pit the state’s farmer-member organizations against one an other, that has not been the case with the Com pact issue. One by one, the Farm Bureau, Grange. Farmers’ Union, and the state’s major dairy cooperatives. Dairy lea. Dairy Farmers of America, Land O’Lakes and Maryland and Vir ginia Milk Producers, all presented testimony at the hearing solidly bearing one united message. Pennsylvania’s dairy producers need Dairy Compact enabling legislation. One recurring theme through several presenta tions of testimony was that dairy farmers are hav ing difficulty paying their bills, as input costs have continued to rise while milk prices remain at price-levels of years ago. Daniel Smith, executive director of the North east Dairy Compact which is presently pricing Class I milk in the six New England states, ad dressed that same issue in his supportive testi mony. “It is allowing farmers to stay more current with their bills. The expectation of wholesale dairy fanner sellouts has stemmed,” said Smith, of the legislation which has added as much as $1.30 and as little as a few cents to the Class I price paid to New England’s producers of fluid class milk. According to Smith, the pricing me chanism has added eight cents per hundred weight to all milk produced in the Compact area. The Compact currently sets the Class I price at $16.94 per cwt, and pays producers the amount between the level and the Federal Order Class I price. As Federal Order prices rose during the winter, the Compact’s “extra check” diminished in amount As Federal Order prices drop with seasonality, the Compact is designed to collect the over-order premium to hold the Class I to the established $16.94 level. As expected, it was the processor and manu facturing side buyers of raw milk which voiced some opposition to the floored Class I prices which would result if the Compact’s pre sent $16.94 was extended to Pennsylvania-pro duced drinking milk. Presentations by the state’s Milk Dealers Association and Food Merchants Association criticized the Dairy Compact pro posal as not in keeping with the intent of the Dairy Compact Hearing Held 1996 Farm Bill and a short-term program currently designed to end in less than a year. Most vocal in opposition was Hershey Foods Corporation, which used I.S million pounds of milk daily, or S percent of the sale’s production, according to presenter Audrey Throne, man ager of dairy ingredients for the candy giant Hershey’s position is that “the free market is the best way to price milk.” Under cross examination, the Hershey representative acknow ledged that the bulk of the food company’s milk purchases are not Class I fluid priced. The Pennsylvania Milk Market ing Board, represented by chair- Seminar To Discuss Urban Tree Establishment Practices WEST PITTSTON (Luzerne Co.) —Establishing trees in urban and suburban areas is no easy task these days. Growing a healthy tree is not as simple as digging a hole and planting the tree. Many times, conditions are such that trees will not survive more than a few years. Whit is it so difficult to grow trees in urban and suburban land scapes? As we build or rebuild our cities, towns, and suburban resi dential communities, we change physical and chemical seal proper ties, or completely remove top- man Beveriy Minor, did not lake a position pro or con on the Com pact issue but applauded the hear ing committee for its efforts. Chairman Minor noted that certain of the Compact’s elements are similar to those of the PMMB, and the Board assumes that it would continue to perform its functions if Compact participation did be come reality. The PMMB prices milk produced, processed and sold within the Pennsylvania state borders, about 20 percent of the state’s total milk production. Lancaster Senator Noah Wen ger. acting chair of the Agriculture and Rural Affairs Committee, quizzed many of the pro-Compact supporters on the likelihood of in- soils, the growing medium for our trees. In other situations, we are compacting soils for sidewalk paving to the point at which roots cannot grow. With compacted soils comes poor drainage which can kill trees. Chemically, soil pH is driven upward when construc tion debris is left in soils. Land scapers then cuta small opening in the concrete and plant a species of tree that requires good drainage and an acidic soil. On April 16, a seminar titled “Establishing Trees In Urban creased milk production in re sponse to a higher Class I price for milk. Northeast Compact executive director Dan Smith acknowledged that the Compact has changed the area’s supplies more than antici pated, with milk flowing in from outside areas and diluting the pool, and that a hearing process is under way to tighten the rules. Under the Compact regulations, if production in the pricing region grows more rapidly than the na tion, and causes the Commodity Credit Corporation to purchase excess supplies, monies from the Compact must be used to pay for those extra CCC purchases. In an ticipation of that possibility, a Areas” will examine new research on plant establishment techniques that Cornell University’s Urban Horticulture Institute and others across the nation have been work ing on for years. The seminar is scheduled for the National Insti tute for Environmental Renewal in Mayfield. Preregistration for the program is required and an $lB fee will cover lunch, breaks, and a packet of reference materials. The day will be full of usable practices from site assessment and modification to plant selection and luge portion of the February Compact premium, 14 cents per cwt which would have been pud out in March, was escrowed. If CCC purchases from regional oversupply are not necessary, those escrowed funds will be dis tributed at a later date to the Com pact’s producers. Senator Wenger’s office and the Agriculture and Rural Affairs Committee expect to take some time to study and evaluate the hearing before generating any fur ther action. “We will be in the process of re viewing the testimony and will discuss the next step,” says Chet Weaver, chief of staff for Senator Wenger. transplant strategies. The seminar is also designed with a hands-on session that will be held outdoors in the afternoon. If you are a landscape contrac tor, architect, designer, civil engi neer, horticulturist, forester, ar borist, shade tree commissioner, municipal official, or planner, and wish to learn die latest findine* that are improving tree establish ment and survival, attend this seminar. For more information, contact Penn State Cooperative Extension at (717) 825-1701.