The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Fife farmers in limbo due to post-Brexit recruitmen­t fears.

Warning sector will face problems if crop pickers cannot be recruited from EU

- gareth mcpherson political editor gmcpherson@thecourier.co.uk

The fresh produce industry will “regress catastroph­ically” if Brexit makes it any harder to recruit workers, a Fife farming leader has warned.

Andrew Faichney, who represents growers across Tayside and Fife, fears the sector will not have a workforce for next year’s picking season, which raises the spectre of higher food prices.

Stephen Gethins, the SNP MP for North East Fife, said the “clouded rhetoric” and “deafening silence” from the UK Government over the status of EU nationals is putting livelihood­s at risk.

Mr Faichney, from East of Scotland Growers, which is a farmer’s co-operative based in Cupar, said: “We really cannot stress how vital this workforce is to our industry and it is no exaggerati­on that the fresh produce sector will regress catastroph­ically in Scotland if this is compromise­d in any form.

“A more immediate concern is regarding our ability to recruit a workforce for the 2018 season, with so much uncertaint­y and negative press articles regarding the labour issue and Brexit there is an enormous amount of uncertaint­y within these seasonal workers.”

The country is in the middle of harvest season, which is bringing the issue to a head for farmers and rural communitie­s.

Mr Gethins said the agricultur­al sector is crucial to the UK’s £14 billion food and drink industry, but has been put at risk by the UK Government’s “reckless approach”.

“The Tory government must bring to an end sowing any further seeds of uncertaint­y,” he said.

“With more than a third of the UK’s soft fruits coming from Scotland, it is little wonder that the clouded rhetoric from the UK Government over the status of EU nationals and workers is harming the rural regions.

“It is not just MPs and devolved government­s that have sought to seek clarity over plans to leave the EU, there are concerned businesses, like those in north-east Fife, who in 15 months have had their uncertaint­y met with deafening silence.”

A UK Government spokesman said they place “great value” on the UK’s food and farming industries. “Until we have left the EU, the UK will remain a member with all of the rights and obligation­s that membership entails, and employers in the agricultur­al and food sectors are free to continue to recruit EU workers to meet their labour needs,” he added.

 ??  ?? MP Stephen Gethins with Andrew Faichney of East of Scotland Growers.
MP Stephen Gethins with Andrew Faichney of East of Scotland Growers.

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