Govt to rethink farm health and safety rules with practical reforms
Farmers are welcoming new Government proposals to make farm health and safety rules more practical and grounded in real-world farming.
Labour's Primary Industries spokesman Damien O’Connor claims there’s been a lot of misunderstanding about what is or is not in the Health and Safety Reform Bill and says that’s no one’s fault.
O’Connor is not a member of the transport and industrial select committee which is dealing with the bill, but he’s well aware of the issues and the feeling in rural communities. He’s been approached by farmers upset at some of the provisions in the bill as it stands.
“Farmers are certainly concerned without knowing the actual details, so there has been a lot of hype around this,” O’Connor told Rural News.
“The question of not being able to put another person on a quad has been the centre of debate and there will no doubt be many other things regarding processes – such as dealing with visitors to farms – that are of concern.”
O’Connor says when issues like this are debated, often extreme positions are taken and he hopes what the select committee arrives at, and the government delivers, is workable for farmers and also reduces the accident rate on farms.
He says he’d like to see lead agencies such as Federated Farmers working harder to get the truth out about the legislation, rather than getting involved in political spin to reverse some of the changes.
O’Connor says while the forestry industry is entirely focused on health and safety, he believes the farming industry is still in denial in some areas and is trying to come to terms with regulations that might be difficult to implement
Meat co-operative, Alliance has met with a group of farmer shareholders, who oppose the sale of a controlling stake in the co-op to Irish company Dawn Meats.
Rollovers of quad bikes or ATVs towing calf milk trailers have typically prompted a Safety Alert from Safer Farms, the industry-led organisation dedicated to fostering a safer farming culture across New Zealand.
The Government has announced it has invested $8 million in lower methane dairy genetics research.
A group of Kiwi farmers are urging Alliance farmer-shareholders to vote against a deal that would see the red meat co-operative sell approximately $270 million in shares to Ireland's Dawn Meats.
In a few hundred words it's impossible to adequately describe the outstanding contribution that James Brendan Bolger made to New Zealand since he first entered politics in 1972.
Dawn Meats is set to increase its proposed investment in Alliance Group by up to $25 million following stronger than forecast year-end results by Alliance.