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News Published on 30 Jun

Defra faces job cuts with closure of government agency

Filed by Shaun Weston

Defra will merge two bodies responsible for animal health and abolish the Commission for Rural Communities, it has been announced.

The department has said the shake-up will better allow it to meet the coalition government’s commitments on service delivery. Environment secretary Caroline Spelman added that “an urgent need to drive down debt” had forced Defra to make “tough decisions”.

The CRC, which has a £5.8m budget and aims to ‘address rural disadvantage’, will be replaced by a strengthened Rural Communities Policy Unit within the department. Animal Health and the Veterinary Laboratories Agency, meanwhile, will be merged as soon as possible.

The NFU has described today’s announcements as a ‘sensible move’, yet has warned that any further reorganisations mustn’t impact on UK agriculture’s ability to remain competitive in Europe.

NFU president Peter Kendall said: “Today’s announcements are sensible streamlining from Defra, which is tasked with saving almost a third of its budget. It’s also heartening to see that Defra is embedding rural issues at the heart of the department, rather than those being delivered by arms-length bodies.

“That said, I’m mindful that, for some, today’s news will mean job losses. I’d like to pay tribute to the CRC and its work to date. We look forward to working with the new body for animal health on the important issues that lie ahead.

“All industries face tough times and agriculture will not escape from the impacts of government cost-cutting while it steers us through these times of great austerity. I would urge government to ensure that any subsequent reorganisations across government, and its arms-length delivery groups, must not damage UK agriculture’s ability to be competitive in a Europe context.”

Defra needs to find £162m of savings in 2010/11 – the third-largest sum as a proportion of a department’s overall spend.

According to reports, there are more than 60 staff at the Cheltenham-based headquarters of the Commission for Rural Communities. Public comments left on the This is Gloucestershire website include: “This useless, overblown, expensive quango should be closed down immediately”, and “In case you’re wondering, the Commission for what? It used to be the Countryside Commission. When is Richard Graham’s quango going to be abolished?”

Source: National Farmers Union, This is Gloucestershire

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