Some will challenge you by saying that all dairy farmers have a different cost of production. So how can we price milk on the national average? To that argument, I say, “Phooey.” Do you as a dairy farmer under the present pricing formula realize that 70% of the milk is considered to be used for manufactured purposes? Now listen, Mr. and Mrs. Dairy Farmer, do you realize that every farmer regulated by federal order receives the same price for 70% of the milk that is produced under the federal orders?
Then answer this: If the majority of dairy farmers are receiving the same price for milk used for manufacturing regardless of the size of their herd or numbers of cows they milk, then why the heck can’t we have a pricing formula based upon the national average cost of producing?
Yes, Mr. and Mrs. Dairy Farmer, you have been lulled to sleep all these years as to why we can’t price milk to dairy farmers because they have a different cost of production. Hogwash. Either get behind the efforts to have a new pricing formula or keep complaining about the p.p.d., which I really call the “producer death disaster price.”
What we put together clearly shows that the p.p.d. represents the amount of money you are not receiving because of the inadequate pricing formula being used.
Arden Tewksbury is the manager of Pro-Ag.