state Battalion/Page 9 September 8, 1982 Storage costs taxpayers millions to k )v David fi i, wert d E-l, Fall crops may rot in fields United Press International Farmers in the Midwest and Southwest may face the worst elevator storage crisis in years this fall because of low prices, bumper crops and billions of bushels owned by the govern ment or in reserves. The corn and sorghum crops are still being harvested in many areas where the ele vators already are near capac ity from a record wheat crop. Farmers fear things may be come so bad they will have to dump their crops outside full elevators or let them rot in the fields. “There will be a bigger problem this fall than there has been for many years,” said Herb Cast, associate director of the Kansas City, Mo., field office of the U.S. Commodity Credit Corp. “It’s partly because of the accumulation of grain owned by the government, partly be cause of the record volume of grain still owned by the far mers but pledged into the re serve program and last but not least, the anticipated size of the new crops,” he said. Kansas, Nebraska and the Texas Panhandle are feeling the pinch especially hard be cause they have several grain crops to harvest and store. Agriculture Secretary John Block two weeks ago approved emergency storage of grain crops, which include soybeans, oats, barley and rye in surplus barges, rail cars and other facilities not normally qualified to store harvested crops. Farmers say they hope the emergency storage will help ease the crisis, but it will take expanded export markets, higher prices, new policies or a bad crop next year to pre vent an even worse storage problem. “This whole darn thing seems to be working against us,” said Jerry Schweitzer of Farmer’s Co-Op Elevators in Dighton, Kan. “The thing we need to do is get somebody using our grain rather than storing it. Every bushel in re serve is costing the govern ment. We need to see better prices that would encourage the farmer to sell grain rather than put it in reserve.” Taxpayers are paying a whopping $168.7 million annually to store 491 million bushels of wheat, corn and sorghum in the nation’s grain elevators, most of it because farmers found it more profit able to default on their gov ernment price support loans than sell on the open market. About 80 million of the bushels were bought by the government after farmers suffered when President Car ter imposed the Russian grain embargo. President Reagan has lifted the embargo for one year, but there is a worldwide glut of wheat. Meanwhile, farmers have put 2.1 billion bushels of wheat, corn and sorghum in the three-year price support reserve program and 499 mil lion bushels of the same crops in the nine-month Commodi ty Credit Corp. plan all crops stored in farm bins or eleva tors. “They’re just kind of sitting on this stuff,” said Erik Ness of the New Mexico Farm and Livestock Bureau. “It’s get ting to be a critical situation because this year’s crop is coming up. They’ve got to do something with it or let it rot in the Fields.” IB ION >00 FF« ,7¥ M’ KIN' SI all. N PERT SHAMPOO $|99 iquet 1 w WM iPrciAis SMOKED PICNICS ■c U.S. CHOICE BEEF BONELESS RUMP ROASTS • • • • LB. U.S. CHOICE BEEF BONELESS WHOLE $2 38 TRIMMED BRISKETS. . . HOLLY FARMS OR. A FAMILY PAK FRYER THIGHS OR FRYER DRUMSTICKS* 1 17 "GENUINE". ANY SIZE PKG. GROUND CHUCK *2” U.S. CHOICE ROAST LEG-O-LAMB ARMOUR SLICED BACON *2" SERVE N SAVE. ASST. VARIETIES LUNCHMEATS $ 1 37 KROGER BEEF VARIETY PAK *1” U.S. CHOICE BEEF BONELESS ENGLISH SHOULDER ROASTS ... $ 2 6 * ECKRICH REGULAR OR BEEF SMOKED SAUSAGE ..... *2” HILLSHIRE FARM REGULAR OR BEEF SMOKED SAUSAGE ..... *2 4 *i KROOIR FAMILY PRIOR W/RALf AM CONDITIONFR OR Shampoo 88* KROGER FAMILY PRIDE Baby OH 1*™: •l 1 * KROGER FAMILY PRIDE Baby Powder l*Su 88* KROGER FAMILY PRIDE Baby Lotion •!** KROGER FAMILY PRIDE ROLL ON Deodorant 89* KROGER FAMILY PRIDE EXTRA STRENGTH Diet Capsules ££ «1 39 KROGER FAMILY PRIDE E_gg_AayS8W • • • STL. O WHITB BAIN ^ A l O*. NON ABROSOL ON * 7.S OZ. ABNOSOL COSMETICS & FRAGRANCES MAYSELLINE BLOOMING COLORS $■9* COLOR I ro. T I NIB.. BILL BLASS" *13” ER SHAVE 2 OZ. STL. PIERRE CARDIN”'.*?” Loan to be asked for jobless fund United Press International AUSTIN — In order to bail out the state’s nearly bankrupt fund for jobless workers, the Texas Legislature may use its special session to make an un precedented request for a feder al loan. The special session was called to avert an impending 2,000 percent jump in unemployment compensation taxes. One prop osed solution is to request a fed eral loan, Texas’ first such re quest since a system to loan fed eral funds to state unemploy ment coffers was established as part of the New Deal in 1938. Texas employers have paid the lowest unemployment com pensation taxes in the nation and enjoyed one of the country’s lowest unemployment rates. But with recent massive layoffs by Braniff Airways and Lone Star Steel Co. and the bur den of jobless workers from northern states in the cinched Sunbelt, Texas employers face the prospect of a 2,000-percent jump in payments. The Legislature met in special session Tuesday to try to ease the necessary tax increase by re working the constitutional for mula which was forcing it. House Speaker Bill Clayton of Springlake has proposed bor rowing $450 million from the federal government to keep the fund solvent, with $45 million in state money provided to pay in terest on the loan. Clayton’s bill also would increase most em ployers’ annual contributions to the fund from about $6 to $22 per employee. If the state opts to follow Clayton’s suggestion, it would mark the first time Texas has used the federal loans for unem ployment. Rep. Lloyd Criss, D- LaMarque.has suggested an alternate plan to levy a one-time, $400 million surtax on Texas employers, avoiding the need for a federal loan. Seventy percent of Texas em ployers currently pay the mini mum fee of $6 per employee per year and the average tax of $36 is the lowest in the nation. A 2,000-percent increase would require a minimum of $120 per employee for em ployers, unless the Legislature changes the taxing formula. Meanwhile, lawmakers must also consider avenues for bailing out the nearly bankrupt unem ployment fund. Bay City rally to hit landfill United Press International BAY CITY — A Matagorda County citizen group says it will hold a rally to protest a toxic che mical waste company’s proposed landfill and incinerator near Bay City. The Matagorda Citizens For Environmental Protection, led by Bay City city secretary Sharon Serafino, was formed last May when Chemical Wastes Manage ment Inc. of Illinois gained con trol of an option to buy 950 acres of prime land in the southwest corner of Matagorda County. The environmental group plans to hold a rally Saturday at 11 a.m. in Bay City to protest the possible dump site. Although the waste firm offi cially announced it has no inten tion of establishing such a site near Bay City, critics say they are skeptical as long as the company holds the option on the prop erty. The firm handles the inciner ation of polychlorinated biphenyls, a transformer coolant found to cause cancer in animals. The company burned the chemicals in the Gulf of Mexico 180 miles off the Texas coast last December and again Aug. 25. Now it has applied to the En vironmental Protection Agency to burn another 2.1 million gal lons of PCB plus 260,000 gallons of the pesticide DDT. Results of the hearings last week in Brownsville will be announced within 30 days by EPA officials. An attorney for the Texas Farmworkers Union, Robin Ale xander, questioned EPA offi cials at the hearing and said she felt the agency was unsure what was contained in the permit. “The description of the che micals to be burned was so vague, CWM thought they were asking for Silvex (another pesti cide), and the EPA didn’t realize it,” she said. Serafino and representatives of environmental groups, in cluding Green Peace, also testi fied at the hearing. Serafino said: “With recent environmental problems, such as groundwater contamination resulting from CWM hazardous waste landfill operations in Kan sas and Louisiana, we strongly question their ability to safely operate a landfill site as well as disposal by incineration in the Gulf of Mexico.” One alternative to the burn ing of PCB is the use of mobile units which can chemically des troy PCBs inside electrical trans formers. USTCLE SAMMT WAISTS toe: ... TO FIND OUT WHAT SIGMA ALPHA MU FRATLRiVITY IS ALL ABOUT... RUSH PARTY Thursday, September 9 Arbor Square Party Room 8:00 p.m.