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Pg 4 Vol 22 No 3, January 29, 2024
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Sector voices seek harmony Neal Wallace
POLITICS
F
Agriculture
ARM sector leaders are open to working more closely together – but there is resistance to creating a single voice to speak on behalf of the sector. Federated Farmers and the ginger group Groundswell are talking about forming a Team Ag, enabling the sector to speak with one voice on issues and act more in unison than at present. Beef + Lamb NZ (BLNZ) and Dairy NZ favoured a less formal structure when approached by Farmers Weekly for comment. Federated Farmers president Wayne Langford said he has set himself the goal this year of advancing his Team Ag concept.
There is value in alignment but also value in having an individual voice. Kate Acland BLNZ Regardless of the final structure, Langford said, the sector needs to talk more often with one voice and with less duplication. That would not preclude bodies having their own views and positions, but Team Ag would use the various strengths of its members, such as science from DairyNZ, extension from BLNZ and the farmer’s voice from the federation. “Team Ag is all about achieving the best results for agriculture and to achieve that everyone has to do
the role that they were set up to do, the position they were put in the team to play,” he said. With the government indicating it has an extensive policy agenda, Langford said, the sector could struggle to keep up. He wants Team Ag to include other rural groups, such as Rural Women, Young Farmers and the Dairy Women’s Network. The chairs of BLNZ and Dairy NZ said they already work closely with one another and Federated Farmers, and are in the process of formalising an agreement to work together at regional level on issues such as water policy. BLNZ chair Kate Acland questioned what Team Ag would look like. “There is value in alignment but also value in having an individual voice,” she said. Acland said farmers do not always see the existing pan-sector approach as it happens out of the public eye. She said sector groups united as one to meet Agriculture Minister Todd McClay before Christmas. The boards of DairyNZ, BLNZ and Federated Farmers meet jointly twice a year and the chairs regularly talk. DairyNZ chair Jim van der Poel said he has not met Groundswell but said the sector groups all represent rural people so it makes sense to work together. “We are all part of the same communities. The issue is how we formulate a solution for everybody that is fair.” He said greater co-operation at a regional level is logical given rural communities all want the same Continued page 3
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OPINION 16
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