NFU Responds to Farm Visit Report
UK - Concerns raised by the NFU that on-farm visits are poorly co-ordinated and have the potential for duplication have been echoed in a new report released by the National Audit Office (NAO) today (12 December).The NAO’s investigation concludes that Defra has made some progress in adopting recommendations by the Farming Regulation Task Force but that it would not “deliver the scale of change expected” and that farmers considered the rate of improvement to be slow. It also states that the department has not collected significant data to understand the scale, nature and effectiveness of farm oversight activity.
“The findings from the NAO vindicate our response to the Farming Regulation Task Force, in that many farm businesses believe poor co-ordination and the potential for duplication of inspection are systemic problems,” said NFU Deputy President Meurig Raymond.
“While we recognise some progress is being made, this report sets out a challenge for Defra to achieve stronger co-ordination among oversight bodies, improved intelligence sharing and collection, and to take account of farmers’ commitment to good practice to help reduce the burden on compliant businesses. Following a number of better regulation initiatives, agricultural businesses are looking for regulatory burdens to be lifted as soon as possible. We look forward to seeing how Defra responds and implements the key findings from this report and the Farming Regulation Task Force at a much faster pace.”
The NAO report also highlights the work of regional forums, jointly established by the NFU, as an example of best practice. These were set out to achieve closer links, better co-ordination and improved intelligence-sharing across regulators.
“We will continue to play a full role in supporting these forums to enable farmers to benefit from the spread of best practice and ensure inspections are more targeted. However these forums must work alongside other approaches to ensure there is more efficient and effective use of resources,” added Mr Raymond.
“Better regulation must be a responsibility across the whole of Defra, if a cohesive approach to implementation is to be achieved. Ultimately, we need to see a co-ordinated effort across Defra to free our farmers from the burdensome regulation that stifles their businesses and reduces their competitiveness.”
The full NAO report is available from its website.
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