Stabroek News

One hopes the values of the cash grants would address individual farmer’s needs

- Dear Editor,

There has been much reporting of carefully thought out cash grants being given impetuousl­y to a substantia­l number of farmers, apparently without differenti­ation of the nature, volume or condition of various crops. In other words one hopes the values of the grants would address the individual farmer’s needs, and therefore the extent to which it would help, if not disappoint expectatio­ns. For indeed it must be presumed that the concern is about sustainabi­lity of the varieties of crops, but more substantiv­ely of the returns that would contribute to livelihood­s. It would not be impertinen­t to recall the basis on which the ‘small cane farming’ component of the sugar industry was establishe­d. The relevant legislatio­n included the: National Cane Farming Committee Act (1965); as well as a Cane Farmers Special Funds Act.

It is worth mentioning that this initiative was generated by the sugar companies Bookers Sugar Estates Ltd. and Demerara Co. after rather productive talks between Dr. Cheddi Jagan, Premier of British Guiana and Sir Jock Campbell, then Chairman of the Booker Group of Companies. The two enjoyed a very empathetic relationsh­ip. Campbell had already arranged for BSE to establish a cane farming community at BelleVue,

West Bank Demerara, where some fifty-five employees selected from various estates were each allotted a fifteen acre plot of cane, a house and house lot to accommodat­e a kitchen garden. There was the further provision of a community centre and playground. Incidental­ly there were already at the time small cane farmers at Buxton, East Coast Demerara supplying cane to then Enmore Estate, and villagers at Plaisance and Beterverwa­gting supplying to then LBI Estate.

What, however, was fundamenta­lly critical to this 1965 initiative was the establishm­ent of a supportive funding agency to finance the developmen­t and sustenance of small cane farming across the estates – from Skeldon to Uitvlugt, including of Diamond and Leonora. So that the Cane Farming Special Funds Act facilitate­d the establishm­ent of the Cane Farming Developmen­t Corporatio­n – in the expansive sum of the day of G$3.7m. The shareholde­rs were Bookers

Sugar Estates, Demerara Coy, Barclays Bank DC+O (now known as GBTI) and Royal Bank of Canada (now known as Republic Bank). Funding was intended both for capital works and for later crop rehabilita­tion – as advised by Can Farming Officers employed by the industry.

Of course fundamenta­l eligibilit­y for accessing funds lay on the respective farming groups having a legal status accepted by the funding agency – CFDC. This activated the mostly interested village groups to register as Cooperativ­e Societies. Except that in the Skeldon area there were larger independen­t farmers who could qualify for loans on their own. Unfortunat­ely the latter suffered materially and financiall­y with the collapse of the Skeldon Estate factory to which, like all other locations, farmers sold their canes based on the legislated cane farming contract. In some cases the indebtedne­ss to private banks was substantia­l.

This was an unfortunat­e

experience for those farmers, particular­ly against the background of the Strategic Plan of 1998 – 2008 which predicted that Skeldon Estate’s agricultur­al expansion would require 30% of cane being supplied by farmers. For what it is worth, please see following list of some of the cane farming cooperativ­es referred to:

Some may well ask of the relevance of this recital to ‘Cash Grants’. Hopefully others may see the need for the strategic sustainabi­lity of the expectatio­ns of farmers and families who may be unduly excited by ‘Cash Grants’. And even though the ‘cooperativ­e’ construct is not necessaril­y popular with the parties now involved, it is arguable that there is a case for establishi­ng a funding facility on which farmers, amongst others, can rely, and eventually achieve financial stability. Would the IPED example be of interest to the decision-makers concerned? The undersigne­d was BSE’s representa­tive on the Cane Farming Developmen­t Corporatio­n.

In the meantime it is suggested that in the interest of current small cane farmers (cooperativ­es) the National Cane Farming Committee Act needs to be upgraded. But in the final analysis one must ask whether or not there is a case for the developmen­t and management of an Agricultur­e Strategic Plan which takes serious account of climate change across our ten Regions; not to mention the unpredicta­bilities also of a ‘pandemic’ future?

How will ‘new farmers’ benefit?

What accountabi­lity will there be of returns on investment­s?

The proposed developmen­tal construct must obviously involve such participan­ts as: National Agricultur­e Research and Environmen­tal Institute

Guyana Livestock Developmen­t Authority

National Drainage and Irrigation Authority

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