Pennsylvania Dairy Stakeholders Aim To One-Source Risk Management Information (ContlniMd from Pag* A 1) sinner confidence in pioduct quality, and food safety in sup port of the dairy management team. Pasteurization has al lowed the dairy industry to be sloppy. But this advantage over the poultry and meat industries is coming to an end. Louis Moore told of the help given to bankers and accoun tants to become knowledgeable in farming enterprises. The Pennsylvania Bankers Confer ence at Penn State on April 18 & 19, will be the 34th such event. Greg Hanson reported on FINPACK, a financial planning and analysis system that helps farmers move from their present operation to a future enterprise that will fit their interest and farm situation. Long range plan ning, cash flow planning and year-end analysis are major fea tures of the FINPACK system. Mike Evanish reported on the Farm Bureau arm Credit farm management program. They have a large number of farmers using the program to obtain tax records, but unfortunatly many do not seriously use the records in management decisions. Chuck Cruickshank reported on the Land ’O Lakes dairy ac counting, financial monitoring, and development program. The goal of their program is to pro vide clients with professional business support services to im prove their profitability and na tional competitiveness. PARK Ridge, 111. - Increases in gasoline prices as well as concerns about the fuel additive Methyl Tertiary-Butyl Ether (MTBE) conta minating soil and water are two rea sons the United States should expand use of ethanol and a fuel source, according to the Kansas Farm Bureau. “If we continue on our present path, the U.S. Energy Department expects U.S. dependence on foreign oil to jump from 50 percent last year to about 63 percent by 2015,” Stan David Blandford chaired the meeting and reported on the effort to benchmark various norms for different size dairy farm operations. Penn State has access to information to produce production and economic ranges of performance. This informa tion is being made available on the Internet, but more can be done. Could Help Ease Gasoline Price Crunch Ethanol Ahlerich, KFB president, said. “We’ve seen firsthand what that reliance can do. Ethanol is a proven commodity, and if we don’t reduce our need for foreign oil, the U.S. economy, including the agriculture economy, is a the mercy of foreign suppliers.” Using more ethanol as a fuel and fuel additive would reduce depen dence on foreign oil and would boost net farm income, Ahlerich noted. The Midwestern Governor’s Conference in a recent report con Ken Bailey reported on milk marketing strategies and the need for education and experi ence in forward contracting to reduce risk in selling milk, buying feed, and crop insurance. The combination of these man agement tools can help farmers to make a profit. Lisa Holden and Tammy Per kins reported on the new Dairy eluded the current ethanol industry increases net farm income more than $4.5 billion. That figure could mush room if ethanol was used on a nation wide scale. Ahlench pledged continued work Lancaster Farming, Saturday, April 8, 2000-A4l Alliance, a program by Penn State to bring together all the in formation available to dairy farmers from public and private sources. An extensive effort to build such a resource on the In ternet is underway. The future direction of the Stakeholders centered on the aspects of bring ing together all the available in formation into one source and providing educational opportu nities especially in the areas of risk management. in Congress to achieve increased use of ethanol. He stated the concerns o( farmers and ranchers who, at a turn of low commodity prices, will now have to deal with massive increases in fuel costs as spring fieldwork begins