Leader - Give our farmers a fair deal
In a mass meeting of farmers held at Stafford, there were the first rumblings of an uprising in the Shropshire countryside.
In a mass meeting of farmers held at Stafford, there were the first rumblings of an uprising in the Shropshire countryside.
Shropshire’s dairy farmers have had enough. They say that the latest cut in the price being paid for the milk that they toil to produce is the last straw, and say they have not ruled out stopping production and setting up blockades.
This is tough talk from a body of men and women who are law-abiding and work all the hours God gives, often for little reward, as the idea that you do not see poor farmers is a myth which has never rung more hollow.
For them to even be contemplating tactics which their French counterparts would be prepared to employ at the blink of an eye is an indication of the depth of the crisis which is engulfing the dairy industry, an industry which has been the bedrock of the Shropshire agricultural scene for generations.
It is a national scandal that while it has developed the national government has shown a complete lack of interest, perhaps feeling that there are not many votes and not much political capital to be gained by helping dairy farmers.
It is a crucial issue for Shropshire. Fed up dairy farmers are leaving the industry. That quintessential Shropshire scene, of grazing cows in a field, is disappearing.
Farmers need help to stabilise the situation and the help they need is by being given a fair deal.
It is all very well for consumers to enjoy cheap milk at the tills, but this short term advantage will be at the cost of a disaster in the longer term in which dairy farms disappear in Shropshire, Mid Wales, and beyond.
And the inevitable consequence of that would be that the price would rocket.
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Comments for: "Leader - Give our farmers a fair deal"
Colin.Dodd.
Well, if they do take action, you can hardly blame them.
Muller are just profiteering, and if they are allowed to get away with it, it will be a disaster.
English dairy farming will vanish, and the consumer will be paying sky high prices for imported milk, the quality of which would be an unknown.
Consumers must either support dairy farming now, or pay for it later at the till.
Port Hill Boy
"This is tough talk from a body of men and women who are law-abiding and work all the hours God gives, often for little reward "
What emotive clap trap. What's law-abiding (and not all of them are - tax evasion, using red diesel in cars, animal cruelty are all cases in recent times involving farmers ) got to do with market forces and good business by the dairies?
The Original Jake
So in PHB's world it's okay for the entire milk processing industry to screw over all the producers because he once heard a rumour down the pub that a friend of a friend of a friend heard from somebody else that Farmer Giles was allegedly spotted topping up his tank with a dash of red?
Port Hill Boy
Glad you're not on my debating team because you can't follow an argument!
It was the original comment that made the "law abiding" comment. It's not only untrue it's totally irrelevant. It's like saying that if somebody doesn't break the law they should have special economic treatment!