Otago Daily Times

Lessons learned: MPI holds public meeting with farmers

- SALLY RAE

PAINFUL lessons have been learned during the Mycoplasma bovis response and hopefully all lessons will be ‘‘locked in’’ and used in the event of another disease incursion, programme director Geoff Gwyn says.

Mr Gwyn was speaking at a public meeting in Oamaru last week, as part of a series of farmer and public meetings throughout the country.

Those meetings came in the wake of the launch of the 2019 Mycoplasma bovis National Plan, released by the Ministry for Primary Industries, DairyNZ and Beef + Lamb New Zealand last week.

The plan set out three goals: to eradicate the disease from New Zealand, to reduce the effect of the disease and the eradicatio­n programme for everyone affected, and to leave New Zealand’s biosecurit­y system stronger.

In May last year, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced $886 million would be spent on phased eradicatio­n of the disease.

About five hours were spent with affected farmers in Oamaru — the farmer meetings were not open to the media — and it was important to hear what they had to say, Mr Gwyn said.

The eradicatio­n programme had a disproport­ionate effect: it was a ‘‘hell of a lot harder’’ for communitie­s like Ashburton, Oamaru and Invercargi­ll than the rest of the country, he said.

Eradicatio­n was ‘‘never going to be a castiron guarantee’’ but the latest Technical Advisory Group (TAG) report said the programme was on the right track and the group was increasing­ly confident eradicatio­n was achievable.

Spring bulk milk testing indicated the disease was not endemic across New Zealand; it appeared confined to a group of farms connected by animal movements.

There was an estimated cost of $1.3 billion in lost production over 10 years if it was not eradicated, plus other impacts on animal health and lower resilience to other diseases.

Farmers were incredibly resilient and great business people. If they could be given certainty, they could work around most things. The biggest problem was giving that certainty, Mr Gwyn said.

This was the ‘‘heavy lifting’’ phase of the programme. Part of what the response was trying to achieve was ongoing support and there could never be ‘‘overcommun­ication’’, he said.

As at April 11, there were 165 confirmed properties, 58 active properties, 107 cleared properties, 112 under notice of direction movement restrictio­n, and 219 under surveillan­ce.

The National Plan had been written in easytounde­rstand terms; it was important that everyone in New Zealand — including taxpayers in Auckland who had never stepped on to a farm — had an understand­ing of how important it was to New Zealand as a country, and how eradicatio­n was progressin­g and being achieved.

It was not just farmers and communitie­s who needed to be convinced it was a worthwhile spend of Government money, Mr Gwyn said.

Compensati­on timeframes had been reduced from 70 days to about 22 days on average.

 ??  ?? Geoff Gwyn
Geoff Gwyn

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