AlO-Uncasttr Fanning, Saturday, Juna 17, 2000 OPINION EPA: Everywhere Rain Falls EPA has proposed changes to the Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) and NPDES permit program. In these proposed rule changes, certain agricultural activities have been targeted. EPA is attempting to reverse almost 30 years of Clean Water Act history by reclassifying these agricultural activities from a nonpoint classifica tion of discharge to a point source classification of discharge. Histor ically point sources were limited to industrial sites, which usually contain pipe sources of discharge. Point sources of discharge are re quired to obtain a prescriptive NPDES permit from the government before operations initiate. The significance of this change is multifaceted. First, it sets a dan gerous precedent. Congress made clear distinctions between non point and point sources of discharge and delegated that they be han dled quite differently for obvious reasons. If EPA can now at will redesignate traditional nonpoint sources as point sources, they have sidetracked congressional intent of managing the two quite different entities separately and exposed all nonpoint activities as potential future point sources. Secondly, point sources of discharge are required to obtain an NPDES permit prior to activity. This means that prior to practicing these activities, landowners will be required to obtain an NPDES permit. It is not clear in the rule whether such a permit will be re quired for each activity or each entry, undoubtedly that will be set tled in the courts. What does obtaining an NPDES permit mean for a landowner? Permits are expected to cost in the $lO,OOO range. They will be sub ject to delays or refusal. They open the landowner up to public com ment and public opposition. They expose the landowner to private litigation under the Clean Water Act. Even if the permit is approv ed, it can be challenged by environmental groups or other private entities. They require landowner evaluation of other federal laws such as the Endangered Species Act. Obviously, the cost and liabilities incurred through the permit process will be a disincentive to landowners to maintain their lands in a forested or agricultural state. There are other provisions in the rule which allow EPA to regulate nonpoint discharges, which literal ly give EPA oversight everywhere that rain falls. This allows EPA to dictate local land use issues through water quality laws. We believe this rule is unnecessary, unreasonable, and unfair. The rule is scheduled for release in late June. Call your legislator on this one. Hay Day, EORDC, Caldwell, Ohio. Hoof Trimmers Picnic, West Pennsboro Township Park, Carlisle, noon. Penn State College Picnic, Rock- spring. Pennsylvania Farm Link-Spon sored Meeting, Pheasant Hill Farm, 9 a.m.-l 1 a.m. Warren County Dairy Princess Pageant, Warren County Fairgrounds, Pittsfield, 8 p.m. Sullivan County Dairy Princess Pageant, Dushore Main St., Editor, I used to get your publication, then allowed my subscription to expire, but have been seriously thinking about renewing it, until now. Your “Opinion” article in the June 3, 2000 issue is the blame. For years, 1 have shook my head in bewilderment at the hog and poultry farms who adopted the * Farm Calendar * Dushore, 7 p.m. Crawford County Dairy Prin cess Pageant, Richmond’s Dairy Farm, Linesville, 8 p.m. Father’s Day. Washington County Dairy Prin cess Pageant, Washington County Fairgrounds, Wash ington. Potter County Dairy Princess Pageant, Northern Potter High School, Ulysses, 2 p.m. (Turn to Pago ASS) ♦ Farm Forum ♦ practice of “biosecurity.” The reason I have always felt that farmers were God-fearing peo ple. People who have ultimate trust in what God gives them will not practice anything that is contrary to His teachings. In my opinion, biosecurity is contrary to scriptural teachings. The Bible is very clear in that when it states in Matthew 6:34: With most of the corn planted, now is a good time to check your fields for weeds. According to Robert Ander son, Lancaster County extension agronomy agent, the best time to scout for weeds and evaluate her bicide performance is two to four weeks after planting. Escape weeds need to be iden tified while they are small and still controllable by a postapplied herbicide or other method. Usually the sooner a problem is identified and dealt with, the more successful the treatment will be. If weeds are scattered or the infestation is light, a simple culti vation or a spot treatment with herbicide may be very effective. If an herbicide application is HALFWAY THROUGH? Background Scripture: Philippians 3. Devotional Reading: Hebrews 10:19-25,32-36. Bennett Cerf tells a story about Tommy Noonan, a young man who picked up “a nice piece of change” mowing lawns for neigh bors during the summer vaca tion. One afternoon his mother, seeing that Tommy seemed to be taking his good old time in get ting started, chided him. But Tommy replied, “Fm waiting for them to start themselves. I get most of my work from people who are half through.” Tommy Noonan was an satu rate observer of human nature: people will start a lot of things they do not finish. Somewhere between beginning and ending, their enthusiasm and self-disci pline wanes and then quits alto gether. BKia This is particularly true in spiritual growth. The churches seem altogether dedicated to nur turing children and youth in growth as Christians. But when these same individuals reach adulthood, there seems to be no additional growth called for. Whereas youth are put through catechism or confirmation class es, adults all too often are not challenged to grow beyond the point they have already attained. These people are only “halfway through” and have no idea that they are expected to continue to grow in Christian discipleship. Jesus, of course, presents a considerably different picture: To Scout Fields For Weeds Expected To Grow needed, most postemergent ma terials are most effective when applied to small weeds at the one- to three-leaf stage of devel opment. Early identification and early treatment are critical. Remember, a good scouting program can pay dividends. To Use Presidedress Nitrate Test The presidedress nitrate test (PSNT) for corn is a soil nitrogen test designed to provide assist ance in making agronomically and environmentally sound ni trogen recommendations for com, according to Mark Good son, capital region extension agronomist. This test is especially useful in systems where manure has been applied, because it eliminates some of the uncertainty associat ed with utilizing manure nitro gen. To use this test, 12-inch deep soil samples must be taken when the corn is at least 12 inches tall. Samples must be dried immedi ately and sent to the laboratory. Samples are analyzed for ni trate nitrogen. Based on this re sult and information on expected yields and field history, a side dress nitrogen recommendation is made. Currently this test is available for com only. To use this pro gram, purchase a standard soil test kit from your Penn State Co operative Extension office and request a PSNT information sheet. The results for nitrate ni trogen along with recommenda tions will be telephoned or faxed to you or a designated individual within 24 hours of receipt by the lab. “You therefore must be perfect as your heavenly Father is per fect” (Mt. 5:48). Maybe that’s where some of the problem is: Jesus seems to be setting a stan dard that is out of reach for us and every one we know. Exclud ing Jesus, how can any human being attain to that state of per fection? The problem is that the Eng lish word “perfect” is misleading. It implies moral perfection, be coming just like God. But the Greek word means the whole will and being to be turned whol ly to God as he is turned to us. So the “perfection” to which we are called is not a destination to be reached so much as the pro cess of getting there. Jesus is not calling us to be sinless and without and weak ness or limitation as God is, but to constantly moving in that di rection. This, then, is exactly what Paul is saying to the Philip pians and us: “Not that I have already obtained this or am al ready perfect: but I press on to make it my own . . .’’(Phil. 12:3). Here, Paul’s word which is rendered in English>as “perfect” means literally “full grown.” In other words, Paul is saying I have not yet become what Christ wants me to become. What he wants of us is always beyond where we are at any given mo ment. As Robert Browning put it so well: “A man’s reach should ex ceed his grasp, Or what’s a heav en for?” (Andrea del Sarto). In this Christian life, we must al ways be extending our reach to ward, but not attaining to, per fection. The Upward Call Paul never reached perfection and neither will we, but he never stopped growing in the faith: “Brethren, I do not consider that I have made it my own; but one thing I do, forgetting what lies To Be Aware Of Heat The recent hot days reminds us summer is coming. Most farmers know the impor tance and how to keep their ani mals cool during hot weather. But are you aware of the impact of heat on you and your work ers? Every summer, hot weather causes hundreds of deaths from heat strokes. Jeff Stoltzfus, Eastern Lancas ter County School District Adult Farmer Program instructor, of fers the following commonsense tips that can keep you and your workers healthy and productive in the summer heat. • Drink plenty of liquids. Water is the coolant for the body. Take frequent breaks for water. Your body gives off salt and elec trolytes with sweat. Sport drinks really do work at recharging the body’s electrolytes and provide extra energy. • Try to stay cool. Splashing cold water on the face and arms helps to keep the body cool. Even a few ice cubes under your hat will help. • Know the symptoms of heat stroke. If your skin begins to feel cold and clammy and you stop sweating, it is time to get a show er and find some shade. Take the rest of the day off. A little rained-on hay is a small price to pay for your health. If someone faints or pass es out, or you do not feel better in a few hours, it is time to get med ical help. Remember, heat can kill. Feather Prof, ’s Footnote: “What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us.” behind and straining forward to what lies ahead, I press on to ward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus” (3:13,14). Paul didn’t stop when he was halfway through. Why did Paul feel he had to write these words to the church at Philippi? It appears that there those who complacently believed that human perfection was attainable in this life and, saved by Christ, they were thus “perfect” and nothing further was required of them. They were content to rest on their laurels because they had forgot ten that it is only by God’s grace that we reach any place on this journey. Paul makes it clear that the prize is not reaching the goal, but the “upward call” itself. Re sponding to the “upward call of God in Christ Jesus” is what is in Paul’s hands and ours. Reaching the goal is in God’s hands. So, he refused to bide his time when he was halfway through and pressed on. And where are you at this moment? Note: In the Steps of Paul to Rome & Greece, an 18-day tour conducted by Larry and Valere Althouse, is scheduled for April 2001. If interested, please con tact us: 4412 Shenandoah Ave., Dallas TX 75205/e-mail: althou ses@aol.com; fax: (214) 52109312. Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building 1 E. Main St. Ephrata, PA 17522 —by— Lancaster Farming, Inc. A Stemman Enterprise William J Burgess General Manager Everett R. Newswanger Editor Copyright 2000 by Lancaster Farming