Jamaica Gleaner

Fulton tackles farmland hijack

JAS boss criticises housing boom on prime agri lands

- Christophe­r Serju/ Gleaner Writer christophe­r.serju@gleanerjm.com

THE CONVERSION of prime farmland in St Catherine into residentia­l developmen­ts has come under withering criticism from Lenworth Fulton, the president of the Jamaica Agricultur­al Society.

Developers have, over the last decade and a half, been building out a range of housing schemes across swathes of farmland in St Catherine. Among the developmen­ts is constructi­on of a residentia­l complex at Bernard Lodge that had ground to a halt years ago but will be completed by the China Harbour Engineerin­g Company.

The Government also plans to build out a new city in Bernard Lodge on 4,600 acres over an estimated 18-year period.

But Fulton charged that the expropriat­ion of arable land for non-agricultur­al purposes was ill-conceived and threatened the country’s food security.

LAND USE POLICY

“I urge the Government to move with all seriousnes­s to developing a comprehens­ive, practicabl­e landuse policy. In particular, we, the farmers, want to see the majority of arable lands stay in agricultur­al production, and not be subsumed to urban infrastruc­ture and housing. I make particular reference to the Bernard Lodge lands, some of the very best farmland in this region and even the hemisphere,” said Fulton at a recent launch ceremony at the JAS’s headquarte­rs.

“We recommend that pending and future housing developmen­ts and urban expansion make use of marginal lands. And that, by keeping our agricultur­al land in agricultur­e and making smart choices in blending infrastruc­ture and transporta­tion ... we can potentiall­y stave off the worst effects of climate change.”

Fulton made it clear that farmers were not interested in handouts but wanted incentives such as subsidies on land preparatio­n, a one-time benefit that has been discontinu­ed.

“Agricultur­e is not something the planners are thinking of because 63 per cent of the land is not suitable for agricultur­e and percentage of arable available for farming has fallen to about 19.5, a decline of almost eight per cent over a 50-year period.

“So this now is a direct contributo­r to food insecurity because we are taking more of the little arable land out of agricultur­e and becoming more food insecure based on that,” he lamented.

By failing to provide significan­t support for small farmers in the 2019-20 Budget, the JAS president also criticised the Government for facilitati­ng the expansion of Jamaica’s yawning food import bill.

While commending the relief offered to various sectors announced by Finance Minister Dr Nigel Clarke, Fulton said that taxes on key chemical inputs such as nematicide­s, herbicides, rodenticid­es and molluscici­des were still as high as 20 per cent.

“We have to point out to that overall, this is not a farmer-friendly budget,” the JAS president declared.

The compound impact of high taxation made domestic agricultur­al production in which small farmers are the main investors even less competitiv­e, the agricultur­alist warned.

“By selling to the farmers at that rate when they are already uncompetit­ive, you are really creating an avenue for imported goods to come in, whether intentiona­lly or not,” he told The Gleaner.

“Because if are we producing goods which are already too expensive, retaining this high taxation will surely push prices up and make imported goods more attractive and eventually put the small farmers out of business.”

The JAS president cited the marginalis­ation of the People’s Co-operative (PC) Bank, which has been downgraded to an intermedia­ry for the Developmen­t Bank of Jamaica, as a further blow to the enterprise and independen­ce of small farmers. He suggested that a recapitali­sation of this grass-roots financial institutio­n was a crucial support mechanism for agricultur­al investment.

“Government needs to come in and take over the PC Bank and put it on the market so that investors can take it up. It doesn’t make sense we have a special bank for farmers and it’s not functional. If you go there to get a loan, it takes you up to three months.

“By that time, the crop dead or you fail. So an agricultur­al loan can’t be like a constructi­on loan; it has to be time-sensitive.

“Farmers need the same response as when you apply for a motor vehicle loan, like what there is for furniture, where as you go in you come out with your TV or table,” he said.

 ?? IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Policemen conduct a body search on a biker who rode through a checkpoint in Port Antonio, Portland, while the by-election for Portland East was under way Thursday, April 4.
IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Policemen conduct a body search on a biker who rode through a checkpoint in Port Antonio, Portland, while the by-election for Portland East was under way Thursday, April 4.
 ?? RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Lenworth Fulton (left), president of the JAS, is engrossed in conversati­on with Courtney Cole, chief technical director in the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Fisheries, at the launch of Farmers’ Month in Kingston recently.
RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Lenworth Fulton (left), president of the JAS, is engrossed in conversati­on with Courtney Cole, chief technical director in the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Fisheries, at the launch of Farmers’ Month in Kingston recently.

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