Rewarding farmers who embrace sustainability
Winners of DairyNZ’s Sustainability and Stewardship awards in the Ballance Farm Environment Awards have their eyes firmly fixed on progressing a positive future for New Zealand dairy.
It's not always easy making sure your staff enjoy coming to work, right?
DairyNZ people team leader Jane Muir shares some of the evidence-based tools we’ve created to help keep your team happy, healthy and productive.
Many farmers are keen to improve their work environment but aren’t sure where to start. Before we look at the tools available, let’s consider what makes for a good dairy farm workplace.
The Sustainable Dairying: Workplace Action Plan outlines five pillars: balanced and productive work time; fair remuneration; wellness, wellbeing, health and safety; effective teamwork and rewarding careers.
These are equally important but at DairyNZ we’re most focused on achieving change in two of them. We want to help farmers enjoy a balanced and productive work time, and assist with making some gains in wellness, wellbeing, and health and safety.
If our sector can improve in these two areas, we’ll end up having more of the people we need on our dairy farms – people who are capable, reliable, willing and respectful.
Balanced and productive work time
Below are some tips and actions you could take to make positive change on your farm.
• Create different roster options quickly using the DairyNZ roster builder at dairynz.co.nz/rosterbuilder.
• Check out our review of different timesheet apps at dairynz.co.nz/timekeeping. Keeping timesheets is a legal requirement but also confirms the actual hours being worked – a necessary starting point if you want to get more efficient.
• Find and remove operational waste (e.g. time, equipment, production) from your farm system by taking DairyNZ’s six-step waste challenge at dairynz.co.nz/waste-hunt.
• Do things easier, better, faster and safer while delivering results (profitability, farm systems and work environment) by participating in a FarmTune course with your team. It’s a significant time commitment but you won’t look back. Visit dairynz.co.nz/farmtune.
Wellness, wellbeing, health and safety
• Find practical ways to keep people safe onfarm by checking out our new web pages on health and safety at dairynz.co.nz/healthandsafety.
• Enquire about a GoodYarn workshop (dairynz.co.nz.goodyarn). This will help you recognise and respond appropriately to friends, family, farming colleagues or customers who are suffering from stress or mental illness.
Key points
1. Good work environments attract and retain good people.
2. Good people increase your chances of a successful farming business.
3. Save time by using the tools that exist; you don’t need to start from scratch.
*Look out for this article and other interesting on-farm management stories in Getting the Basics Right 2018 issue arriving in your mail boxes soon.
The 2023-24 season has been a roller coaster ride for Waikato dairy farmers, according to Federated Farmers dairy section chair, Mathew Zonderop.
Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) director general Ray Smith says job cuts announced this morning will not impact the way the Ministry is organised or merge business units.
Scales Corporation is acquiring a number of orchard assets from Bostock Group.
Family and solidarity shone through at the 75 years of Ferdon sale in Otorohanga last month.
The Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) has informed staff it will cut 391 jobs following a consultation period.
New Zealand farmers are committed to making their businesses more resilient to climate change and are embracing innovation to help them do so.