House debates
Monday, 21 May 2007
Trade Practices Amendment (Horticultural Code of Conduct) Bill 2007
First Reading
12:51 pm
Bob Katter (Kennedy, Independent) Share this | Hansard source
After 700 days a code was introduced that specifically excluded the large retail chains. The major element requested that every sale have a bill of sale. That is surely not an unreasonable requirement, Mr Speaker. But that a sales docket should be produced to cover a sale, where it is a sale to a food retailer, is specifically excluded by the government’s code. Why would you specifically exclude a sales docket?
The promise was given to people in the electorate of Kennedy—and let me name them: Joe Moro, Scott Dixon and John Gambino at Mareeba; Noel Hall and Colin Pace at Rollingstone; and Tableland Fruit and Vegetable Growers, and Rural Action and their secretary, Bernie O’Shea. Similar undertakings were given to grower representatives from the New South Wales Farmers Association horticultural committee, in the electorate of the member for Calare. We thank the member for Calare for jointly presenting this bill in the House today. He has my gratitude and the gratitude of my growers for his support on this issue. Along the Murray and in the Riverina the announcement was also received with very great gratitude to the government for making this promise.
If you make a promise and give a commitment and then flagrantly break that promise, you put in the consciousness of people hatred and mistrust which will last for the rest of the time that they vote. That is what has happened here: dreadful damage has been done to the credibility of the government.
The reason for the necessity of a mandatory code of conduct is the phenomenon called the ‘harvest fall’. That means that when harvesting begins, of mangoes, for example, as more and more farmers start to harvest—they do not all come on stream at the same time—the price starts to fall as the huge volume of product comes onto the market. What happens then is that many of the stores of the large retail chains will return product. They buy it one week at $20 a carton. The price slides the next week to $10 a carton and they suddenly decide that the product has blemishes upon it so they return it to the grower. They no longer have to pay $20 a box; they now have to pay only $10 a box. Their superiors at Woolworths or Coles, or whatever the retail chain is, say that these store managers are very good little boys and promote them, but they get promoted over the dead bodies of the farmers. Unfortunately, and sadly, that can be literally true. These days in Victoria, along the Murray, every four days a farmer commits suicide. So, to help overcome this, we simply ask for a sales docket. (Time expired).
Bill read a first time.
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