You are using software which is blocking our advertisements (adblocker).

As we provide the news for free, we are relying on revenues from our banners. So please disable your adblocker and reload the page to continue using this site.
Thanks!

Click here for a guide on disabling your adblocker.

App icon
FreshPublishers
Open in the app
OPEN
Perrys Berrys

COVID restrictions create problems for NZ's largest strawberry producer

The first strawberries of the season are on their way already. By October the fields will be ready for harvest but the problem is, there's virtually no one to pick them. Vital overseas workers who make up the bulk of pickers can't get here due to New Zealand's closed border.

Francie Perry is the country's biggest strawberry producer, a multi-million-dollar operation. "If the Government don't allow some of these horticulture workers across the border, then the Kiwi public are going to be faced with very high prices for annual crops."

The Government says locals will take up the slack, with Labour leader Jacinda Ardern claiming some New Zealand unemployed will take up the slack, and yesterday announcing that foreigners with expiring working holiday visas can now move into horticulture.

Agriculture Minister Damien O'Connor estimates that would mean around 11,000 people could move into the job. But Perry is sceptical.

"If they believe that there's plenty of harvest staff here, where are they, because we can't find them," she told tvnz.co.nz.

Perry says she has the solution - accommodation in Auckland all set to receive workers from Covid-free Samoa. "We've got a facility that would be suitable for quarantine and we could quarantine 70 one people in it and that would get us through." She's paid for it all and she'll even pay for the security staff.  But the Government is still not budging. "If we don't get it organised in the next week or so, it becomes a real crisis," Perry says.

Without pickers, more than 1000 Kiwi jobs in the packhouse will potentially be lost, and the Christmas favourites could be left to rot in the ground.

Publication date:

Related Articles → See More