Tag: Farm Debts

UK farmers call for EU workers to bypass Covid quarantine

An article in The Guardian newspaper has reported that there is likely to be a Christmas turkey shortage if EU workers not allowed in to work in British Poultry farms.

Poultry farmers are urging the government to lift travel restrictions to allow hundreds of specialist EU turkey pluckers to fill jobs in the UK, with a warning that there could be a shortage of birds or higher prices if the restrictions are not waived.

The proposed exemption would cover at least 1,000 seasonal workers who normally travel from Poland, Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Slovenia at the end of October to help slaughter, pluck and prepare birds destined for UK Christmas dinner tables. It says workers with typical two-month contracts will not come if they have to quarantine for two weeks upon arrival, even if they are provided with Covid-secure accommodation and “work bubbles”.

With lockdown forcing smaller festive gatherings, farmers are finding it difficult to predict consumer demand, and there are fears that larger birds will be out of favour. 

Chicks – or poults – typically ordered in February grace the Christmas dinner table as fully grown birds the following year. According to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra), between January and June 2020 there were 6.2m poults being reared on farms, compared with 6.1m in the same period in 2019.

Intensive meat processing plants have already fallen victim to outbreaks of Covid-19. A thousand staff at Bernard Matthews’ facility in Holton, Suffolk, have been tested after 72 colleagues were found to be Covid-19 positive.

Calls for help with farm debts rise

The number of farmers in the south west seeking help for financial hardship is increasing, a charity has said.

The Farming Community Network (FCN) said it was dealing with a rise in cases in Devon and Cornwall.

Sustained wet and cold weather in 2012 is thought to be largely to blame for many farms in financial difficulties.

The FCN, which is dealing with more than 200 cases in Devon alone, said it encouraged farmers to seek help “before a problem becomes a crisis”.

‘Unsustainable’ debt

The FCN said that it had seen an increase in cases in Devon alone from 213 last year to 230 up to August this year.

Of the cases being dealt with this year, 90 were new, according to the charity’s figures.

In Cornwall in 2012, it was dealing with 121 cases.

More than half of the problems raised with the charity nationally concerned finance and for some debt was reaching “unsustainable levels”, it claimed.

Joanne Jones, a dairy farmer and FCN coordinator in Devon, said some farmers – often on small family-owned farms – felt isolated and were struggling with seemingly “insurmountable” pressures.

Farmer Tom Jeanes said he was forced into selling half his herd after flooding last year rendered his grazing fields “useless”.

“I doubt if I’ll make any profit this year at all,” he told BBC News.

“I’m only a very small farmer – and I’m not the only one… there are others who’ve lost far more than me.”

‘Reluctance to help’

The FCN said although 2013 had been drier, farmers were still dealing with financial problems caused by the previous 18 months of bad weather.

“We have had a better year this year,” Ms Jones said.

“The harvests have been better, but not enough to get stocks back up to where they need to be for this year and this winter.

“I think some of these issues relating to finances are to do with banking services and maybe some reluctance to help extend overdrafts and to carry on supporting farmers.”

Ms Jones said FCN was trying to encourage farmers to seek help.

“Sometimes we feel farmers don’t come forward soon enough with their problems,” she said.

[BBC News]