I make no apology for beginning this newsletter by making reference to Foot and Mouth disease. Too much of the country this is no longer news and the media manipulators are spinning their webs of truth and half truths on other stories.
To us in Yorkshire this is far from the case and the ongoing confirmation of new cases in the Southern and Northern Dales and the areas around Northallerton and the Moors near Whitby are a worry to everybody. We can only hope that it will soon be contained and that the hot weather as I write will help to eliminate the virus.
The directors of the Ring, who include one who has been culled, join with me in hoping that those of you who have had the misfortune to loose stock will ultimately recover and bounce back stronger than ever.
The effects of Foot and Mouth with a general reluctance to import men and machines onto farms, together with the miserable weather and the change in management policy on some of the larger estates has obviously had a knock on effect for the Ring.
Last year was the most successful in the history of the Ring and with grant income disappearing from the balance sheet in the future we need to continue to make steady progress.
One of the factors that continues to exercise our minds is the number of members who are infrequent users of the Ring. If the non users and low users were to only use the Ring in a modest way the finances of the Ring would be transformed.
Core turnover has held up remarkably well under the circumstances and after running behind for the early months of the year, June should see the budget for the year to date being achieved.
Commodities, notably fuel, are down on budget. With the weather being as it has been with no land work being possible, this is not surprising.
However the following paragraph written by Bruce Hamilton in the Tayforth Machinery Ring Summer newsletter is as true for us as it is for them, please remember it when reaching for the invoice pad instead of a Ring Worksheet.
"When a job is first arranged through the Ring, that job is inevitably billed through the Ring. We are concerned however that some Members consider that the next time the job happens and is arranged privately, the Ring does not deserve its 2% and thus bill each other privately. IT DOES MATTER - please remember that it was the Ring that put the two of you in touch in the first place!"
Ray and I can both testify that what is even more demoralising than finding out that the above has happened is to learn that a "first time" job that may have taken a lot of time to set up has also been invoiced privately.
Farmers as a group are quick to complain about being exploited by "The Government", "The Supermarkets", "The Multinationals", "The Foreigners With Lower Standards" and so on. But, at the end of the day it appears that some will forgo their principles for a short term opportunistic gain at the expense of supporting their Ring, an organisation that exists solely to help their business now and in the future.
Without the 2% now there will be no future.
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