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Federated Farmers is urging the Government to put a halt to Waikato Regional Council's controversial Plan Change 1 (PC1), warning the regulations will impose significant costs, complexity and duplication on thousands of farmers while major national reforms remain unresolved.
Chris Woolerton, Waikato Federated Farmers president, says that, if introduced, PC1 will be the most significant rule change ever seen by farmers in the Waikato and Waipā catchments.
"There are huge restrictions and compliance requirements being placed on Waikato farmers that will totally change the nature of farming in the region," Woolerton says.
"Plan Change 1 will add cost, complexity and duplication, with thousands of farmers needing both a resource consent and a gold-plated farm plan just to keep farming."
Woolerton, a Taupiri dairy farmer, wants to see the plan change paused until there’s clarity on resource management, local government and farm plan reforms.
"These new farming rules are completely at odds with the Government’s direction of travel and vision for the country," he says.
"On one hand we have a Government saying it wants to cut the cost and complexity from farming by overhauling local government and the RMA.
"But on the other hand we’ve got a binding court decision pushing in the opposite direction, bringing in very prescriptive farming rules with huge compliance requirements."
The development of Plan Change 1 began in 2012 and has spent years progressing through submissions, hearings and appeals.
The Environment Court released its decision on 8 June, giving Waikato Regional Council until 21 July to complete 20 specific amendments before the plan is finalised.
Woolerton says the lengthy process has resulted in regulations that are already outdated.
"These rules took so long to work their way through the court system that by the time they landed they were already out of date and out of step with central government.
"This process has taken more than 14 years and, in that time, we’ve seen significant changes in farmers’ environmental practices. Farmers have moved quicker than the RMA process has."
Once implemented, Plan Change 1 will introduce extensive new agricultural land use rules affecting more than 4,500 farms throughout the Waikato and Waipā River catchments.
Federated Farmers says that restrictive rules would make it extremely difficult for farmers to change land use or switch between farming systems.
This would hit many Waikato farmers who converted their dairy farms to dairy goats in the 2010s, rendering them unable to return to milking cows.
More than 400 farmers in the Whangamarino Wetland Catchment will also have to obtain a restricted discretionary resource consent simply to continue their existing farming activities.
Federated Farmers warns that those farmers could face additional operational restrictions and uncertainty about their long-term ability to continue farming.
King Country sheep and beef farmer Reon Verry, who serves as Waikato Federated Farmers meat and wool chair, is also concerned about what PC1 might mean for local farmers.
Verry is a strong supporter of environmental protection, having completed substantial fencing and planting projects on his farm and helped establish a local catchment group.
"The environment is something I really care about, but these rules will simply see a whole lot of money wasted on compliance costs rather than on-farm action," Verry says.
"With all the Government’s reforms currently underway, it makes total sense to press pause on implementing these new rules until everyone has more clarity.
"Pausing the new rules doesn’t mean pressing pause on environmental improvements. Farmers are still going to keep getting on with the good work we’re already doing.
"Like most farmers, I’ve still got my farm environment plan to get on with, the native trees are ordered, and the fencers are booked in."
Verry says Ministers are currently working their way through what the new national system will look like, and we need to be careful to avoid duplication or confusion.
"Common sense would suggest we slow down and wait for the new system to land."
Federated Farmers is urging the Government to put a halt to Waikato Regional Council's controversial Plan Change 1 (PC1), warning the regulations will impose significant costs, complexity and duplication on thousands of farmers while major national reforms remain unresolved.
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