Manawatu Standard

Moves to fight raw milk stance

- Sam Kilmister

A Horowhenua raw milk supplier accused of putting consumer health at risk is joining an industry-wide fight to reopen following a Government raid.

Ministry for Primary Industries’ compliance teams shut down sales of raw milk from dairy farms in Manawatu¯, Horowhenua, Auckland, Hawke’s Bay, Nelson and Southland after a 12-month probe led to a series of co-ordinated raids in December.

Some producers have had to let staff go, and supply milk to Fonterra.

However, the ministry is refusing to bend the rules on raw milk, leading to a stand-off with several suppliers campaignin­g to rewrite laws about distributi­ng their product.

A Givealittl­e page has been set up by a Hawke’s Bay supplier to hire a qualified policy expert.

Phillippa and John Martin’s farm Mannamilk, south of Levin, was one of those raided by officials to throw their support behind the fundraisin­g effort.

They hope the ministry will work with suppliers so raided farms can reopen promptly.

However, in a statement to Stuff, a ministry spokespers­on would not comment on whether unregulate­d suppliers would be prosecuted as the investigat­ion was ongoing.

Meanwhile, suppliers remain in limbo.

Phillippa Martin said the delay was frustratin­g and prompted them to buy a pasteurise­r so they could continue their raw milk operation.

However, they chose not to due to the investigat­ion and were forced to layoff a staff member after six years’ service.

‘‘We are totally shut down, as are a couple of others who tried to keep going,’’ she said.

Unpasteuri­sed milk that hasn’t been treated carries greater risk of food poisoning and has been linked to gastrointe­stinal outbreaks in the past.

It led the Government in 2015 to tighten hygiene standards, and customers had to sign for milk delivered off-farm and volumes were required to be recorded.

Farms, such as Mannamilk, were required to store milk in ministry-registered vending machines or secure fridge depots where the milk could be picked up by customers.

But the Martins had a private arrangemen­t with their partners, where the partners would pay for the costs of animal husbandry and bottling the milk.

In return, the Martins delivered milk to un-registered depots in Ka¯piti, Wellington and the Hutt Valley. Milk was left in fridges or chilly bins and picked up later that day. They thought the ministry didn’t have jurisdicti­on over a limited partnershi­p model. But the system is untested in court.

‘‘We are all hoping to avoid that [court] with a change in offfarm delivery policy to limited partners.’’

That’s where the Givealittl­e page could help, Martin said.

The page, set up by HawkesBay supplier Lindsay Farm, states it wants to improve regulation­s around distributi­on and monitoring.

‘‘We believe New Zealanders should be able to make choices about food they consume and be able to access it easily,’’ it stated.

 ?? MURRAY WILSON/STUFF ?? Phillippa and John Martin’s farm Mannamilk, south of Levin, was raided by officials in December.
MURRAY WILSON/STUFF Phillippa and John Martin’s farm Mannamilk, south of Levin, was raided by officials in December.

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