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I think the EU got blamed for things it wasn’t responsible for, not that it was perfect. Some farmers saw the referendum as an opportunity to have change.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2023

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Summary

I have farmed all my life. My family has been at this farm since 1937. Prior to that we were on a farm a mile down the road and we’ve farmed here in this area for over 300 years. So we’re fairly indigenous – we’re nearly locals now. At one time there were seven or eight farms in our valley and now there are only two, so that can bring problems. Similar to decline in industrial and mining towns, families and communities get spread to the four corners of the globe – or at least the country – and that causes social issues, because there isn’t the family there to support like there used to be.

When you look at farming as an industry, I believe it has the highest or second highest suicide rate. The main cause of death for male farmers under 50 is suicide. Farming is quite isolating. I’m very lucky here, I’ve got quite a big farm and a brother and two sons. I knew a man who obviously had some problems that had been going undetected. He was a beef farmer and he lost his favourite cow – that tipped him over the edge and he committed suicide. That was hard.

Despite the decline in the number of farms and the remaining farms getting bigger, there is still public support for British farming and some respect for farmers. But I don’t think that British farmers are as respected as farmers are in Europe. The French really value their farmers. Since 2005 British farmers no longer get any production subsidies; any farming support is all about managing the land and environment. Post-Brexit we just don’t know how things will change. There’s a lot of uncertainty.

I think that a lot of farmers perceived the amount of bureaucracy we have to deal with was down to the EU, but I think that a lot of issues were down to failed IT systems in the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and some of its own rules. I think the EU got blamed for things it wasn’t responsible for. Not that it was perfect. Some farmers saw the referendum as an opportunity to have change – they previously felt their voices weren’t being heard, but now there’s an awful lot of uncertainty as to what the future will look like.

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Invisible Britain
Portraits of Hope and Resilience
, pp. 41 - 43
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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