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“A disaster for farmers” - O'Hagan 24.04.09

by Liam Porter, Inishowen Independent

INISHOWEN farmers already struggling to cope with the fall-out of last October’s budget will find it extremely difficult to cover the costs of increased charges for the disposal of fallen animals, it has been suggested this week.
Speaking to the Inishowen Independent, Linsfort-based farmer George O’Hagan described the decision to bring most subsidies paid by the Department of Agriculture under the Fallen Animal Collection Scheme to an end as, “a disaster” for farmers in the peninsula.
“Make no mistake about it the recent budgets have been very sore on farmers and this latest move has been a very sore blow,” he said.
The Government introduced the Fallen Animal Collection Scheme following the food scares during the 1990s, which led to calls for greater traceability in the cattle industry.
In 2000 a computerised database that tracks the movements of bovine animals across Ireland was set up and the following year a scheme for the subsidised collection of dead animals from farms through a network of approved collectors was introduced.
This was done to facilitate BSE testing requirements and minimise on-farm burials, which became an offence in the absence of a licence from the Department of Agriculture. However, following the supplementary Budget, licensed collectors will no longer be paid a subsidy to collect the carcasses.
The licensed collectors have said they have no choice but to pass on the cost to farmers and according to George O’Hagan farmers are facing a cost increase of around €140 per animal.
“You really are talking somewhere in the region of costs rising from €60 to €200 per animal and farmers will really struggle to pay that,” he said.
However he suggested that at the moment it was almost impossible for farmers to get a licence to bury animals.
“Unless you are on an offshore island or an animal falls in a bog you won’t get a licence to bury, but the reality is that farmers will not be able to afford the costs now.”
Describing the scheme as it existed before last week as ‘a very good scheme,’ Mr. O’Hagan said something needed to be done to look at the costs.
“The nearest rendering plant for farmers here is in Cavan so we will feel the full brunt of the costs in isolated places like Inishowen. The government needs to look at this seriously because at the minute we’re being told it costs around €200 per tonne to render a carcase in the south but in the north the figure is around €90.”
Mr O’Hagan suggested that farmers worries could be eased if licenses to bury were issued and animals buried in a sensible way.
“We’ve buried animals for thousands of years and done sensibly and correctly there is no fear of pollution,” he said.
At present however the Minister seems unlikely to grant permission for extra licences although he will come under pressure from farm organisations over the coming weeks.
“At the minute we’re being told this won’t change and we’ll have to cover the costs. God help any poor farmer who has an animal or maybe two falling now,” the local farmer concluded.
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