A spokesperson for the ACA said its members would remain closed until the Department came forward with an appropriate package. \ Ramona Farrelly
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Knackery operators have closed their gates to farmers as their dispute with the Department of Agriculture intensifies. Farmers have been caught in the crossfire, with animals going uncollected and charges rising.
The Department announced an amended Fallen Animal Scheme, which imposed maximum collection fees that knackeries can charge farmers. The revised scheme was rejected by the Animal Collectors Association (ACA), which said a proper support package was needed. A lack of competition in the rendering sector, combined with a collapse in hide prices, has put pressure on the trade. This is making it financially unviable, knackeries say.
A spokesperson for the ACA said its member firms will remain closed until the Department comes forward with an appropriate package.
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The IFA, ICSA and ICMSA have all called for the Department to revisit the scheme urgently.
IFA animal health chair Pat Farrell said the scheme failed to reduce the cost of disposal for farmers and did not guarantee a collection service.
The closure during peak calving and lambing season, combined with bad weather, will heap pressure on farmers.
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Knackery operators have closed their gates to farmers as their dispute with the Department of Agriculture intensifies. Farmers have been caught in the crossfire, with animals going uncollected and charges rising.
The Department announced an amended Fallen Animal Scheme, which imposed maximum collection fees that knackeries can charge farmers. The revised scheme was rejected by the Animal Collectors Association (ACA), which said a proper support package was needed. A lack of competition in the rendering sector, combined with a collapse in hide prices, has put pressure on the trade. This is making it financially unviable, knackeries say.
A spokesperson for the ACA said its member firms will remain closed until the Department comes forward with an appropriate package.
The IFA, ICSA and ICMSA have all called for the Department to revisit the scheme urgently.
IFA animal health chair Pat Farrell said the scheme failed to reduce the cost of disposal for farmers and did not guarantee a collection service.
The closure during peak calving and lambing season, combined with bad weather, will heap pressure on farmers.
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