Biddy Fraser-Davies has been battling the bureaucrats since 2009, when food safety officials spotted her on Country Calendar and turned up at her cheese-making business near Eketahuna to ensure she was complying with their rules. Last month she took up the cudgels again to draw the Primary Production Select Committee's
Winston Peters: Grate red-tape nonsense like cheese
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Winston Peters
Biddy isn't the only victim of bureaucratic overkill. Mount Eliza Cheese owner Jill Whalley, from Katikati, is another small-scale cheese-maker pressing for a level playing field. She noted how high compliance costs make it much harder for Kiwi producers to compete with European imports.
The Ministry for Primary Industries says it is trying to find the right balance between regulating the food industry and keeping costs down. Consumer safety must be a vital consideration and the ministry will rightly come under fire should there be a food safety scare, illness or death resulting from sloppy monitoring. The reputation of New Zealand's food exports must be protected, too.
But Biddy does not seek exemption. She is suggesting less onerous requirements for cheesemakers who use 1000 litres of milk or less each week and who can prove they can stick to a "sensible and well-planned" programme for their premises and production processes.
Labelling is another option on packaging and in restaurants. It gives customers the chance to choose between manufactured products and cheeses made under a different safety regime. Regulations like this confirm the view that this isn't the practical National Government of old. Under this new breed of MP's we are seeing the emergence of controlling 'nanny-nats.' Simply put, strangling artisans in red tape is nuts.
Winston Peters is the Leader of New Zealand First and Member of Parliament for Northland