N.E. Dairy Compact Commission Sets Management VERNON ACHENBACH JR. Lancaster Farming Staff MONTPELIER, Vt. - In about two weeks, details of a prop osal for a supply management program for dairy producers in the Northeast Interstate Dairy Com pact region are to be published in the Federal Register. Also to be published ate details for Northeast Dairy Compact Commission meetings, and hear ings about the proposed program, set for July 7 at the Eastern State Exposition in West Springfield, Massachusetts, and August 4 at the Northern Stage Opera House, in White River Junction, Vermont. The Compact Commission is a group of delegates from the six New England states enjoined in the Constitutionally authorized North east Dairy Compact The Commission meetings are to be held at 1 p.m. at the sites, and they are to be the Commission’s tegular monthly meetings. The hearings follow the meet ings on the same day, and they should be of interest to Compact producers and others, because they have been especially scheduled for 7 pjn., in an attempt to attract testi mony from actual daily producers. A Commission official said this was done because the Commission considers it has had a lack of direct input from actual farmers, and for months has had plenty of testi mony from representatives of dairy cooperatives, dealers, politi cal organizations and related groups, especially with respect to the supply management proposal. Accenting to Kenneth Becker, executive director of the Compact Commission, when the Commis sion met the first week in June to consider a condensed-proposal for a supply management system, it put off acting on the proposal until later in the year. Becker said that the “commis sioners want to tweak the proposal.” As it was, the proposal would institute an assessment on each 100 pounds of milk sold by a Com pact producer. At the end of the marketing year, those farmers who s,om Augers Galvanized • Carbon • Stainless AUGER INSTALLATIONS ✓ In feedlots ✓ In drying systems ✓ Commercial applications ✓ At feedmills or elevators ✓ Around poultry & dairy barns ✓ At your gram bins or bulk tanks ✓ Replacement Augers for feed mixers and farm equipment Manufactured by auf tfr kept their production stable (no more than 1 percent increase) geta refund of their assessment. Those who increased production lose their assessment. Those who decrease production get a tegular refund, plus a bonus refund on each 100 pounds of decreased production. , , hi essence, the proposal creates goals of no-growth and reduced production for the Compact producers. While just short of an explicit quota system, the proposal is con sidered a form of a quota system by many. This has provided much concern for those in Pennsylvania who have been considering the adop tion of legislation to allow Pen nsylvania to join in the N£. Com pact should the U.S. Congress expand its borders and extend its life. Started in 1997, the Compact had an original termination of date of April 1, that was extended to Oct. 1, 1999. hi its brief time of operation, it has provided additional income support for New England dairy far mers (as well as some New York and Pennsylvania farmers), but has also been attracting more milk than it needs. Milk received by processing plants within the Compact region qualifies for Compact payments. Even if the milk is then “diverted” for use outside of the Compact reg ion, it gets priced at the Compact level. Last fall, the Commission adopted a rule limiting the amount of milk that a processing plant could divert and still receive the Compact price. As far as can be determined, in brief, this was done because the Commission didn’t want a situa tion that could foster the deliberate shipment of unwanted milk to a Compact processing plant merely to draw a higher price for the milk. Depending on the ownership of tire processing plant, the motiva tion to do so is considered a possibility. When that is done, it dilutes the I n | ars automatic farm systems I !• 717-274-5333 ' ' iar 9e Stock of o U-TROUGHS Standard Auger Specifications Tube Gauge Flight Thickness 3/16" 3/16” 250 BuVHr 850 RPM Caf[lls Jor Custom Specifications f t i r* t r 4 » 1 f♦ r r HAMMER MILLS for Grinding High Moisture & Dry Grains Features • Low Initial cost • Low maintenance > Low operating coat • Easy serviceability • 360' screen • Reversible hammers 6 screens • Compact design • Heavy duty plate magnet • Dust tight enclosure • Removable wear plate • Self locking door latches 1/4” 3/16” Manufactured by. 3000 2000 Rovendale Ag Watsoniown PA 717-538-9564 Keystone Mills Romulus NY 315-549-8226 A.N. Martin Grain Systems Clyde NY 315-923-9118 '/.V ViV'-Vc I jil value of the milk, and thus the far mer price, for all within the Compact. That problem of increased diversions of milk was exacer bated with increased milk produc tion' within the Compact Testimony was presented to the Commission that the increased milk production was in response to favorable milk-making conditions, not a widespread expansion of, or increase in, dairy herds within the Compact. The temporary overage resulted in Compact farmers being required to pay the USDA Commodity Cre dit Corporation to remove low val ue dairy product to boost the value of fluid milk. It has been feared by many that the Compact, by offering a guaran teed price, could result in a more rapid demise of small herd family farms. It is reasoned that such a guaran teed price could attract invest ments to fund large-herd dairy facilities that could outsupply and outperform long-time small dairy farms. However, in markets with no return on investment guarantees, there is greater risk to investment. Logic and histoiy indicate that gre ater risks are more likely assumed by individuals rather than large financial groups. Reduced return on investment risk has changed poultry and swine production investment sources, and essentially the production industry in those meat production sectors. Hie Compact concept is to sta bilize the dairy industry, not stimu late its growth or change the nature of the production industry. Hie N.E. Compact specifically was instituted to stabilize small herd family farming in the New England states. What has become tricky with the Compact pricing system is similar to problems experienced fay the USDA during its admi nistration of its defunct program designed to provide a minimum milk price to farmers in order to keep them in business Grinds Finer than Roller Mills. automatic farm systems Contact your nearest Matter Mill dealer listed below. Marvin Zimmerman Oakland Mills PA 717-463-9731 Nlesley Feed Equipment Willow Slraat, PA 717-786-/654 Star Silo Myaralown pa 717-866-5708 until market prices, recovered to profitable levels. Here’s the concept, as under stood by Lancaster Farming : The Compact Commission sets a mini mum retail price on milk used as beverage milk, in an attempt to provide a fair systetn for compen sation for product to consumers and fanners within the Compact system. If too much milk is made, or shipped in, then, for some of the farmers, their pay will drop below the cost of production, no matter what floor price is set by the Commission. That is to serve to curtail in compact production. However, it doesn’t appear as though that is enough of a tool to deal with the teal world. On top of that, the complicating aspects of the current United States milk marketing and pricing system ate many, and they affect the abili ty of the Compact Commission to keep the system simple and fair. Hie federal government sets the value of milk after considering the current market value of manufac tured dairy products. For example, when the USDA determines the current price to be paid to a farmer for his milk, it con siders the current open trading market price of cheese on national exchanges and then uses that price as a major factor in determin ing the current value of fluid milk (and thus the farmer price). For the farmer and anyone else without cheese processing com pany records, trying to match up the value of cheese with the price paid for the milk used to make that cheese is impossible. Forget trying to determine the value of the milk used to make the cheese whose current market value determines the current value of milk, etc. Hie perceived assumption used in establishing cheese as a fluid milk price mover is that cheese use Big Valley Repair Service Bftllevllfe, PA 717-935-5051 Wltmer Implement Shlppansburg, PA 717-532-6139 Zelset Equipment Manheim, PA 717-665-4056 Cedar Crest Equip. Lebanon, PA 717-270-6600 Martin Equip. Co. Chambeisourg. PA 717-263-3505 Harold’s Equip. Dundee OH 330-893-2348 Beaver Creek Farms NewEmerpnse PA 814-766-3239 Hearings represents a regular use of surplus fluid milk, therefore, low-priced cheese represents greatly exces sive fluid milk. Thus tied together in a pricing formula, the government attempts to stabilize the dairy industry by creating a supply-and-demand cyclical relationship based on two relationship assumptions: 1. Low priced cheese creates low priced milk to the farmer and reduces the milk supply; that results in less excessive milk pro duced, less cheese being made, and thus causes increases in the price of cheese, which then increases the price of milk, etc. 2. Increases in the price of milk stimulates increases in milk pro duction, while decreases in milk price cause decreases in milk production. However, real world influences primarily the deci sions made by people within the dairy industry tend to break down the relationships. For example, for years some dairy farmers have testified atvari ous hearings that they increase dairy production in response to receiving low milkprices (to main tain cash flow to pay bills), and others have testified that they have increased production in response to higher prices (to exploit profit able opportunities). Because the price the farmer receives for his milk is calculated after the fact, and because he has no direct control over how it is being marketed, he can’t know how much he will receive, but he can know how much he spends to make it In the competitive battle to con trol market supply, the trend has been to high-numbered animal operations of thousands of cows. California, and non-traditional daily states have seen the most nnTirVi summer discount on W 0 111/ li AGLIME - JUNE, JULY, & AUGUST ISajiflß Hb ■HHI (Turn to Pago A 29)