PER lODIC v£RB ITY V 01.45 No. 21 Berks County teachers visited Dutch Valley Food Distributors near Myerstown Tues day evening. From front, bottom to top, are Joanna Fryer, St. Ignatius Elementary; Clyde Myers, Berks County extension agent; Neil Fisher, Schuylkill Valley High School; Kathy Fisher, Mount Penn Elementary; Kay Frantz, Brandywine Heights High School; Cindy Jarozenski, St. Ignatius Elementary; Wes Siegrist, Dutch Valley Food Distributors; Joan Crossan, Cumru Elementary; Bob Allison, Brandywine Heights High School; Jeannine Campbell, Wilson Southern Junior High; Sally Koch, Wilson School District; Irene Straw, Northeast Middle School; and Donna Meloy, intern at the Wyomissing School District. Photo by Andy Andrews Berks Teachers Learn Y2K Worries Translate Into Business Boom For Food Company ANDY ANDREWS Lancaster Farming Staff MYERSTOWN (Lebanon Co.) Wes Siegrist of Dutch Valley Food Distributors re members the items delivered last year to customers worried about potential Year 2000 problems. Out the doors went bags of rice, beans, soups all sorts of items from the rush of people who wanted to stock up for fear that stores, for whatever reason, would run out of them. The year’s rush to purchase bulk food items “just hap pened,” Siegrist, sales manager, told more than a dozen Berks County grade and high school teachers Tuesday evening at the annual Berks County Ag In The Classroom Teacher Seminar. The teachers visited Dutch Valley as part of the seminar. Siegrist said that last year, to stock up for any Y2K emer gency that would occur, many people did their own canning. For Dutch Valley Food Distrib utors, sugar demand was up. “It was a tremendous year,” said Siegrist. “It was crazy. What you expected customers to take, they didn’t. And what you didn’t expect customers to take, they took.” Dutch Valley Food Distribu tors, which specializes in bulk foods, was founded by the Melvin Burkholder family, Manheim, in 1974. The com Five Sections pany began in the “back end of a butcher shop” about two miles from where the company’s headquarters is, north of Myers town. Because sugars are essential in the meat process, the shop bulked up on them. Neighbors purchased sugars and other The Pennsylvania Beef Expo is scheduled next week. In this photo, junior exhibitors at the 1999 show get ready to enter their beef animals. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 25, 2000 items in the ensuing years. Fi nally, a distribution site was set up at the current location, once part of the Burkholder farm, in 1978. The company is operated by Mel Burkholder and his three (Turn to Page A 24) $31.00 Per Year Business Plan Grant Helps Dairyman Evaluate Options JAYNE SEBRIGHT Lancaster Farming Staff WHITE HORSE (Lancaster Co.) Gordon Hoover of Lan caster County knows a good op portunity when he sees it. That’s why he took advantage of the Pennsylvania Dairy Stakehold ers’ business planning assistance program. The Stakeholders’ group is providing grants to farmers who want to develop business plans for their dairy operations. The goal of the program is to encour age dairy farmers to develop business strategies for their op Gordon Hoover utilized a business planning grant from the Pennsylvania Dairy Stakeholders to evaluate his 120- cow dairy operation and plan for the future. Photo by Jayne Sebright Special Farm And Home Section The special features that usually appear in Section B can be found in our special Farm and Home Section again this week. Look for regular features such as: Home on the Range, You Ask, You Answer, Cooks Question Corner, and Homestead Notes. In ad dition, Mailßox Markets arf also in the Farm and Home Section. March 30 to April 2 ,fr At The Penn State Ag Arena Excitement Abounds Over Expo The Pennsylvania Junior Cat tlemen’s Association will con duct its 10th annual Junior Steer and Heifer Preview Show at the 11th annual Pennsylvania Beef Expo, scheduled March 31- April 2 at the Penn State Ag Arena, State College. The Expo is an excellent op portunity for Pennsylvania Cat tlemen’s Association junior members to exhibit animals and partake in a weekend of fun and learning. Since its creation in 1989, the Pennsylvania Beef Expo has ex panded over the years to include 600 Per Copy erations. Farmers who apply can receive a grant for up to 75 per cent of the cost to work with a consultant and develop a busi ness plan. The grant is limited to $1,500, so if a plan costs more than $2,000 to develop, the farmer would only receive $1,500. Currently 11 farmers have completed their business plans with the provided grant monies. Another 10 have been through the approval process and are working on plans. Three are cur (Turn to Page A 27) various activities aimed at both junior and senior PCA members. This year’s Expo begins with the annual Pennsylvania Cattle men’s Awards Banquet and Meeting, scheduled Thursday, March 30, at Celebration Hall, State College. The festivities will begin with a social hour at 6 p.m. followed by a prime rib buffet at 7 p.m. Cattle producers will be rec ognized this special evening for several awards including the In dustry Service Award, Commer- (Turn to Page A 35)