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Food and Farming visits Downing Street
By Chris Benfield
HILL farmers have been called on to come up with their own ideas for keeping
their trade alive in the face of economic pressures which appear to make
them economically unviable.
James Paice, the Conservative Party's shadow Minister for food and farming,
told a delegation from Yorkshire he accepted upland farmers needed long-term
help so they could play their part in maintaining the landscape which brings
tourists and keeps shops and other services alive.
He said party leader David Cameron's speech about the need to secure British
production of food, at the NFU conference two weeks ago, was part of a
deliberate effort to put their considered view on the record.
He said: "We have to still pay money into the hills“ call it subsidy or
whatever you like. Farming in the hills is never going to be purely an
agricultural activity. The big challenge I face is trying to devise the
right way. I confess I am wrestling with it. Having accepted that public
money has to go into the hills, it is a question of finding the right
mechanism."
He sympathised with the farmers' complaints about the current government's
strategy of switching money from direct support, in the form of Hill Farm
Allowances and Single Farm Payments“ the residues of the old subsidies
systems“ into environmental stewardship and general rural support schemes
They said farmers were losing the money too quickly and it was not coming
back to those who needed it most, because of the cost of qualifying for it.
They told him they had to pay thousands of pounds to consultants just to get
the immensely-complicated application forms filled in.
Mr Paice told the Yorkshire Post after the meeting that the Labour schemes
were too bureaucratic but he broadly agreed with their strategy of
decoupling subsidy from past production.
Any government would need the flexibility to re-direct the money to serve
the environment as well as providing food.
He believed that Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, which have stuck more
closely to payments based on history, were beginning to realise they had
made a mistake“ although average upland farm incomes there are far higher
He said: "You can say I am appealing to all farmers. You
Tell us what the answer is."
Mr Paice was at a meeting in Westminster with five farmers from the
Dales-based pressure group Food&Farming4Real.
It was set up to highlight the fact that many small hill and moorland
farmers are crumbling under the pressures of grant changes, bureaucratic
costs and low prices caused by competition from other countries.
Movement restrictions imposed in response to last autumn's foot and mouth
scare and the arrival of the disease bluetongue are adding further pressure.
Former Tory leader William Hague organised the meeting, in response to
lobbying from Alastair Davy, one of his constituents in Richmond, North
Yorkshire, and an organiser of the campaign. Skipton and Ripon MP David
Curry, Whitby and Scarborough's Robert Goodwill and the Vale of York's Anne
McIntosh were also there.
The delegation went on to present a dossier at 10 Downing Street.
chris.benfield@ypn.co.uk
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