Weekend Herald

Cattle disease farmers won’t be named despite complaints

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The farmers whose livestock i s infected with Mycoplasma bovis will not be named — despite people complainin­g.

That was the first message from Ministry for Primary Industries chief operating officer Roger Smith to a packed public meeting in North Otago’s Weston Hall on Thursday night.

“This is a significan­t issue,” he said of the bacterial cattle disease confirmed on six farms since it was discovered last month for the first time in New Zealand.

“There’s a lot of noise about why we aren’t naming the farmers. People are moaning about it. The law says we can’t.”

But the main reason was that the ministry relied on people feeling safe to approach it with informatio­n or fears, he said.

It needed to be able to trust that farmers would come forward, and they needed to trust the ministry to protect them.

Personnel on all farms where the disease was present — four owned by the Van Leeuwen Dairy Group near Waimate, one near Maheno in North Otago, and a lifestyle block near Rangiora — had done all that was required by the ministry so it could carry out its work, Smith said.

It did not help anyone to “name and shame” those involved.

Ministry staff gave more details of the multilayer­ed testing and sampling processes than were presented in the previous three public meetings since the outbreak.

“There’s a lot of public angst and concern in the farming community,” said technical liaison officer Victoria Barrell.

“We’re here to alleviate some of that.” The “vast majority” of test results were negative for Mycoplasma bovis.

“That’s really good news.” All positive tests were from farms where cattle had direct contact with van Leeuwen livestock. That showed the system was working — there were no unexplaine­d cases, said Oamaru veterinari­an Hamish Newton.

If farmers were concerned about their cattle making contact with neighbours’ animals, they should de- cide who was grazing which boundary paddocks and when, he said.

Where adjacent grazing could not be avoided, an extra fenceline could be installed as a safeguard.

Smith said these events could “either pull apart your community, or pull it together”.

“Communicat­ion i s absolutely critical.”

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