Editorial: Long overdue!
OPINION: The Government's latest move to make freshwater farm plans more practical and affordable is welcome, and long overdue.
Federated Farmers Gisborne-Wairoa has thrown its weight behind a campaign to get the Napier-Gisborne rail line repaired.
"We want to create new jobs on the East Coast and we need freight transport to do that," says Hamish Cave, Federated Farmers Gisborne-Wairoa provincial president.
"It's no secret we've got constraints with our roads and this is why we need the Government to sit down with us, employers and the council to look at all the freight transport options we need. This isn't an 'either/or' as we need better roads, better shipping and of course, a rail line.
"Government policy is too skewed to the cities where Roads of National Significance are about solving congestion. There needs to be recognition regions like Gisborne need our own Roads of National Significance to help us develop economically.
"Rail is also vital but to secure a viable rail you need to start with a rail line in the first place."
Cave believes it will cost $3.4 million to repair a line that hasn't been touched since 1988's Cyclone Bola.
Even if it's twice that, it's still small compared to the "massive $1.6 billion government-funded upgrade to the Auckland metro rail network," announced only last year, he says.
"We just want a fair shake of the stick and the infrastructure to grow our region. Doing this doesn't just help Gisborne-Wairoa but the big cities by creating more export wealth, more jobs and more opportunities.
The 2025 game bird season is underway with Hawke’s Bay and Southland reporting the ideal weather conditions for hunters – rain and wind.
A group of meat processing companies, directors and managers have been fined a total of $1.6 million for deliberately and illegally altering exported tallow for profit.
New Zealand’s top cheeses for 2025 have been announced and family-owned, Oamaru-based Whitestone Cheese is the big winner.
Waikato farmer, and Owl Farm demonstration manager, Jo Sheridan is the 2025 Fonterra Dairy Woman of the Year.
New Zealand’s special agricultural trade envoy Hamish Marr believes the outlook for the dairy sector remains strong.
Everyone from experienced veterinarians and young professionals to the Wormwise programme and outstanding clinics have been recognised in this year’s New Zealand Veterinary Association Te Pae Kīrehe (NZVA) awards.