IFA Reacts to Ag Minister's Launch of Renewed TB Strategy

IRELAND - IFA Animal Health Chairman Pat Farrell said IFA National Council have strongly rejected proposals by the TB forum to increase TB controls and costs on farms while refusing to address the shortcomings in the current compensation schemes.
calendar icon 24 July 2019
clock icon 3 minute read

Pat Farrell said farmers have had enough of the endless controls and restrictions on their farms by the Department of Agriculture, with no appreciation of the impact.

He said it is now up to the Minister for Agriculture, Michael Creed to decide if he is prepared to support farmers who are exposed to his Department’s controls and enormous associated impact on their farms or if he is going to push ahead with increasing further these costs and controls on farmers.

Mr Farrell said the TB Forum, established by Minister Creed under the chairmanship of Michael Cronin to involve stakeholders in the decision-making process for the TB eradication programme, has failed to deliver on this key objective.

He said the Forum merely functioned as a vehicle for the Department of Agriculture to impose their views of the TB programme on all stakeholders while continuing to ignore the voice of farmers, who are the single largest contributor to TB eradication.

He said eradication of the disease in the shortest feasible timeframe must be the objective, however, farmers will not accept additional controls until the deficiencies in the current compensation schemes are addressed.

Mr Farrell said farmer costs in the programme have spiralled since 2012, rising by 15 percent, with all other contributor costs reducing including the Minister’s contribution to the programme.

Direct farmer contributions increased by €4.513m from €30.641m to €35.154m, DAFM contributions reduced by €289,000 from €45.825m to €45.536m and the EU co-financing reduced by €1.337m from €11.085m to €9.748m.

The funding shift between 2012 and 2018 represents an increase of 15 percent for farmers, a reduction of one percent for the national exchequer and a reduction of 12 percent by the EU.

The IFA Chairman said against this background and the enormous costs and losses imposed on farmers in the TB programme IFA made detailed submissions on necessary changes to the Live Valuation Scheme, Income Supplement Scheme, Depopulation Grant Scheme and the Hardship Grant to offset the burden of controls on farmers.

However, representatives of the Minister for Agriculture at the Forum stated they will not support any increases to compensation rates for farmers. This has frustrated the work of the Forum and prevented any meaningful progress being made.

Mr Farrell has called on the Minister for Agriculture to immediately clarify his position on this critical issue for farmers. The objective must be to reduce the number of farms having TB breakdowns but those unfortunate enough to experience breakdowns cannot be just ignored by the Minister and his officials and left deal with the enormous impact on their farms and their livelihoods. These farmers must be fully supported through what is an extremely difficult, traumatic and costly experience.

He said the Minister must confirm to farmers if the views expressed by his officials at the TB Forum are consistent with his views and if not resolve the issue as a matter of urgency.

Mr Farrell said the TB burden has gone on for too long and eradication must be the objective but this will not be achieved by the usual Department of Agriculture simplistic approach of just tightening controls on farmers and increasing the cost burden while ignoring the stress, trauma and economic impact these controls have on farmers and their families.

In addition, he said IFA strongly reject the EU proposal to impose 30-day pre-movement testing on farms over six months tested. He said the Minister and our MEPs must stand up and be counted by outrightly rejecting this unscientific, market distorting proposal that swill not contribute to eradication of the disease in support of Irish farmers which could cost €20m annually.

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