The Victorian Labor Government is busy again rushing through bills.
The Agriculture Legislation Amendment Bill 2022, introduced to Parliament on 5 April 2022, has already had its second reading moved (a day after the first reading) and debate resumed on 3 May 2022. It looks as though Labor is looking to push this bill through and make it law very quickly heralding significant changes to the current agricultural/farming legislative framework.
Being 183 pages long, few have had neither the time nor ability to understand the serious implications of the numerous amendments, including, we believe, those MPs expected to vote on this.
Labor MPs will most likely toe the party line and each vote to pass the bill in both the Senate and House of Representatives. For those MPs who wish to think instead of following and vote critically, the pages ahead will provide background on the great risk this bill poses to our farmers, our soil and our food security.
Should this bill become law, it will:
There are many facets of the Agriculture Legislation Amendment Bill 2022, which are of concern. In particular the area of increasing government and governmental agency power over farmers – for example, new powers granted to ‘authorised officers’ who in exercising their function risk violating farmers’ personal, property and privacy rights.
Surprise visits from ‘authorised officers’ who do not even have to reveal their identity, who can take away their materials, destroy their crops and administer unreasonably large fines could become a reality for Australian farmers if this bill passes. Farmers in this country already have high rates of suicide, with one death every 10 days. Do they really need to work in a more aggressive, regulatory landscape, which potentially jeopardises their physical and mental wellbeing?
The general public has been feeling feels disregarded and uncared for. And this has been the general sentiment for a few years now. Laws that give the government the ability to implement unusual surveillance and control were passed without the general public being aware this was taking place. It wasn’t long ago that legislation was also passed that limited the freedom of media. Are we about to allow the passing of this bill that would seek to destroy the backbone of this country, our farmers, to happen? What is the rationale behind the Labor party introducing this bill before Parliament in the first place when it places the needs of farmers well behind those of the agrochemical industry?
Truth be told, Australian farmers are not having their needs met. Their crops are suffering due to the cumulative effects of soil erosion, droughts, fires and floods we have experienced for decades. Whilst farmers are unable to change the impact of changing weather on their crops, the issue of soil erosion is now one which they have the power to deal with. Farmers are now increasingly aware that the primary cause of soil erosion is paradoxically from the very chemicals which were meant to make food grow. Over time, these chemicals are killing off the essential ingredients for growth – soil biodiversity and soil immunity.
Soils are amongst the most complex ecosystems on Earth, containing nearly a quarter of the planet’s biodiversity. Without healthy soil, nutritious food cannot grow. Unhealthy soil leads to weak and nutritionally deficient plants, and the farmer gets caught up in the vicious cycle of using pesticides and chemicals to defend against disease and insects, whilst making their soil sicker. This leads to soil abundant in pesticides, which in turn grows food that is potentially contaminated by pesticides and nutritionally deficient.
It was only recently discovered the extent to which pesticides harm the organisms critical to maintaining healthy soils. A 2021 article in Scientific American entitled ‘Pesticides Are Killing the Organisms That Keep Our Soils Healthy” refers to the most comprehensive 2021 peer review study ever conducted on how pesticides affect soil health published in Frontiers in Environmental Science.
As the United States Department of Agriculture or Farm Service Agency, our Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority (APVMA) have not considered the harms of these pesticides on our soil in the Australian safety reviews. Here in Australia, we have approved several hundred pesticides without any regard to how these chemicals can harm our soil and what makes it ‘alive’, the soil microbiome. The use of these pesticides is directly contributing to our food insecurity by killing or eroding our soil.
In short, the agrochemical approach to farming puts all Australians in a vulnerable position.
“The APVMA is a corporate Commonwealth entity company that was established in 1993 as an independent statutory authority responsible for assessing and registering pesticides and veterinary medicines proposed for supply in Australia…”
This is not a reflection of reality. There is evidence that the so-called independence of regulatory decisions made by the APVMA has been compromised by political donations to Labor and the Coalition. For example, in the 2017-18 financial year alone, Bayer donated $40,600 to Labor and $42,540 to the Coalition, with the Australian arm of the international body CropLife donating $34,271 to Labor and $22,300 to the Coalition. CropLife is a highly influential international trade association and lobbyist group for the agrochemical industry, and it so happens that the Managing Director of Bayer Australia, is the Vice President of their board.
The APVMA was also the subject of a Senate Inquiry in 2018. The Greens Dissenting Report issued in response to the Senate Inquiry further questioned the independence of the APVMA. We cite, “…There were genuine concerns voiced in the inquiry about the independence of the decisions of the APVMA and the Ministers who influence them. Multiple witnesses pointed to the relationship between political parties and the agricultural chemical sector, singling out the role of both corporate donations to political parties and the influence of lobbyists with high-level connections to political elites.” https://apvma.gov.au/sites/default/files/publication/95311-apvma_fraud_control_policy_and_plan_2021-23.pdf
In 2018 Australia’s peak cancer body called for an independent review of the world’s most popular weedkiller, ‘Roundup’ whose active ingredient glyphosate, has been linked to Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. Watch the ABC program Four Corners’ expose on the use of Glyphosate in Australia, and its effect on farmers who had developed the disease, the ‘Monsanto Papers’, here.
Study after study has shown that glyphosate-based herbicides (GBHs) are associated with an increased risk of Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma (for example, a study published in the journal Mutation Research). Even Bayer (which has purchased Monsanto) last year agreed to spend more than $10 billion USD to settle almost 100,000 lawsuits alleging that Roundup caused cancer.
Professor Lin Fritschi is a cancer epidemiologist with a particular interest in occupational causes of cancer says, “If an industry pays for a service, they are presuming they will get a service, and it is possible the government agency sees themselves as a service industry instead of seeing themselves as a protection for the Australian people.”
Most disturbingly, the 4 Corners Program states, “In 2014 CropLife claimed credit when federal parliament removed the requirement for chemicals like glyphosate to be regularly re-approved. In its annual report, CropLife boasted of what was a momentous achievement. CropLife’s vigorously and targeted advocacy campaign resulted in the passage of this bill“.
The Greens Dissenting Report also states;
1.10 The irony is that a mandatory scheme for re-approval and re-registration of registered products was introduced in the Agricultural and Veterinary Chemicals Legislation Amendment Act 2013, but this was repealed before coming into effect by the Coalition Government with the support of the Labor Opposition in 2014.
1.11 The need for such a system is overwhelming. As identified by Ms Joanna Immig from the National Toxics Network, many chemicals currently approved and in use in Australia have not been reviewed since the Agricultural and Veterinary Chemicals Act 1994 began. Even more concerning, there are products that have been under continuous review for decades, including numerous chemicals that are already banned in many overseas constituencies.
Glyphosate is now restricted or banned in 22 countries and growing. Why is it still an integral part of our Australian farms and finding its way into the Australia diet? It is being applied to crops in low lying areas, and the effects of the use of this agrochemical, amongst others (such as Clothianidin) are far-reaching and felt as far north as the Great Barrier Reef which is slowly being poisoned by soil runoff containing these herbicides and long-acting insecticides.
How can we trust the AVPMA, when it is in bed with the lobby group, Croplife and is contributing to illness and the destruction of our land?
The Greens Dissenting Report also states;
1.10 The irony is that a mandatory scheme for re-approval and re-registration of registered products was introduced in the Agricultural and Veterinary Chemicals Legislation Amendment Act 2013, but this was repealed before coming into effect by the Coalition Government with the support of the Labor Opposition in 2014.
1.11 The need for such a system is overwhelming. As identified by Ms Joanna Immig from the National Toxics Network, many chemicals currently approved and in use in Australia have not been reviewed since the Agricultural and Veterinary Chemicals Act 1994 began. Even more concerning, there are products that have been under continuous review for decades, including numerous chemicals that are already banned in many overseas constituencies.
Such a Bill allegedly allows Clothianidin and Glyphosate in the form of Roundup to be applied to crops in low lying areas which drain into The Great Barrier Reef. In turn, the poisoning of The Great Barrier Reef is taking place due to the impact of herbicides and long-acting insecticides.
There are hundreds of chemicals that need to be reviewed in light of the harm they may cause to our soils and our farmed foods.
These are just some examples of why we need to question the trustworthiness of the AVPMA, highly intertwined and influenced by lobbyist CropLife.
Are there too many red flags about where their vested interest is? In the section ahead, you will understand how the Bill may even be a response to the current threats to those interests.
No, it is not all bad news!
There is a new approach to farming sweeping the landscape, that is rebuilding hope, confidence and the pathway to a soil and food secure future.
Regenerative Agriculture is a system of farming practices that increase biodiversity, enrich the soil, increase yield, improve watersheds and capture carbon in the soil, building resilience to climate instability. It seeks to mimic nature, so benefiting from her wisdom. Grazing animals in their natural setting gradually improve and revitalise the soil, water, vegetation, biodiversity and animal systems.
Instead of chemical pesticides and fertilisers pushing the limits of production, regenerative agriculture progressively improves the ecosystem in which that food is grown.
With the implementation of Regenerative Agriculture and chemical-free organic inputs, farmers can effectively reverse soil erosion, build soil health, and capture and store carbon, while providing farmers and the consumer with the highly nutritious foods we need for health. There is exponential growth in Australia in the sharing of this method.
Our farmers could be in control of their own destiny. If you want to know more, the Netflix documentary Kiss the Ground provides a glimpse of a much better future.
The coming of Regenerative Agriculture and the inevitable shift to organic chemical-free soil health-focused farming methods heralds a massive financial threat to Agro-chemical interests.
The Bill sitting in Parliament at this moment is an unusual bill in how it seeks to:
None of these new ‘powers’ will help our farmers’ mental health, their soil health, crop yields, or the nutritional needs of our nation.
Could this bill undermine the regenerative organic approach to chemical-free farming?
Farmers first and foremost need the freedom to control their own destiny. Our farmers need a government that supports them in best practice farming.
We are blessed with abundant land, so why would we not encourage the wise use of her?
A future vision based on innovation and healing the soil will also relieve the enormous pressure on their personal, financial and social wellbeing.
We could be world leaders in:
This is where the future food security of our country and the financial success of Australian farming lies.
The bill sitting in Parliament at this moment is an unusual one in how it seeks to:
1. Implement a highly regulated surveillance approach to agriculture.
2. Implement an ‘AVPMA approved only’ approach to what farmers and urban farmers may use on their crops.
3. Support increased powers of regulation over the old and failing systems of expensive agrochemical inputs into farms.
4. Neglects privacy and/or trespassing protections.
5. Provide chemical suppliers with the ability to refuse financial mediation that bankrupts farmers.
None of these new ‘powers’ will help our farmers, they will only destroy their mental health, the health of their, their crop yields, and the nutritional needs of our nation.
This bill could undermine the regenerative organic approach to chemical-free farming.
WHAT DO OUR FARMERS NEED?
Farmers first and foremost need the freedom to control their own destiny. Our farmers need a government that supports them in best practice farming.
We are blessed with abundant land, so why would we not encourage the wise use of her?
A future vision based on innovation and healing the soil will relieve the enormous personal and financial pressures placed on our farmers.
We could be world leaders in:
This is where the future food security of our country and the financial success in Australian farming lies.
DEEP DIVE INTO THE BILL
Here are some of the sections to consider;
1- The purpose of the act is to amend the Agricultural and Veterinary Chemicals (Control of Use) Act 1992 in relation to inspection and enforcement;
Under section 1 (iv)- to make other miscellaneous and consequential amendments.
2- Division 1—Inspection and enforcement powers
In section 4(1) of the Agricultural and Veterinary Chemicals (Control of Use), Act 1992 insert the following definitions-
“inspect, in relation to a power to inspect, includes search; place includes;
(A) ANY LAND; AND
(B) ANY TEMPORARY BUILDING OR STRUCTURE;
What could this mean?
54 – Power to enter and inspect
(1) An authorised officer may at any reasonable time enter and inspect any place, other than a place occupied as a residence, and inspect anything found at that place if the authorised officer reasonably suspects that-
(a) any fertiliser or stock food has been, is being or may be manufactured at the place; or
(b) any chemical product, fertiliser or stock food has been, is being or may be sold, kept, stored or prepared for use at the place; or
(c) there is any equipment at the place that has been, is being or may be used in connection with the use or manufacture of a chemical product, fertiliser or stock food; or
(d) there is an aircraft at the place that has been, is being or may be used for aerial spraying; or
(e) agricultural spraying has been, is being or may be carried on at the place; or
(f) there are any contaminated stock or agricultural produce, or plants from which contaminated agricultural produce is likely to be derived, at the place; or
(g) the place has been contaminated by the use of an agricultural chemical product; or
(h) the place is occupied or apparently occupied by a person who holds, or whom the authorised officer reasonably suspects is required to hold, a licence, certificate or permit under this Act, the regulations or an Order under this Act.
(2) An authorised officer may at any reasonable time enter any place, other than a place occupied as a residence if the authorised officer reasonably believes that it is necessary to do so in order to access another place that may be entered under subsection (1).
(3) In exercising any powers under this section, an authorized officer must—
(a) cause as little inconvenience as possible; and
(b) not remain at the place any longer than is reasonably necessary.
What could this mean?
54AC- Announcement on entry
2) If the occupier, apparent occupier, driver or person in charge is not present when an authorised officer exercises a power of entry under this Division, the authorised officer must, on leaving the place, vehicle, vessel or aircraft, leave a notice setting out-
What could this mean?
54AD- Persons assisting authorised officer
(1) An authorised officer may request the assistance of any person for the purpose of entry and inspection of a place, vehicle, vessel or aircraft and the taking of any other action under this Division.
What could this mean?
54AH- Taking photographs and making recordings, sketches or drawings
An authorised officer may at any reasonable time take photographs, make any audio, visual or audiovisual recordings or make any sketches or drawings.
What could this mean?
(c) Remove the document for as long as is reasonably necessary to make copies or take extracts.
What could this mean?
In section 57(3) of the Agricultural and Veterinary Chemicals (Control of Use) Act 1992, after “produce” insert “in a court of competent jurisdiction as a debt”.
20 Destruction notice
(1) Insert the following heading to section 58 of the Agricultural and Veterinary Chemicals (Control of Use) Act 1992- “Notice to destroy or otherwise deal with chemical products and agricultural produce”.
What could this mean?
After section 19(9) of the Agricultural and Veterinary Chemicals (Control of Use), Act 1992 insert—
(10) If there is an approved label for a chemical product at the time of use, a reference in this section to the label is a reference to the approved label for the chemical product at that time (whether or not the approved label is marked on or attached to the package of the chemical product), unless—
(a) the chemical product is used in accordance with written instructions issued by a veterinary practitioner in the course of veterinary practice; or
(b) the chemical product is a prescribed chemical product or is used in prescribed circumstances or both.
What could this mean?
Division 3—Administrative arrangements
27 Definitions
(1) In section 4(1) of the Agricultural and Veterinary Chemicals (Control of Use) Act 1992—
What could this mean?
An authorised officer may, at any time without a warrant, search any parcel, basket, bag, box or receptacle for anything which the authorised officer reasonably believes has been, is being, or is likely to be, used in the importing, keeping, trading or releasing of pest animals or noxious weeds in contravention of this Act, and may do any one or more of the following-
A person is not excused from producing a document or record or answering a question if required to do so under this Part on the ground that the production of the document or record or the response to the question would tend to incriminate the person or make the person liable to a penalty.
(3) Despite subsection (1), if, before producing a document or record or answering a question required under this Part a natural person claims that the production of the document or record or the response to the question would tend to incriminate the person or make the person liable to a penalty, the document or record or response is not admissible in evidence against the person in any criminal or civil proceeding, or in any proceeding for the imposition of a penalty other than in a proceeding for an offence under section 84(e).
What could this mean?
56 application for authority to cultivate and process low-THC cannabis
(1) For section 62(1) of the Drugs, Poisons and Controlled Substances Act 1981 substitute—
58 New section 63A inserted After section 63 of the Drugs, Poisons and Controlled Substances Act 1981 insert-
63A when Secretary must refuse to issue authority
If the Secretary is notified under section 63(3)(c) that the Chief Commissioner of Police opposes the issuing of the authority, the Secretary must not issue the authority.”
The entire section through to section 80 sets a very concerning precedent that allows the Chief Police commissioner the power to overrule the secretary, whilst allowing the Chief Police Commissioner the ability to suppress the decision by way of “protected information”.
Often, it’s just a phrase we use to signify what we’ll say next should be taken more literally than the “how are yous” we answer with a “great, how ‘bout you.” Our conversations happen in shades of truth rather than pure white light and we’re all aware that truth is often subjective so what “Let’s be Honest,” usually means is I’d like you to listen carefully to what I’m about to say because I want you to understand that while I may not necessarily like what I have to say I need to say it.
So, let’s be honest, there is very little integrity in politics today it’s an arena renowned for casting versions of facts before us from which we must discern a truth. We’ve grown disillusioned and disgusted with it and we’ve turned it off. That’s what they want. We know we should care but then need to take a shower to wash off the torrent of bulldust it exposes us to when we do. I’ve always wondered about the people that stand in front of the public saying things they clearly know are untrue to serve a hidden agenda from masters we’ll never know, and we see very clearly now that most of our “leaders” are sycophants at best or willing puppets at worst.
I joined Peter Harris a few months ago because more than anything in the time I spent travelling around WA and speaking with him I perceived a level of integrity that I knew would infuse any political party he led or was a part of. Peter agreed to join two alliances; Cadco, and Tick Freedom. Each is an initiative signifying to voters the intention to put aside various other differences so that they would have confidence that their votes and preferences would be effective in ensuring that core principles would be represented. All other parties were invited to join.
The Australian Federation Party has respected both of those agreements in spirit and deed. Cadco was signed first and hence our partners will occupy those positions on our printed HTVs. Tick Freedom parties sit next to on our preference tickets. Thus;
1. Our HTVs and all written communications will respect those agreements.
2. We encourage everyone to make their own choices exactly as they see fit; but,
a. We MUST put the majors last and end the two-party duopoly that is destroying our nation.
3. We also encourage you to use the https://majorslast.com/how-to-vote-cards system too.
At this stage of the election process, a great deal of discussion is held. We were offered better strategic deals than those based on principles we agreed to in our alliances; based purely on the mathematical theories that might influence such things based upon polls. We had choices to make.
The Australian Federation Party formed and now exists to represent the Australian People as their government. We are serious about this. We are an emerging party made up of ordinary people, which is to say unaccustomed to backroom deals and “politics” in the pejorative sense. We entered into agreements with others through Cadco and Tick Freedom.
And we intend to honour them, regardless of the choices that others have made in pursuit of some other purpose. We hope that those who have taken that view might reconsider it in the context that what is most important in any effort to rebuild representative democracy in our country relies first on, and foremost, on restoring public confidence in the idea that anyone seeking to be their government will keep their promises and honour their commitments.