The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Farmer claims new entrants are bottom of the subsidy pile

CAP: Unhappy north-east farmer hits out over his wait for money

- Gemma mackenzie

A north-east farmer who is still waiting for last year’s subsidy payment has accused the Scottish Government of neglecting new entrants.

The farmer, who wishes to remain anonymous for fear of his subsidy claim being further delayed as a result of speaking out, said he and others in a similar situation were facing severe financial difficulty as a result of the payment delays.

The new entrant has recently succeeded his father on a tenancy on a farm in Aberdeensh­ire, and his father has transferre­d him his historic entitlemen­ts.

The farmer, who is married with two children, said because of the transfer of his father’s entitlemen­ts his claim was now being viewed as “too complicate­d” and it had been pushed to the “bottom of the pile”.

He said he has yet to receive any money and was not able to take advantage of a Government loan scheme set up to administer cash advances because his entitlemen­t transfer had not yet been processed, meaning he had nothing to base a loan against.

The farmer, who is waiting for an estimated £10,000 in subsidy monies, said without his wife’s income and financial support from his father, his family would not have been able to survive the past six months.

“As a new entrant I should be at the top of the pile and not at the back,” he said.

“When you start out in farming, there’s a huge cost involved and it’s a long time before you get your money back. The Government says they want to support new entrants but establishe­d farmers get dealt with first.”

He said Government needed to prioritise getting payments out to new entrants because establishe­d farmers had produce, whether it be cattle or grain, to sell to tide them over in the meantime. New entrants, on the other hand, did not, he said.

A Scottish Government spokeswoma­n called on the farmer in question to contact their local rural payments office. However the farmer said he and his agent had been calling the office on a weekly basis for months to no avail.

The spokeswoma­n added: “As we promised in May, every effort is being made to fix this issue and teams have been working flat out to get CAP payments out as fast as possible.

“We have made significan­t progress but anyone who thinks they should have had a CAP payment and hasn’t should contact their local area office or the RPID customer helpline.

“We will look into such cases as a matter of priority.”

When you start out in farming, there’s a huge cost involved and it’s a long time before you get your money back

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