Irish farmers critical of changes to bovine TB programme

The Irish Farmers Association Animal Health Chairman Pat Farrell is critical of the Department of Agriculture’s changes in Ireland’s TB Eradication Programme.
calendar icon 21 June 2020
clock icon 2 minute read

According to the IFA the Department enacted these changes without consulting or discussing the ramifications with farmers.

Pat Farrell said that the Department’s policy of removing animals that were previously inconclusive in TB breakdowns and deeming tests where four or more animals are inconclusive as “reactors” is a significant change to the programme. Its expected impact on farmers will be severe.

The IFA Chairman said the Department of Agriculture had shown yet again that they have no difficulty in increasing the cost burden on farmers while refusing to address the enormous shortcomings in the compensation schemes.

He said, “This latest change to the implementation of the TB programme severely impacts on the income of farmers and was imposed without any consultation. This is despite claims that all stakeholders would have the chance to input into decision-making on the programme”.

The IFA chairman said this latest move by the Department of Agriculture is particularly disappointing given the enormous efforts made by farmers throughout this COVID-19 pandemic to ensure the TB programme continued.

Pat Farrell said, “Farmers have enough of the Department of Agriculture’s continual refusal to address the critical issues in the TB programme. The new Minister for Agriculture will have a job to maintain farmer support for the programme if the current approach continues”.

He said IFA has consistently identified critical areas around the live valuation scheme and the income support schemes that need changes to reduce the cost burden of the programme on farms.

“The Department of Agriculture is acutely aware of these issues, yet persistently refuse to carry out a meaningful costing of the changes.”

The decision to now remove animals that were previously inconclusive and have since had several clear tests does not rest well with farmers. While they may be eligible for existing compensation schemes, the levels of support available are only in the region of 50 percent of the actual loss imposed by the removal of some of these animals.

Pat Farrell said, “The TB programme requires significant changes; the most fundamental is the need for the Department of Agriculture to recognise the enormous contribution farmers make to the programme by addressing the losses they are imposing on them through reform of the compensation schemes”.

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