Jamaica Gleaner

$70m subsidy for Trelawny cane farmers.

- Leon Jackson/Gleaner Writer

THE MINISTRY of Agricultur­e is to subsidise the cost of transporti­ng sugar cane produced by the Trelawny Cane Farmers Associatio­n from that western parish to Worthy Park Sugar Estate in St Catherine, and the Appleton Sugar Estates, i n St Elizabeth to the tune of $70 million.

The disclosure, which is like music to the ears of the cane farmers, was made by agricultur­e minister Karl Samuda, while addressing the 63rd annual Hague Agricultur­al Show in Trelawny on Wednesday.

“I could not come to Trelawny and not mention the situation at Long Pond. I went to the permanent secretary and requested the subsidy allocation, and I first asked for $50 million, but eventually, we settled on $70 million, which is the same as last year,” said Samuda. “I could not stand by and allow the farmers to suffer. It is a matter of finding some form of employment for the residents in the area and for farmers to earn for their labour.”

In a s wift response to Samuda’s announceme­nt, Allan Rickards, the chairman of the All Island Cane Farmers’ Associatio­n, said he was appreciati­ve of the subsidy, albeit he would have preferred if the money was going to small cane farmers.

“There is no way that any Government is going to keep pumping money into these kinds of subsidies,” said Rickards. “I would have loved for all of that money to be going to small farmers, but this money is for the transporti­ng of the farmers’ cane.”

LONG POND IS DEAD

With regard to the strained relationsh­ip between the cane farmers and Everglade Farms, the operators of the Clarke’s Town-based Long Pond Sugar Factory, Rickards intimated that the relationsh­ip is now irreparabl­e.

“Long Pond is dead. The sooner we accept that, it would be better for the farmers. There is no way farmers are going to trust the investors in Long Pond who have treated them with contempt and disrespect,” said Rickards. “A company, Farmers First Limited, has been formed, along with Packaging and Distributo­rs, as minor shareholde­rs, and that is the direction in which the farmers are now looking.

“It is our intention to use 30 to 35 tons of small farmers’ cane to produce cane juice for the local and internatio­nal markets. We is far down the road in getting started,” continued Rickards. “The equipment are coming from India, and but for a few technicali­ties, some part of the equipment would have been on display at the Hague Show today. We will incubate at the Rural Agricultur­al Developmen­t Authority Incubator while establishi­ng our plant.”

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 ??  ?? Minister of Industry, Commerce, Agricultur­e and Fisheries Karl Samuda holds a piece of yam grown in Trelawny as he interacts with a female farmer during his tour of the booths at the Hague Agricultur­al and Industrial Show in Trelawny on Wednesday.
Minister of Industry, Commerce, Agricultur­e and Fisheries Karl Samuda holds a piece of yam grown in Trelawny as he interacts with a female farmer during his tour of the booths at the Hague Agricultur­al and Industrial Show in Trelawny on Wednesday.

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