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No food on the shelves for Victoria if Andrews Labor Government fails fix food supply chain workforce shortages
Industry has warned there'll be "no food on the shelves" if the Andrews Labor Government fails to act to fix workforce shortages that risk bringing Victoria's food supply chain to a grinding halt.
Reports today detail the pressure on local meat processors, supermarkets and food distribution centres as they struggle to keep up with demand while hundreds of staff are in mandatory isolation. But the Government refuses to consult with industry, according to the Victorian Farmers Federation, leading President Emma Germano to say: "the risk with us is that if you get it wrong, you're going to have no food on the shelves".
The Andrews Labor Government's failure to get coronavirus outbreaks under control is threatening the supply of food to supermarket shelves high demand through the COVID-19 crisis has seen supermarket shelves stripped bare
Putting huge pressure on the people
Shadow Minister for Agriculture Peter Walsh said the Government had failed to offer a way forward for the food supply chain. "Unworkable rules are putting huge pressure on the people who keep food flowing through the supply chain and onto Victorians' tables,"
"But instead of working with industry to make sure the right COVID-safe settings are in place to reopen, rebuild and recover, the Andrews Labor Government has slammed the door shut on any consultation." Mr Walsh said.
Disruptions and temporary shutdowns
At least six Victorian meat processors are facing disruptions and temporary shutdowns today due to the State Government's broad-brush approach to mandatory isolation. Meanwhile, one major supermarket has reported 25,000 instances where team members had to be isolated in the past three months, despite most staff not having been anywhere near the positive cases that attended the venue.
Plan to protect food supply chain
Mr Walsh called for a plan protecting the food supply chain. Rapid testing for workers and drivers at processors and distribution centres. "We could avoid the devastating worker shortages we're seeing in our supermarkets and across the food supply chain with rapid testing and more targeted contact tracing. If workers had access to rapid testing, especially those who were asymptomatic at work - COVID would have been detected before it put the entire food supply chain at risk.
"We should be using every tool at our fingertips, including following the lead of other states that are using CCTV footage to identify specific close contacts to avoid an entire workforce going into 14 days' isolation. Despite worsening workforce shortages right across Victorian agriculture, Labor's Agriculture Minister is out-of-ideas, missing-in-action and actively avoiding consulting with the industry." Mr Walsh said.
Pictures from Google Images.
Source: www.gippsland.com
Published by: news@gippsland.com

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