N.E. (Continued from Page A 1) com prices, which had since plummeted. The additional milk production resulted in the Compact Commis sion paying the USDA Commodi ty Credit Corporation $1.76 mil lion in the fall of 1998 because the Compact is required to compen sate the federal government for surplus purchases if milk produc tion increases faster than the national average. The government had purchased excess dry milk and the Commission was charge for its pro rata share. Then after making that pay ment, the Commission held a broad issue rule making hearing to take additional testimony on milk supplies and whether there was a need for supply management. At that time, according to Beck er, there were several proposals some coming out of Massa chusetts, some from Compact staff, and some from other places. The staff reviewed the proposals and consolidated the testimony, and at the January 1999 meeting, the Commission decided it was time to consider the issue. Lancaster s==*=^= Poured Walls • Agriculture • Commercial • Residential U ■*- Call for Prices On: • SCS approved Manure Storage Pits • Basements • Retaining Wails •Footers, , , •Floors i Customer Satisfaction Is Our Goal Lancaster Poured Walls 2001 Jarvis Rd. * Lancaster. PA 17601 » (717) 299-3974 —BuffaloT 7800 ROUND BALE MOVER Move bales the fast and easy way. • Three models available with 5 to 14 bale capacity. • Quarter-Turn® Pickup Arm allows bale pickup in the same direction as the windrow. Rounded loops on chain prevent damage to the bale For Nearest Dealer and more information contact: [iH] CUMMINGS and BRICKER, Inc. wholesale distributors 100 Stover Drive Carlisle, PA 17013 1-800-222-8969 100-120 Lehigh Ave - PO Box 928 Batavia, New York 14021-0928 716/343-5411 1-800-252-1552 Serving Farmers Through Farm Equipment Dealers Since 1961 Compact Commission Sets Supply Management According to Becker, the Com mission had collected testimony over about a nine-month period and sent all the information to its regulatory subcommittee, direct ing it to review it, do further study of milk production stastitics, con solidate the testimony from its spring 1998 meeting, and formal testimony collected in December 1998 and to crane back to the com msision with recommendations. At the Compact Commission's April meeting, it determined to enter into the proposed rulemaking. “They are now wanting to hear from the public at large,” he said. As it is now, the results of all the information gathering and fact finding ate to be deliberated at the Commission's June meeting. Prior to a permanent amend mentbeing made to Compact over order pricing regulations, there must first be a public comment period, commission deliberation, and then a producer referendum requiring a two-thirds majority vote of Compact producers. As it is, the current supply man agement proposal is negative- CiHll 1 ■«S • Tilting bed allows easy unloading. • Low profile incentive based, in that an assess ment would be collected from all dairy producers, but given back rally to those who have either maintained production or decreased it from one year to the next. Those who increased their annu al production above 1-percent for the year would forfeit any assess ment refund. A refund would be made on a flat rate for those who kept produc tion increases under 1 percent, or decreased production. Those who decreased produc tion would receive the flat-rate refund and an additional refund based on the hundredweight of milk decreased from the prior year’s production. More specifically under the proposal, the Commission would collect an assessment from farmers at a rate of $250,000 per Compact monthly marketing pool, up to a total maximum of $3 million per year for the entire Compact. The actual hearing announce ment on the proposal was pub lished in the April 19 Federal Register. Though not a member state, the actions of the Compact Commis sion are of interest to those involved in the Pennsylvania dairy industry, because the state Legisla ture has been considering prop osed legislation enabling the state to join the Compact should it be expanded and should it be reau thorized beyond Sept. 30. State farm policy organizations, and several regional and national dairy producer and milk marketing cooperatives have been lobbying the state’s elected officials for legislation to authorize the inclu sion of Pennsylvania into the Compact. (A version passed the Pa. Senate and is currently set to be reviewed by the House Agriculture and Rur al Affairs Committee. The state Legislature has until the end of June to act; a deadline tied into the state’s fiscal year and the need for a state budget). If the Compact is not reauthor ized, several things would certain ly happen: Becker and the other four full-time Compact staff mem bers would be out of work; dairy pricing would revert to being Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 1, 1999-A3l Hearing influenced by regulation and admi nistration by federal milk market ing orders based on supply and demand of milk and domestic market trade of manufactured commodities; commission mem bers could stay in their respective states instead of meeting monthly in Concord, New Hampshire; and Pennsylvania and New York dairy producers who now ship milk to the New England states wouldn’t receive a Compact price for their milk. Also, the supply management proposal would be moot The Compact’ is controversial because the 1996 Farm Bill (Free dom to Farm Act) was designed to end federal government support programs of agriculture in an attempt to remove obstacles to free global trade. The Compact was approved as a temporary measure to help the New England states, a region that produces less than 3 percent of the nation’s milk supply, with a transi tion buffer. From July 1997 through August of 1998 (July 1998 was the last over-order premium until this coming month), the Compact was able to pay dairy producers an additional $45 million, or an aver age of $ 11,000 per farm in the Compact region, according to Becker. He said the average price increase per hundred pounds of milk was 41 cents, representing a 2.5- to 3-percent increase over what would have been received. The Compact Class I use has fluctuated from a high of 52.3 percent in October 1997 to a low of 43.5 percent in May 1998. The Class I utilization rate month-over month did decline between the last half of July 97 to the last half of July 98, Becker said, and while the Class I volume went up about a million pounds from Octobert 1997 to October 1998, the total milk pool vol ume increased as well. Becker said that, his torically, since the 19505, New York dairy farmers have contri buted about 25 percent of the milk to the New England states (it has fluctuated some, espe cially when the Federal Order 2 price was high er), and now with the Compact New York’s contribution is about 26 to 27 percent, Becker said. “We have noticed more being diverted out since,” Becker said. “As a result the Commission amended the regulations (as to how much) could be diverted and trans ferred out of the region that could still have Compact pricing,” He said those limits are seasonally adjusted for receiving plants 8 percent of plant volume can be diverted in the fall months, 13 percent in the spring.