Jamaica Gleaner

Pressure on small farmers

New rules facing Jamaican exporters force more farming scrutiny

- nadine.wilson@gleanerjm.com

FARMERS WHO supply crops to local exporters can expect a greater level of scrutiny due to the implementa­tion of more stringent regulation­s by foreign government­s aimed at protecting their consumers.

With the introducti­on of the Food Safety Modernisat­ion Act by the Barack Obama administra­tion in 2011 and the establishm­ent of a regional office by the US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA), local manufactur­ers say that they are increasing­ly being required to provide more technical details about their products.

“The farmers would be required to show standard stuff like when they planted, what they treat it with, when they reap, down to when did they wash the vehicles that they delivered it in,” noted group marketing director of Walkerswoo­d Caribbean Foods Limited, Sean Garbut during a Gleaner Editors’ Forum last Thursday.

Walkerswoo­d manufactur­es seasonings, cooking sauces, preservati­ves, and canned vegetables, and exports almost 90 per cent of its products to markets in the US, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Garbut accepts that the new rules will force it to move from some of its traditiona­l suppliers.

“Unfortunat­ely, the smallfarme­r base, which we still rely very heavily on, is grassroots people. They work very hard, but they don’t know what a laptop is or how to keep detailed records outside of in a book, like myself,” said Garbut.

INCREASED REQUIREMEN­TS

He pointed out that because of the new regulation­s, the requiremen­ts for being a supplier to Walkerswoo­d have increased.

“We used to have a lovely little lady that lives right in the town of Walkerswoo­d by the square, and she had about 10 Scotch bonnet plants in her backyard. On Fridays, she would just pick what she had, take it to the factory and we cut her a cheque the next week and she get a few thousand dollars in her hand. That smaller scale is what is at the point of going away.

“That is not a batch size, so it can’t be tracked, and if we are doing a mixed batch, it still comes back to traceabili­ty at some point,” explained Garbut.

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