WILKES-BARRE (Luzern Co.) - The Pennsylvania Holstein Convention opened Thursday with a tour to HiSllside Farms, seminars on employee relations and time management, and a convention sale with number one in the catalogue selling for $lO,BOO Hillside Farms located 10 minutes out of town has the creek flowing right by the barn that many years ago was used to cool the milk cans. The original barn still stands from 1881 when great grandfather William Conyngham imported the first registered Holstein. Hillside is one of only two farms m the nation that can trace a continuous registered Holstein business back that far In 1977 the present Conyngham owners, William L. and Frank E P., started to bottle milk and they now service the area with milk in glass and have an on-farm store and ice cream shop. A greenhouse business is also part of the enterprise. Hillside got into the high index Holstein business when they Pennsylvania Holstein Convention Early Report made a purchase six years ago when the state Holstein convention was also in Wilkes- Barre. Since that time, the herd has become high profile with many contracts and high-selling bulls, heifers, and embryos. The convention sale Thursday night under the slogan “Holstems shine in ‘99” was quite successful with an offering highly regarded as having "something for every kind of breeding program ” Darlawn Bellwood Hazel consigned by Mark and Paul Darling, Nicholson, sold to Vision Genetics, Richmond, VA. For $lO,BOO. The Bellwood daughter with a bottom pedigree showing longevity, type to (EX, 4E-92, GMD DOM) and production to 47,750 m 1,836 f 1,426 p. Hazel herself was VG 85 at 2y Bm, and had a PTA +2,716m +losf +loop PTPI +1,789 with an estimated 305 d record of 28,834 m 1,087 f 994 p. Another $lO,OOO sale was the l sl choice from 2 ultrasound females due 6/7/99 consigned by James Yunker, Fleetwood. This embryo, a Manfred daughter out of a Bellwood from Rich-Ru Thor Mellow-ET, the foundation cow, had indexes running off the chart The buyer was H.E. Hendel and Sons, Brogue. At $6,100 the June calf from Dale and Fred Rice, Chambersburg, sold to Steven Rudolph, Greencastle. A Mascot from a Luke daughter traced back to Ricecrest’s Noreen cow. The sale continued past press time and other high sales and the averages would be reported next with the continued convention coverage. In the employee relations’ seminar, Mike Weimer, Ed Drexler, Abe Harpster, Ken Kehr, and Dean Johnson served on a panel. Some of the thoughts expressed were; -In employee management it helps to keep low-key and flexible. -Payment is sometimes made m goods from the farm such as hay for the employee’s horses. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February 20, 1999-A25 -Try to build up employees, not always look for complaints -Keep good relations with past employees as they may want to come back to work for you sometime, or they may recommend others who can make good employees -Go to farm auctions and talk to the farmers who are leaving the farm. -Exhibit booths at farm shows make a good place to contact future employees -Give all the information about Study Shows Network Firms Dominate Of Food System WASHINGTON, D.C. - A ening American’s system of inde small number of dominate “clus- pendent family farms and tors” of firms control the deci- ranches, according to a new sion-making throughout all lev- report unveiled by the National els of the U.S. food chain, threat- Farmers Union (N* U). your job opening up front in the advertisement so you don’t have people calling you who are not qualified -Develop your farm as THE place to work. You will know this has happened when employees send referrals -Develop incentive programs The panel discussion on “Recapturing Time” included Mark Bachman, Dr Ronald Buffington, Kaye Slusscr, and Nelson Troutman The study, prepared by Dr. William Heffernan, a rural sociologist at the University of Missouri, documents how linkages in the food system, through alliances, joint ventures, partnerships, mergers and other relationships, have formed a complex network of “clusters” of firms. Each cluster is a vertically integrat ed “food chain,” controlling the system from the gene to the supermarket shelf. “The study reveals the complex web of relationships among a handful of firms m the food chain,” said NFU President Leland Swenson. “The trend toward a pri vately centralized food system puts our food security in great jeopardy Food is dif ferent than other goods and services, and it would be dangerous to permit a few major firms to control decision making through out the entire food chain This study should compel Congress to take action to ensure the industry remains competitive The study details the relationships forming the three major clusters-Cargill/Monsanto, Con Agra, and Novartis/ADM- which now dominate the food system. Some of the studies findings include’ • The complexity of the linkages in the system undermines market competition and makes it difficult to measure. The net work of relationships is creating a seam less system with little market transparen cy along the various stages of the food sys tem. Because of the complexity, a firm that does not hold a majority share of a specific market may still have a great decision making power within the food chain. •Technological advances are accelerat ing the process of vertical integration. Biotechnology and the terminator gene have put the farmer at the mercy of the food cluster for seed to plant the crop. Also, precision farming’s global positioning sys tem separates management from the pro duction of agriculture. With this technolo gy, it is possible for “managers” in distant offices to make decisions about farm pro duction, while producers simply become labors. •The new structure threatens indepen dent producers. The clusters influence opportunities all along the food chain-from production inputs to global trade-which severely hampers producers’ ability to earn a fair return on their product. It also erodes the independence of producers by shifting major decision-making to a hand ful of firms. •The new structure is harming rural communities because corporate returns are reinvested in the firm, rather than in local economics where the goods are pro duced. The study was unveiled at a Capitol Hill news conference. The full text of the study can be found on NFU’s website at www.nfu.org