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Foot
& Mouth Crisis
With
farming already on its knees and the rural economy under great
strain, it did not seem possible that matters could get worse.
They did. The plague of foot-and-mouth disease has reached directly
and indirectly into every corner of our land. At the time of
writing, there have been no direct outbreaks in South Wiltshire.
However, because of the very strict rules on contacts with quarantined
or affected areas, there has been substantial slaughtering of
sheep on welfare grounds.
Employment in tourism has been very hard hit. It has not just
been the predictable impact on hotels, pubs and bed and breakfast.
This has extended to less likely economic activity such as small
forestry businesses, game dealing, deer stalking, trout fishing,
boating and other sporting events. English Heritage closed Stonehenge,
Old Wardour Castle and Old Sarum Castle - but then proposed
to re-open Stonehenge at the end of March. This proposal was
extremely unpopular with local farmers - there are 4,000 head
of cattle and sheep within a two-mile radius of the stones.
I intervened with the Chief Executive of English Heritage and
agreed there would be no re-opening without a letter from the
Government Chief Vet guaranteeing there would be no increased
risk to local livestock.
I remain optimistic for Britain's farming community because
agriculturalists always take the long view - and in the long
run no economic activity is as basic as the production of food.
Over the next few months the face of agriculture may change
beyond measure and it is just not possible to predict the outcome.
The implications for the whole rural economy could be profound.
In a departure from the normal evolutionary progress of the
rural economy we are living through a cataclysmic change which
may have a lasting impact on farming not just in the United
Kingdom but through Europe and right across the world.
We all want our local (and national) economy to get back to
'business as usual' as quickly as possible. Tourist-related
businesses and services are being hit hard. Banks and other
financial institutions must be sympathetic. The Government has
proposed some business tax reliefs - and the Conservatives would
like to see a small business emergency loan scheme brought in.
What really must come first is the eradication of foot-and-mouth
disease in our livestock.
We can all help in practical ways. As well as keeping off the
countryside, we can
spread the word that in South Wiltshire, as in the rest of the
UK, there are plenty of holiday and tourist attractions open
for business - and not located in restricted countryside. Recently
I gave an interview to ABC News, networked across North America,
in which I explained why Stonehenge is closed but asked people
to come and see what else we have to offer, including Salisbury
Cathedral, theatres, shopping, amazing museums and houses, spectacular
landscapes and coastlines - and the most welcoming hotels, pubs
and B&Bs in the world!
As the green shoots of Spring arrive, so will new confidence
in the future.
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