Gong for Waikato farming leader
Waikato farming leader Sam Lewis says he’s surprised and delighted at being made a member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to business and the community in the latest King’s Birthday Honours list.
New Zealand's agriculture sector and associated rural communities will be hit hard if Affco management and the unions don't sort out their differences soon, Labour's Primary Production spokesperson Damien O'Conner says.
Referring to the 1700 meat workers who are off the job due to lock-outs and strike action at eight Affco meat processing sites around the North Island, O'Connor says the two sides needed to get back around the table as soon as possible.
"We all acknowledge that the country needs an efficient industry. However, having workers locked out is not in the best interests of the farming community, especially at a time when the sector is having a productive season.
"Whatever the ins and outs of the dispute, locking out workers rather than engaging in good faith mediation, is not the way to build solid relationships with either the community or the workers.
"Many of the sites involved are in provincial towns which rely on the workers and their families to survive. If people aren't being paid, no one is spending and the whole community suffers.
"The issue needs to be settled for the sake of both local and national economies," Damien O'Connor says.
Fears of a serious early drought in Hawke’s Bay have been allayed – for the moment at least.
There was much theatre in the Beehive before the Government's new Resource Management Act (RMA) reform bills were introduced into Parliament last week.
The government has unveiled yet another move which it claims will unlock the potential of the country’s cities and region.
The government is hailing the news that food and fibre exports are predicted to reach a record $62 billion in the next year.
The final Global Dairy Trade (GDT) auction has delivered bad news for dairy farmers.
One person intimately involved in the new legislation to replace the Resource Management Act (RMA) is the outgoing chief executive of the Ministry for the Environment, James Palmer, who's also worked in local government.