The Journal

Rural & Farming

The fund’s requiremen­ts defy common sense in flood management. Members have been denied funding for being more than 150m away from rivers, despite flooding depending on landscape, not just distance

- EMILY BEAMENT and HARRY STEDMAN in associatio­n with Harry & Kilme

THE Government has widened access to a fund for farmers who have suffered severe impacts from flooding after “major issues” were pointed out by agricultur­al leaders – including lack of funding for farms in the North.

It was announced on Tuesday that grants of between £500 and £25,000 under the Farming Recovery Fund would be paid to farmers hit by the damage from Storm Henk in early January. The funding was designed to help farmers restore land to the condition it was in before heavy flooding due to the storm.

But, originally, only fields within 150 metres of a main river that had flooded were eligible for the compensati­on, leading to complaints from farmers.

Farming minister Mark Spencer said: “We want to make sure the Farming Recovery Fund offers the support farmers need to recover from uninsurabl­e damage.

“It’s why we’ve immediatel­y listened and responded to feedback on the launch of the initial phase of this scheme, fully removing the 150m limit.

“This means that farmers will be able to receive payments for all land parcels which are flooded contiguous to an eligible river.

“We’ll continue to listen to farmers and look at how we can expand the scheme and improve support for those affected.” The National Farmers’ Union (NFU) – which is warning of a building crisis in the agricultur­al sector due to the ongoing bad weather which has battered the country with heavy rain, winds and flooding – initially welcomed the scheme.

But NFU vice president Rachel Hallos said on Thursday it had very quickly become clear that there are major issues with the fund.

She added: “We are hearing from numerous members who have suffered catastroph­ic impacts who have been told they are not eligible for the fund because some of their affected areas are more than 150 metres from ‘main’ rivers.

“These include members with 90% of their land saturated or underwater, and huge damage to buildings and equipment.”

She said the farming body was taking the issue up with the Environmen­t Department (Defra) urgently.

“I cannot believe this is what ministers intended when they launched the fund, which was a welcome and wellintent­ioned developmen­t which seems to have been fundamenta­lly let down in the detail,” she said.

“While the impact of the weather goes far beyond Storm Henk, this could have been a good start but, as it stands, it simply doesn’t work.”

CLA president Victoria Vyvyan added: “The fund’s requiremen­ts defy common sense in flood management. Members have been denied funding for being more than 150m away from rivers, despite flooding depending on land

scape, not just distance. Farms in the North and Shropshire have also been deemed ineligible, despite also experienci­ng catastroph­ic flooding from Storm Henk.

“After three months, it’s frustratin­g to see how little thought has been given to basic detail.”

The grants are initially open to farmers to help them restore their land, in areas where a wider support scheme known as the ‘flood recovery framework’ has been activated, to help farms which have experience­d the highest levels of flooding, Defra said.

These are Gloucester­shire, Leicesters­hire, Lincolnshi­re, Nottingham­shire, Somerset, Warwickshi­re, West Northampto­nshire, Wiltshire and Worcesters­hire.

Eligibilit­y for funding in Berkshire, Herefordsh­ire, Oxfordshir­e, Surrey, Staffordsh­ire, Yorkshire, Norfolk and Derbyshire is under review, Defra added.

Eligible farmers are being contacted directly by the Rural Payments Agency, outlining the support available and how they can make a claim.

 ?? ?? A wet and muddy sheep stands in a flooded field during heavy rain on the Romney Marsh in Kent. The Government is widening access to a fund for farmers who have suffered from flooding on their land
A wet and muddy sheep stands in a flooded field during heavy rain on the Romney Marsh in Kent. The Government is widening access to a fund for farmers who have suffered from flooding on their land

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