Reef bill snub shows Government’s true colours (It’s green)

The
State Government’s refusal to adequately consult about its proposed reef
protection legislation demonstrates its contempt for the views of primary
producers and people living in regional Queensland, and suggests the
Government’s agenda has been hijacked by urban-dwelling Greens.

The “sham” public review –
allowing just two weeks for written submissions after the surprise introduction
of the bill into Parliament on 27 February – does not even include any
consultation sessions in the affected regions as originally promised.

The only consultation session
planned is in Brisbane, making it virtually impossible for farmers and regional
Queenslanders to have their views considered.

AgForce
CEO Michael Guerin said the pretend consultation showed the Government’s true
colours – that they don’t think farmers are worth talking to despite the fact
that the burden of this legislation will fall on them.

“It also highlights the
Government’s reluctance to expose the shaky science and cherry-picked facts on
which they have based their legislation to public scrutiny,” Mr Guerin
said.

The proposed regulations would
saddle all cattle, sheep, grain, fruit and vegetable, and cane farmers in the
six reef catchments – an area that covers about a third of the State and
extends as far as 300 kilometres from the coast – with restrictive practices
that will severely hamper their operations and involve onerous record-keeping
and reporting.

“It is absolutely criminal that
the Government believes it can introduce these laws without even talking to the
very people and communities that it will so badly effect,” Mr Guerin said.

“Such arrogance is breathtaking.
What happened to democracy? I thought they were supposed to be governing for
every Queenslander, not just those living in the south-east corner.”

Mr Guerin said the most frustrating
thing was that farmers had real-world information and advice that would lead to
a more effective, practical and realistic solution to protect the reef at a
lower-cost – but no-one wanted to listen.

“The saddest irony is that
farmers love the reef and want to do their part to preserve it, but are being
prevented from doing so by hard-nosed environmentalists, whose impractical,
ideologically motivated demands will actually do more harm than good,” he
said.

“In their current form, the
proposed laws impose on farmers unnecessary, expensive red tape and regulation that
won’t provide any benefit to water quality or the Reef’s long-term well-being.

“This is a significant burden
for farmers, many who are still recovering from floods or who are still in
drought.”

Mr
Guerin said the fact that primary producers weren’t even aware of the proposed
legislation until AgForce informed them indicated “very poor communication
by the Government and a clear lack of consultation”

Media
Contacts David Vogler

/Public Release. View in full here.