Feds unveil 10 priorities

Holy Bible

Federated Farmers’ Cambridge and Te Awamutu presented electoral candidates with a gift pack that included the organisation’s priorities for incoming farmers.

Chris Lewis

Waipā dairy farmer Chris Lewis, who chaired the organisation’s candidates meeting in Te Awamutu last week, urged the three Waipā mayoral candidates and three regional council candidates who showed up to “please read the guide”.

“It’s like a bible to us at Federated Farmers,” Lewis said.

Waikato Regional Council Waipā-King Country candidates Stu Kneebone, Garry Reymer and Liz Stolwyk all received the pack alongside Waipā mayoral candidates Susan O’Regan, Mike Pettit and Clare St Pierre.

Regional council candidate Clyde Graf sent his apologies to the meeting.

Federated Farmers priorities for incoming councillors are keeping rates in check, controlling pests and weeds, giving ratepayers a say on big spending, a fairer funding system, rates relief for protected land, streamlining planning and environmental rules, not wasting ratepayer dollars by setting climate policies, having rural representation in emergency operations centres, using fuel excise and road user charges to cover 90  per cent of ‘local” roading costs, and a lower registration for for working dogs.

More Recent News

Home show at your leisure …

The Waipā Home & Leisure Show is officially open at @Mighty River Domain, Lake Karāpiro. Come for a wander, grab a coffee or lunch at the café, chat with local exhibitors, and go in the…

More soldiers’ stories shared

The names of 58 soldiers who gave their lives are inscribed around the sides of the Te Awamutu First World War Memorial. Ten were remembered at the Te Awamutu branch of the New Zealand Society…

Remembering them

Four more fallen WWI soldiers noted on the Kihikihi cenotaph have been at the Kihikihi Town Hall. New Zealand Society of Genealogists Te Awamutu branch member and life member Sandra Metcalfe did a similar presentation…

Soil production hits pause

Rising fuel costs and State Highway 3 freight disruptions have temporarily paused New Zealand production of an award-winning living soil and delayed its nationwide expansion. Read more