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The Canowindra Phoenix

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Home » Step Towards Fairness For Farmers And Families

Step Towards Fairness For Farmers And Families

3 July, 2024 By Canowindra Phoenix Editor

A mandatory Food and Grocery Code of Conduct will be a step towards fairness for farmers and families, NSW Farmers says, but more work needs to be done.

The final report pf the Food and Grocery Code of Conduct Independent Review by Dr Craig Emerson was published on Monday, with all 11 recommendations being agreed to by the Federal Government.

But while making the code mandatory, sig­nificantly increasing penalties for breaches, and providing better support for farmers in disputes with the supermarkets were posi­tive steps, NSW Farmers Horticulture Com­mittee chair Jo Brighenti-Barnard said there was still a long way to go in solving Austral­ia’s supermarket problem.

“We welcome this report which confirms what we’ve been saying all along – there needs to be meaningful competition reform so Australian farmers and families can get a fair go at the checkout,” Ms Brighenti-Bar­nard said.

“For too long farmers have been afraid to speak out because of the sheer might of these two big supermarkets, so options for independent mediators and arbitrators who can set enforceable actions is a good step, but growers need to be able to use them without fear of retribution.

“It will be critical for farmers to have an ac­tive role in drafting this mandatory code so it is practical and fit for purpose.”

Among the findings in the report were enormous penalties for breaches of the code – something NSW Farmers had been seeking – but Ms Brighenti-Barnard said courts rarely imposed the maximum penalty.

“A mandatory code with significant penal­ties is something we’ve been seeking, and we welcome this, but they need to be a real deterrent, not just a cost of doing business,” she said.

“As long as farmers are selling their fresh food for a few cents a kilo and supermar­kets are charging families a few dollars a kilo, we’ll all continue to feel the pain,” Ms Brighenti-Barnard said.

Filed Under: Articles, General Interest, Rural Round Up, Special Interests

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