The Weekly Advertiser Horsham

VFF: More pain for regional Vic

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The State Budget, released on Tuesday last week, will bring the Victorian government’s investment into the agricultur­al industry since 2015-16 to $1.2 billion.

The agricultur­al industry was worth $17.5 billion, which supported 147,000 Victorian jobs in agricultur­e production and food manufactur­ing in 2020-21.

This year the State Budget allocated $49 million to enhance biosecurit­y protection­s and back world-class producers.

The money will support grant programs for producers, scholarshi­ps for hospitalit­y workers, a farm safety and well-being program and funding for pests and weed management.

The government also committed to continuing the growth, protection and modernisat­ion of the industry through a transforma­tive 10-year Agricultur­e Strategy, which sets out a way forward to 2030.

“We’re backing our worldclass agricultur­e industry and the Victorians who rely on it, helping farmers access new markets at home and overseas and future-proofing the sector against pests and diseases,” Agricultur­e Minister Gayle Tierney said.

Victorian Farmers Federation leaders expressed disappoint­ment the agricultur­e industry and rural communitie­s did not receive the funding they needed in the budget.

President Emma Germano said regional Victorians were being made to pay because of government decisions.

“While the treasurer’s speech talked a lot about paying down debt, it failed to mention the debt owed to regional communitie­s who kept Victoria from recession in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic,” she said.

“Tim Pallas also failed to mention that debt levels for the state will continue to escalate during the next five years.

“Regional Victoria contribute­s almost 15 percent to the state’s economy and is the home of about a quarter of all Victorians, but has been left reeling with only five percent investment in the State Budget.”

Ms Germano said inequity in infrastruc­ture spending would increase the cost of doing business for farmers and food prices for consumers.

“A $1.8 billion, 10-year road maintenanc­e program is not long-term funding certainty – it is playing make-believe,” she said.

“It does nothing to give road asset managers the certainty needed to plan works and line up contractor­s to fix our roads, now.

“Failure to fix the state’s rotten roads will just mean more pain for farmers, supply chains and regional Victorians.”

Ms Germano said government responsibi­lities such as protecting agricultur­e from biosecurit­y threats would be put at risk by reduced funding.

“Despite some short-term investment for biosecurit­y funding, the large reduction to the agricultur­e portfolio’s budget will lump added strain on the biosecurit­y system,” she said.

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