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Tipperary Milk Suppliers Get October Price Lift

Milk prices in Tipperary strengthen with Co-ops increasing prices to suppliers for both their September and October deliveries.

Following a board meeting on Friday last, Tipperary Co-OpMilk have confirmed that they will pay 24.5 cents per litre VAT inclusive, from October, representing an increase of 2.9 cents per litre.

Outside the meeting more than 150 of the Co-Op’s suppliers protested, calling on the board to retrospectively pay a top-up on September supplies and to increase October returns.

The Arrabawn Group in Nenagh are also to raise its milk price for the month. After a board meeting on Monday the Co-op confirmed that it is to pay 24.83cents per litre VAT inclusive, for all October supplies.

Centenary Thurles has also raised its October price and will pay 22.81cents per litre VAT exclusive. This represents an increase of 2cents per litre on the September price.

Reacting to the market trends, the EU Dairy Management Committee has said that 51,000 tons of butter and 65,000 tons of skimmed milk powder will be released from intervention for various charity schemes.

Huge Turnout for Farmers Protest In Thurles

Farm Protest The normal Thurles traffic was seriously impeded today following the huge turnout by IFA members and their tractors, protesting to raise awareness of the problem of falling farm incomes.

The IFA say that farm incomes have fallen 25% alone this year with bad weather, falling commodity prices and Government cuts being the main reasons given for the income drop. IFA President Padraig Walshe said the protest came about as part of the IFA’s equity and fairness campaign for farmers around the country and he urged all government ministers to defend and support the farming sector through this current crisis.

IFA Farm Business Committee, Chairperson James Kane said that farmers were also extremely angry and outraged at the Government’s plans to put an 80% tax on gains from disposal of rezoned land.
He stated:-

“Farmers see this proposal as an attack on the right to free sale of private property. Indeed many farmers are expressing the view that it is a first step in undermining private property ownership. A tax rate of 80% does not apply anywhere else in the tax system. It is an extreme over-reaction to the recent property price bubble, and is seen as a sop to the Greens, while the main victims will be farmers. There is an importance distinction to be made between farmers who own land in the long-term, as opposed to property speculators who buy agricultural land for speculative gain. The Government can extricate itself from the worst extremes of the 80% CGT, and IFA has put forward reasonable and equitable proposals. Land acquired through the CPO system, and non-rezoned land sold at prices above agricultural prices should not be subject to the higher rate of CGT.”

Also today, Fine Gael Deputy Noel Coonan has strongly reiterating his party’s call for the slurry spreading deadline to be extended.

The Fine Gael TD said North Tipperary farmers need a break after a year earmarked by Government cutbacks, crippling milk and beef prices.

“Farming cannot always operate within certain calendar deadlines. At times these restrictions need to be extended and this Government must be more flexible and accommodating to farmers’ needs and allow slurry spreading past 15th October. Coming from a farming background, I can empathise with other farmers who have ploughed through a very rainy summer which made it very hard to spread all their slurry before this Thursday. Almost every year the slurry spreading deadline is pushed forward so why doesn’t the Government learn from this and take the advice of farmers who know best. Would it make a huge difference to the Government if they extended the deadline by even four weeks? Farming is now dictated by bureaucracy. It’s very tough for farmers to structure their work around numerous time restrictions because their jobs are hugely influenced by the weather which cannot be regulated. I am committed to streamlining the amount of paperwork and the inspection systems currently in place,  to provide farmers with freedom to farm.”

ICSA president Malcolm Thompson, who recently welcomed the collapse of the World Trade Talks, has criticised the EU for imposing “farming by dates” and Deputy Coonan commented that the Minister for Agriculture Brendan Smith TD must review regulations imposed on farmers to allow them to maximise on the use of their own land.

Major Disruption to Thurles With IFA Protest

tipp-farmingThurles town traffic is expected to be seriously delayed by next Monday’s intended IFA nationwide protest.

The Thurles protest will assemble on Racecourse Road and turn right at the Tipperary Institute Roundabout, crossing over the railway bridge on the Nenagh Road, progressing left onto Cuchulainn Road and turning right into O’Donovan Rossa St, before entering Liberty Square.

The protest will continue over the Suir Bridge into Cathedral Street, before turning right at the Dublin road roundabout and back again through the Square, exiting via Friar Street.

The protest convoy will then cross over the railway bridge beyond Bowe’s corner, straight to the next roundabout opposite Lidl Supermarket and will turn right towards the back of Semple Stadium, before dispersing.

Similar disruptions are expected in Clonmel Co. Tipperary from 11.30am and both protests are expected to delay normal traffic movement for up to one hour.

This protest will involve at least twenty eight tractorcades right across the country to further highlight Government cuts and their continued effects on farm families and the rural economy.

Thurles Chamber Seeks Your Help

As part of their Shop Local campaign Thurles Chamber of Commerce is seeking your help in updating their current data base in respect of all food producers and manufactures operating in Co.Tipperary.

It should be noted that the offices of Thurles Chamber is usually the first port of call by buyers such as restaurants and supermarkets, all anxious to source names of local high quality suppliers.

Presently the Chamber is compiling a data base listing businesses providing quality food items such as preserves, fresh vegetables and all meat products.

Mr P.J. Shanahan speaking on behalf  of Thurles Chamber to www.thurles.info stated:

Fresh Farm Produce from the Golden Vale

Fresh Farm Produce from the Golden Vale

“While the Chamber are aware of many high quality producers and manufacturers in Co.Tipperary, there were others who had recently entered the market place, but whom as yet had not introduced themselves to Thurles Chamber. In recessionary times it is most important that all manufacturers and producers in Tipperary now get an equal opportunity to expose their product to a demanding wholesale / retail market, all anxious to purchase high quality fresh produce”.

Mr. Shanahan is now requesting that all growers and manufactures of quality preserves, vegetables, fruit and meat products, contact the Thurles Chamber office, supplying details of their products.

All information should to be send marked for the attention of Mr. P.J. Shanahan to the following address:  Thurles Chamber Office, Slievenamon Road, Thurles, Co.Tipperary.

Contact information can also be sent by e-mail to info@thurleschamber.ie.

If you wish to pass your information on via this website please click here and your information will be receipted and forwarded immediately to the Thurles Chamber Office.

Note: Should you require further information please contact Thurles Chamber at Tel No: 0504-23407

Information supplied by product wholesalers should contain information under the following headings:-

  1. Name and Address.
  2. Contact Information.
  3. Full Details of Products Supplied. (Together with copies of any brochures, business cards and current advertising material available.)

Please also state, where applicable,  if your product is organically produced or no.

This section of the Chamber database, when completed shortly, will benefit not only local food producers but also local restaurants, hotels, shops and supermarkets, all presently anxious to obtain fresh top quality traceable produce.

Benifits Of Shopping Local In Thurles

Members of Thurles Chamber

Members of Thurles Chamber

Why We Should Shop Locally

Thurles Chamber launched their ‘Shop Local Campaign’ in recent weeks and erected signs on the main approach roads into the town to focus attention on the importance of shopping local. We all enjoy the fun and ease of shopping in Thurles but have we as consumers really stopped to think about the overall benefits to our town.

Protecting our local character and our reasonable current prosperity, while also retaining a supportive community.

Thurles is distinct and unlike any other town in the world. By choosing to support locally owned businesses, we immediately help maintain the town’s huge diversity and its very distinctive flavour. Many town centres in Ireland, now are beginning to look the same, with franchises and multi-nationals springing up. Independent shops on the other hand create a distinctive shopping experiences and stock new and different products. Most people can get to their local shops easily and this is especially important for our elderly, vulnerable and young people and those without any form of transport.

Local stores help to sustain vibrant, compact, walkable town centres which in turn are essential to reducing urban sprawl, unnecessary transport use, wild life habitat loss, and air and water pollution. Local stores in our town centres require comparatively little infrastructure and make more efficient use of public services relative to shopping malls. Shopping local protect and secure services with private, voluntary and public sector services clustering around our many shops. The loss of our main high street often corresponds to a reduction in these services, so as shops begin to disappear, so regretably also do the our hairdressers, our vets, our dentists, our doctors etc.

People don’t like losing shops and services in villages and small towns, but do not always equate this to how they spend their disposable incomes. Shops will only survive if customers spend locally, so if you want a vibrant town centre, where people can socialise as well as shop, businesses must also start thinking seriously about how to encourage people to shop locally. Local businesses are owned by people who live in our community, who are less likely to leave, and who are more invested in the community’s welfare and future prosperity. Keeping our shops open by buying locally helps the Thurles environs as a whole.

Locally owned businesses also build strong neighbourhoods by sustaining communities, linking neighbours, and by contributing more to Thurles causes. Local ownership means that important decisions are being made locally by people who live in the Thurles community and who themselves will feel the immediate impacts of their own decisions. Going local does not mean cutting off the outside world. It means nurturing locally owned businesses which use local resources sustainably. These businesses employ local workers at decent wages who serve, primarily, local consumers. It means becoming more self-sufficient and less dependant on foreign imports. Control will automatically now move from the boardrooms of distant and often greedy corporations and back into our own community where it must surely and indeed rightly belong.

Independent shops keep traditional Thurles products alive. They should respond more quickly to the needs of  Thurles customers, stocking products to meet the changing populations need. They can also be more innovative, let us never forget, for example, that organic products were first developed not by the multinationals or franchises of this world, but by local individual and independent sole traders. Nationally, entrepreneurship fuels our economic innovation and prosperity, and serves as a key means for families to move out of the sphere of low-wage jobs.

Euros Spent Locally Have Three Times More Impact On Our Community

Your euro spent in locally owned businesses has three times the impact on your community as a Euro spent in multi-national chains. When shopping locally, you simultaneously create jobs, fund more town services through taxes, invest in neighbourhood improvement and promote community development. As stated, shops in our  town’s centre create local employment and self-employment. These people in turn spend in our local economy. Evidence shows that for every £10 spent in an independent shop, £25 is generated for the local economy compared to only £14 spent in multinationals. Sole traders and independent stores are proportionally more generous in their support for local charities, schools and other community events. So supporting local shops means a financial reward both for you and our community.

Out of town shops have done an excellent job of convincing us all, that sole traders are expensive, but the evidence just isn’t there to back this up. If you add together travel, parking costs, fees and valuable time spent, all consumed in transporting larger items home, the overall cost is, in the vast majority of cases, much higher.

We talk a lot about exerting influence with our purchasing power or “voting with our purses”.  It’s a fact that business respond to their customers, but your values and desires are much more influential to your local community business than ever to the franchises and multinationals.

We are all becoming increasingly aware of our CO2 emissions and our environmental impact problems. Local shops, often stock a high percentage of locally sourced goods and products, where long car, train and bus journeys aren’t required, thus helping reduce our carbon footprints. Locally grown produce can be on your table within hours of being harvested. In order to be ripe for you, shipped produce must be picked days before peak ripeness to allow for transit times. Buying local means freshness and by buying from our local farmers, freshness is guaranteed. When you purchase at locally owned businesses rather than nationally owned, more money is kept in the community because locally managed and owned businesses often purchase from other local suppliers, services and farms.  Thomas Jefferson (1743 – 1826) 3rd President of the U S A (1801–1809), and principal author of the Declaration of Independence once stated:

“Cultivators of the earth are the most valuable citizens. They are the most vigorous, the most independent, the most virtuous, and they are tied to their country, and wedded to its liberty and interests by the most lasting bonds”.

A market place like Thurles containing  hundreds of small businesses is the best way to ensure innovation and low prices over the long-term and Thurles has as its hinterland the richest producing farmland in europe.

The unique character of Thurles is defined to a large degree by the businesses that reside here, and this will continue to plays a huge and deciding factor in our overall satisfaction with where we live and the value of our home and property.

So it is in our own interests  to Think Local – Shop Local – and Buy Local.

To quote Derek Edward Trotter (Del Boy) from Only Fools And Horses “You know it makes sence”.