Leaving the EU: Veterinary Profession in Wales

Simon Hart Excerpts
Wednesday 18th April 2018

(6 years, 7 months ago)

Westminster Hall
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Ben Lake Portrait Ben Lake
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My hon. Friend makes an important point. It illustrates what important pillars of communities vets are, particularly in rural areas.

Simon Hart Portrait Simon Hart (Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire) (Con)
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On that point, there was always a theory that if something was doctored it was slightly suspicious, but if it was vetted it was generally considered to be sound.

Ben Lake Portrait Ben Lake
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The hon. Gentleman succinctly makes the same point. It is true that, in rural areas, whether in Wales or any other part of the UK, the vet is very much a pillar of the local community. Whether by bringing solace to weary pet owners, safeguarding standards in the meat processing sector or supporting farmers to rear healthy livestock, they perform a crucial service.

We often hear about the function of the financial services sector and how it helps to keep the economy of London and the south-east ticking, but just as important, although seldom commented on, is the role played by the veterinary profession in rural areas and how it keeps the very heart of those areas beating. Whether in times of tranquillity or turbulence, the local vet is the very foundation of the agricultural community—a constant and dependable figure, as perhaps best conveyed by the books of James Herriot. I must declare that I was not alive to witness at first hand the scenes depicted by those books; in fact, I was not around to witness the first TV series based on the books. However, the role that vets play in sustaining communities in Wales—as the backbone of the rural economy—is just as indispensable now as it was in the 1930s.