Petitions

Monday 3rd March 2025

(3 weeks, 4 days ago)

Petitions
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Monday 3 March 2025

Intensive Poultry Units

Monday 3rd March 2025

(3 weeks, 4 days ago)

Petitions
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The petition of residents of the United Kingdom,
Declares that industrial chicken farming produces huge volumes of polluting chicken manure which, when spread as fertiliser on nearby fields, can cause phosphate from the manure to leech into rivers, causing algal blooms which starve the river of oxygen; further that the River Wye is close to complete ecological collapse, with damaging pollution from industrial chicken farming as a leading cause; notes that the Environment Agency reports ‘unacceptable levels’ of phosphate in over half of English rivers; and further that other rivers across the United Kingdom are also at serious risk from an increase in intensive poultry units; and further notes that a similar online petition by the Soil Association received over 30,000 signatures.
The petitioners therefore request that the House of Commons urges the Government to introduce a ban on new intensive poultry units, to support farmers to exit this industry and to take action to reduce chicken consumption to more sustainable levels.
And the petitioners remain, etc.—[Presented by Ellie Chowns, Official Report, 27 January 2025; Vol. 761, c. 123.]
[P003035]
Observations from the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Steve Reed):
Cleaning up our rivers, seas, and lakes, including iconic sites such as the River Wye, is a top Government priority. Restoring the river will require cross-border working between English and Welsh authorities to effectively influence the right changes on the ground. Government are working constructively with a range of stakeholders, including local MPs, farmers, and environmental non-governmental organisations, to tackle pollution in the Wye. The Environment Agency continues to target advice-led inspections, to check adherence to pollution prevention regulations—including the farming rules for water—in the area. Intensive poultry farms generally consist of enclosed buildings, without fields on which manure is spread and from which soil might erode. All farms, including non-permitted poultry farms, are subject to the farming rules for water, slurry silage and agricultural fuel oil regulations, and nitrates regulations (within nitrate vulnerable zones, which cover a large proportion of the River Wye special area of conservation), and are inspected for compliance by the Environment Agency.
The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs has committed to consulting on national planning reforms to enable the farming sector to diversify and grow their businesses to deliver sustainable and higher-welfare food production. As part of this commitment, the Secretary of State committed to a series of roundtables with the farming sector. We will shortly be organising these, to understand in greater detail the issues faced by farmers, and how they can be addressed.
The Government are committed to developing a truly plan-led system, with a policy framework that is accessible and understandable to all. To that end, we intend to consult on future policy changes, including a set of national policies for decision making, in spring 2025.
DEFRA is working with the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government ahead of its upcoming consultation on national development management policies to develop solutions to issues faced by farmers in the planning system. In addition, we are also examining ways to enable poultry farmers to improve animal welfare by reducing stocking density. We will be engaging with the sector and stakeholders to find an appropriate solution that improves welfare, supports food production and does not come at a cost to the environment. Sustainability is central to this Government’s mission, and animal welfare legislation will continue to play a crucial role in food security and sustainable farming.
That is why this Government are committing £5 billion for farming over two years, and are working with farmers to deliver a profitable farming sector and unlock rural growth. This will include a cast-iron commitment to food security, while introducing reforms to help farmers diversify their income streams to support them during poor harvests. As part of the plan for change, the Government have announced a series of reforms, delivering on the Government’s new deal for farmers, including:
Backing British produce: For the first time ever, the Government will monitor food currently bought in the public sector and where it is bought from. This is a significant first step to deliver on a manifesto pledge to use the Government’s own purchasing power to back British produce, with an ambition for 50% of food in hospitals, army bases and prisons to be local or produced to high environmental standards, making it easier for British farmers to win a share of the £5 billion spent each year on public sector catering contracts.
Using planning reforms to support food production: Ensuring our reforms make it quicker for farmers to build the buildings, barns and other infrastructure they need on their farms to boost food production.
Diversifying income streams: Helping farmers make additional money from selling surplus energy from solar panels and wind turbines by accelerating connections to the grid, and supporting them during difficult harvests and supply shocks.
A fair supply chain: Boosting profitability through fair competition across the supply chain. New rules for the pig sector will come this spring, ensuring contracts clearly set out expectations and changes can only be made if agreed by all parties. Similar regulations for eggs and fresh produce sectors will follow, with the Government ready to intervene with other sectors if needed.

Safety standards in the scaffolding industry

Monday 3rd March 2025

(3 weeks, 4 days ago)

Petitions
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The petition of Maria Georgina Dennis,
Declares that the petitioner’s 11-year old son was tragically killed in December 2022, when an unsecured scaffold board came loose from the back of a flatbed van and travelled through the windscreen of the petitioner’s vehicle; notes that the Health and Safety Executive wrote in her report that the securing of the load was “grossly inadequate” and “the insecure loading caused an immediate and likely risk of ‘harm’”; and further notes that the defendant protested in court that he had not been trained properly.
The petitioner therefore requests that the House of Commons urge the Government to review current laws and guidance followed by scaffolding businesses and ensure that scaffolding personnel must, by law, be a member of a governing body who are responsible for controlling how scaffolding businesses are run including safety standards, strengthening skills training and to improve the level of scaffolding competence.
And the petitioners remain, etc.—[Presented by Helena Dollimore , Official Report, 12 February 2025; Vol. 762, c. 354.]
[P003044]
Observations from the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Transport (Lilian Greenwood):
I want to begin by offering my sincere condolences to Maria Dennis and her family.
On 9 December 2024, Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency, with support from Health and Safety Executive, published updated guidance on the safe loading of vehicles. This includes a section specifically covering scaffolding loads. The updated guidance has been communicated to operator licence holders directly and through social media channels. Under section 2 of the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974, employers must ensure their drivers have sufficient training, knowledge and experience if they are loading and securing their own vehicles, to ensure safety of the load and that of other road users.
Furthermore, I have met with Maria Dennis and her MP and instructed Department for Transport officials to explore the possibility of a load security awareness course being offered as an alternative to a fixed penalty—like the approach taken for minor speeding offences—and to look at how to raise awareness of the existing guidance on load securing published on www.gov.uk.
The request to mandate a governing body for the scaffolding industry is not a matter for my Department. My officials have made the Department for Work and Pensions aware.