The New Zealand Herald

Fed Farmers: Wait for cull compo hurting disease-hit farms

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Andrea Fox

The Government has finalised compensati­on for just three farm businesses out of 31 claims for destroyed cattle affected by the Mycoplasma bovis disease outbreak as Federated Farmers says farmers are feeling financial stress.

Herald inquiries to the Ministry for Primary Industries, which is overseeing the response to the serious disease, reveal the ministry has received 31 compensati­on claims for livestock destructio­n, of which three have been paid out in full and five have had partial payments.

Claims go back to the second half of last year and some are from dairy and beef cattle farmers who have lost almost their entire annual income from livestock which had to be slaughtere­d.

In an emailed response to Herald questions, MPI director Geoff Gwyn said compensati­on claims, only for animal destructio­n, received so far totalled $6.9 million.

Affected farmers under MPI regulatory control cannot sell or move their livestock, which affects income.

MPI did not answer questions as to how many farmers were still owed compensati­on or how many animals were involved in claims.

Federated Farmers national vice- Andrew Hoggard, Federated Farmers national vice-president president Andrew Hoggard said affected farmers were experienci­ng financial stress with banks refusing to extend them credit.

“MPI has recognised they haven’t been doing a fast enough job. It needs to be faster,” Hoggard said.

“The biggest risk in a biosecurit­y outbreak is that farmers who put their hands up as being affected go bank- rupt and lose everything which says to other farmers to keep it quiet and shoot it [the animal], which is the complete opposite to what we want to achieve.

“That’s why it’s so important to make it [compensati­on] quick and fast.”

MPI has recently ordered the destructio­n of another 22,000-plus, mostly dairy, cattle on properties infected by M. bovis, in an attempt to contain the highly debilitati­ng cattle disease, identified mid-last year on a South Island property.

MPI believes the disease, establishe­d in the herds of New Zealand’s trading partners, is not yet well- establishe­d here. Meanwhile, MPI said beef properties had been implicated in the outbreak and cattle slaughtere­d as a result.

Four properties — two in Waimate/ Waitaki in the South Island and one each in Otago and Southland — had been confirmed as being infected.

Cattle on them had tested positive for M. bovis.

Some cattle had been destroyed for “diagnostic” purposes to help MPI establish the location of the disease, and some on infected properties would be culled under MPI’s mass slaughter programme, to be completed before June 1, the start of the new dairy season.

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