The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Recruitmen­t firm warns of impact of shortage of agricultur­al workers

Brexit: Fruit could be left unpicked and farm profits slashed across the country

- Gareth Mcpherson political editor

A shortage of seasonal workers is threatenin­g to leave farms with rotten crops and slashed profits, says a leading recruitmen­t agency.

Tayside and Fife is the home of Scotland’s £100 million fruit industry, but the area is struggling to attract the required workforce amid Brexit concerns, high travel costs and improving eastern European economies.

Meanwhile, Home Secretary Sajid Javid challenged Theresa May’s Home Office legacy by saying he would take a “fresh look” at some of her most controvers­ial policies.

Stephanie Maurel, chief executive of Concordia, which supplies around 10,000 foreign workers to 200 farms in the UK each year, said the company could be 10% short this year.

“It’s compoundin­g the misery for growers really who are planting, and literally they are looking out of their windows not knowing if they’re going to have enough workers to harvest and gather in the crops and the fruit,” she said.

She said up to five offers are being put to each seasonal worker and large numbers are not accepting the offers.

“The money itself is reasonable and that doesn’t come out as a complaint when we do our surveys and focus groups,” Ms Maurel added.

“What does is that the strength of the pound means that when they convert back into euro and to local currency, they’re usually better off going to Germany or Scandinavi­a because Brexit has actually had an impact on the comparison rates.”

Farms across Courier Country use Concordia, as well as other agencies and mounting their own campaigns.

Earlier this year, Angus Growers – a collective of 19 farms mostly in Angus, Perthshire and Fife – revealed how they missed out on £625,000 in 2017 because of recruitmen­t shortages.

In total, 85 tonnes of fruit on those farms was left unpicked or had to be downgraded.

Angus Soft Fruits alone needs 4,000 seasonal workers a year and bosses there have said they “cannot bear to think what it would be like” if the drop in seasonal migrant numbers carries on.

Pressure has been mounting on the UK Government to resurrect the seasonal agricultur­al workers scheme, which would allow migrants from all over the world to work on British farms.

A UK Government spokesman said: “Defra and the Home Office are working closely to ensure the labour needs of the agricultur­e sector are met once we leave the EU.”

Speaking on the BBC’S Andrew Marr Show, Mr Javid said the decision to include students in net immigratio­n figures was “something I would like to look at again”.

On Mrs May’s cap on Tier 2 skilled workers, Mr Javid said that is “something that I’m taking a fresh look at”.

gmcpherson@thecourier.co.uk

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? There could be a 10% fall in the number of foreign seasonal workers on UK farms this year, according to recruitmen­t firm Concordia.
Picture: PA. There could be a 10% fall in the number of foreign seasonal workers on UK farms this year, according to recruitmen­t firm Concordia.

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