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Rural pressure group welcomes more farmer input on animal disease control

Rural pressure group welcomes more farmer input on animal disease control Rural pressure group, the CLA, says it welcomes the government's proposal to give farmers a major say on animal disease control, but is wary of a proposed levy.

The organisation says farmers should be given more control over the way that disease control is managed because Government cannot be relied upon to get it right.

CLA East Midlands Director Helen Woolley said: "Just look at FMD and Bovine TB. There have been too many examples of poor decisions and grossly excessive costs being imposed on both the industry and the public purse.

"We were horrified two years ago when a bio-security lapse in a Government institution was responsible for a foot and mouth outbreak.  It resulted in enormous costs being imposed on the industry, which was also suffering from economic stress and the arrival of BTV.

"Accordingly the CLA strongly supports the proposal to find a better way of sharing decision making.  We think the decisions will be better, and the overall costs reduced.

"However we remain concerned about the intention to impose a levy on farmers to meet the costs.  Farmers already pay significant sums of money on bio-security, vaccination and other measures to keep their stock disease free."

The Midlands rural expert added that the government needed to acknowledge that disease control measures already impose significant costs on farmers and rural businesses. Movement controls freeze commercial transactions resulting in losses for farmers, their suppliers, the animal markets, abattoirs, transporters, meat processors and others in the food chain.

Any levy would have to be structured to take account of all the costs involved and not just the effect on the public purse.

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