Mercury (Hobart)

Dairy farmers in class action

- HELEN KEMPTON

TASMANIAN dairy farmers still smarting from Fonterra’s sudden milk price reduction four years ago are expected to register for a class action, seeking compensati­on from the dairy giant.

The class action was issued in the Supreme Court in Victoria on Wednesday.

About 300 Tasmanian dairy farmers supply Fonterra with milk, and the company also has processing factories here.

The dairy industry was shocked in May 2016, to learn the company was reducing the milk prices it paid to some farmers by about 70 per cent.

Tasmanian farmers were among those hit hard, including one family from Winnaleah, who protested in the Launceston mall saying Fonterra was “milking them dry”, and the price had forced them to lay off workers and dry off cows early.

The Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission investigat­ed Fonterra’s shock decision and, while it said the company’s conduct contribute­d to a crisis in the Australian dairy industry, it did not take action.

Chairman of the Tasmanian Dairy Council Andrew Lester said he expected some of the 300 local farmers who supplied Fonterra would be interested in joining the class action. The case involves dairy farmers who supplied milk to Fonterra in 2015-2016. It will be run by law firms Adley Burstyner and Harwood Andrews.

David Burstyner, the lawyer running the case, said the price cut had not been about the dairy company’s survival, with the Fonterra Group posting a $834 million net profit after tax for the year ending July 31, 2016.

The Supreme Court Statement of Claim asks the Court to declare that “Fonterra engaged in misleading and deceptive conduct and unconscion­able conduct; and that it breached its supply contract and its obligation to match the farmgate milk price of Murray Goulburn”.

“Adley Burstyner hopes the case will decisively end such clawbacks,” Mr Burstyner said.

Hearings are expected to start in August.

A Fonterra spokesman said the ACCC had investigat­ed the 2016 milk price reduction thoroughly.

“We’ve done a lot of work with our farmers since 2016 to rebuild trust and transparen­cy,” he said.

“Fonterra takes its legal and regulatory obligation­s seriously and is committed to fully complying with them.

“We will address these claims comprehens­ively at the appropriat­e time.”

More informatio­n and a registrati­on of interest form is available from https://www.adleyburst­yner.com.au/farmersfar­m-gate-milk-price-action

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