Showing posts with label #Dairy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Dairy. Show all posts

Thursday, 13 February 2020

Dairy Farmers Recall Milk in Contamination Scare

BY DAKOTA TAIT

Leading milk supplier Dairy Farmers have issued an urgent recall on two milk products due to concerns regarding E. coli contamination.

Both the Dairy Farmers 1L Full Cream white milk with a use-by date of the 25th of February and the 3L Full Cream white milk with a use-by date of the 24th of February have been immediately recalled.

Although the impacted products were distributed across NSW throughout supermarket chains Woolworths, Coles and IGA, as well independent outlets and convenience stores, Dairy Farmers' parent company Lion Dairy & Drinks say "there have been no consumer complaints to date".

Anyone with the product is urged to dispose it and contact the Lion Dairy & Drinks consumer inquiries centre at 1800 677 852 to receive a full refund.

Image source: en.wikipedia.org

Tuesday, 13 February 2018

Parliamentary Secretary visits Drought-Ravaged Properties: Maitland, Port Stephens

BY LAUREN FREEMANTLE

The devastating effect of drought on Hunter farms has been sighted first-hand by Parliamentary Secretary, Scot MacDonald.

He visited livestock and dairy farms around Port Stephens and Maitland yesterday, and now plans to share his findings with colleagues in state parliament.

Among the farms visited was Danny Stork's property at Glen Oak, where a dam once 3 metres deep is now nothing more than a muddy puddle.

"There's no question they're under a lot of pressure," Mr MacDonald says, "the pastures are in a very poor condition; many [farmers] are reporting less than half their average annual rainfall- dams are dry and feeders are just about non-existent on the paddocks."

Many parts of the Hunter Valley have recorded single-figure millimetre readings for 2018.

Mr MacDonald says he's relaying the dire situation to government.

"I'm going away and talking to government ministers about what we can do to assist and what the appropriate response is."

He says a collaboration to improve water catchment measures could prove timely.

"I think there's a range of actions we can take; it needs Port Stephens Council to also look at some of their policies around dam cleaning- when dams are empty, it's an opportunity for them to be cleaned out and de-filtered."

Despite an inter-governmental drought agreement signed in 2013 which removed subsidies such as those for fodder transport and left many Hunter farmers calling for reform, Scot MacDonald says there is still a subsidy available for livestock being transported for sale or slaughter.

He says under the current scheme, there's a focus on drought-preparedness and loans for silos and water infrastructure, and is urging affected property owners to attend information workshops later this month.

The workshops will be hosted by Hunter Local Land Services, aiming to arm regional producers with animal health advice from veterinarians and advice on current beef market trends to follow on from seasonal and climate information presented at forums held in October last year.

The Lower Hunter Producer Update will take place at Tocal on February 21, while the Upper Hunter event is being held at Scone on the 22nd.

For more information on the workshops or to RSVP, head to the Hunter Local Land Services Events page.

Dam dry: Danny Stork's Property at Glen Oak. Image: Maitland Mercury