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Felling the Wall: An investigation into forestry training in the Gisborne region.

Executive Summary

Plantation forestry in New Zealand is entering a period of growth due to the availability of wood supply. Nowhere is this more prevalent than the Gisborne region. In order for forest owners to capitalise on their investment, this growth in industry capacity needs to be met with the supply of labour. To this end, the industry has its back to the wall.

The primary aim of this project has been to identify important characteristics of forestry training that are considered useful in the context of designing an alternative forestry training programme for the Gisborne region. The characteristics of training explored in this project include features that are considered successful as well as identifying limitations and challenges that are impeding the delivery of positive training outcomes. A broader objective of this project is to support the Eastland Wood Council (EWC) initiative to explore the potential for an alternative industry led training programme for the region. In order to achieve this aim, the author has collected data with semi-structured interviews to explore the perspectives of a sample of key stakeholders who are directly involved in the industry.

The results of this research illustrate that forestry training is a complex and challenging environment which is constrained by many factors. What is evident is that there is strong support for an alternative forestry training programme for the region. There is collective acknowledgment that the current training framework is not delivering what is required to support industry labour needs. The industry stakeholders realise the potential opportunity and more importantly are willing to consider alternatives and invest to find ways to improve efficiency and deliver better training outcomes.

Improved efficiency and better outcomes for forestry training will come at a significant cost. It will require substantial investment to design and implement a modern and attractive training programme which utilises technology to facilitate training as well as provides strong pastoral support to students. Strategic partnerships beyond current levels will be needed with businesses, organisations and government agencies within the industry training space to build critical momentum and realise the opportunity. This research suggested that progress toward this opportunity will require strong leadership and collaboration among industry representatives.

This report makes a number recommendations that relate specifically to the design of a training programme as well as training and industry promotion more broadly.

The recommendations are:

  • Consider partnering with Competenz to integrate the apprenticeship model.
  • Design and implement a student induction process to clarify the expectations of the training programme and employment in the industry more broadly.
  • Invest in a strong pastoral support framework to assist and develop students.
  • Consider employing a Project Manager/s to coordinate the programme. Ensure individuals who support students directly are able to engage and communicate effectively with the students.
  • Invest in technology to improve student recruitment and engagement as well as improve training efficiencies and student access (i.e. machine operation simulators).
  • Consider options for a machine operation training facility located in or around the city.
  • Expose students to all aspects of the industry and its support services to promote the scope of care er opportunities.
  • Explore opportunities to deliver the introductory industry qualifications to students prior to worksite placement with contractors. These should include NZQA ‘general requirements’ (17769) and ‘employment in a forestry operation’ (22995) . Additionally, basic fire and first aid units should be considered.
  • Vet contractors who partner with the programme to ensure their team culture is appropriate to facilitate student learning.
  • Consider and implement appropriate incentive mechanisms for contractors who partner with the training programme.
  • Facilitate opportunities to develop a shared vision for forestry training among key stakeholders in the region. This shared vision should include defining what future employment in the forestry industry will look like. Ensure this vision can be communicated effectively.
  • Facilitate opportunities to improve collaboration between key stakeholders.
  • Stakeholder collaboration and partnerships with the training programme should be based upon co – investment (financial and/or non – financial) to improve engagement and deliver better outcomes.
  • Increase promotion of the industry and career opportunities in schools including specific engagement with teachers and parents to ensure they are up to date with changes in industry and the future opportunities.
  • Consider targeted industry and career promotion at rural schools within the Gisborne region.

Hitting the marc in marlborough.

Executive Summary

Grape marc in the Marlborough region is set to increase in production by 50% in ten years. This increase in quantity could be tolerated by the multiple types of practices that currently exist, if expansion plans are in place. Comparing Marlborough to other industries or other wine regions within New Zealand and off shore is difficult as there are many unique factors involved. Council regulations are changing, and consequence for non-compliance has recently been aggressive; a strong contributor to the need for a change in culture around the issue.

Waste disposal in any industry is of environmental concern, and sustainable practices should be clearly defined so all procedures involved in handling, storage and use will have no adverse effect on the community, environment and businesses involved. Reutilising excess materials offers an environmentally conscious solution and provides the industry with another positive story.

There is room for more research and development of technology which can help make systems easier and more effective. Collaboration between industry members, industry bodies and governing bodies is essential to the success story that is grape marc in Marlborough.

How has the financial viability of Sauvignon Blanc in Marlborough changed over the last five years in three major growing areas.

Executive Summary

The financial viability of Sauvignon Blanc in Marlborough has never been stronger, showing returns on investment for the 2015/16 season of 24.47%, now who wouldn’t chase returns like that? Growers and investors are purchasing the remaining bare flat land to develop and keep up with world demand this is seeing record prices paid for both bare land and existing vineyards.

I undertook a literature review in conjunction with interviewing three growers, I was better able to understand the characteristics of the Marlborough wine region its sub regions, and how these characteristics play out in the flavour of the wine, value of the land and the factors that are driving the current expansion.

What I wasn’t aware of before undertaking this report was just how well this industry was performing and had been over the last 5 years peaking last season as mentioned above, I quickly learned that if we suggest these things to be cyclic then it would appear to me that we are very high in the cycle right now, are we at the peak or do we still have room to move? This report will give you an understanding of where the market is today.

Growing wine grapes in an undercover system

Executive Summary

Thinking outside of the square and challenging the status quo is and will become more and more important as we see challenges to the primary industries. The changing consumer preferences and urbanisation of our communities is and will continue to erode at the traditional way of farming and growing in New Zealand, and the world over. How do we combat this and retain a highly valuable primary production systems in New Zealand.

The simplistic answer is for us to evolve and change in line with consumer preferences and what is accepted by society, we can see this happening all around us. Cage free eggs in all major supermarkets by 2027, Low alcohol wines gaining a market share from relative obscurity only a few years ago, chicken free chicken and artificial proteins becoming available to consumers, that were highly expensive prototypes at the start of the decade. But what do we need to do to evolve?

The question then lies, “how do we keep ahead of the curve” and “how do we maintain relevance in todays society.” The answer to this is complex and not straightforward, but it all starts in one place, asking questions and challenging the status quo, not being content with how things are, or how they are progressing. Always asking why.

I will use the example here of looking to grow wine grapes in a semi-protected or undercover system. I have investigated and continue to evaluate this as part of my professional role as a viticulturalist, and for the Kellogg programme. Also I will try to understand the process of thinking outside of the square, as well as provoke thought about all our systems and processes, and encourage you to always be looking forward for a new and novel solution.

Putting a face to the challenges of small, rural businesses in New Zealand.

Executive Summary

The school bus pulls away from the farm driveway and the already-exhausted mother sinks into a chair at the kitchen table to drink her now-cold coffee. The pet lambs have been fed, school lunches made, lost uniform items recovered, homework sorted and kids packed off to school. There’s washing to hang out, beds to make, housework to do… and she’s expected at the yards at 10 o’clock to help with the drafting. Somewhere in there, she has to do some work for her business too.

Down the road, someone else is cursing at their screen because the computer won’t load the latest orders from their company website because the internet speeds are too low and they can’t do it via mobile because their farm has no cell phone reception. Another rural business struggling to do business.

The purpose of this project was to give a more personal view of the challenges facing small rural business owners from their own experiences and perceptions. I wanted to create a greater understanding of those challenges and how those business owners felt about them.

I defined small as self-employed people with fewer than five staff (mostly working alone) and rural as being in a rural area or rural service town (and not farming). I surveyed 24 small, rural business owners under five sections–governance, operation, technology, communication and personal. After collating and analysing the results, I identified specific challenges to investigate further.

Rural areas do have their challenges, but they also have many opportunities and resources for small business development.

Rural people running non-farming businesses or urban people moving to the country to run businesses for a variety of reasons, are doing their best to overcome these challenges to create successful rural businesses. Challenges such as work-life balance and distractions, human resources, rural connectivity and general lack of business know-how.

In some cases, they are issues facing people with small businesses all over the world. But in rural New Zealand, it’s not always easy to solve them in isolation.

Comments about rules and regulations mainly came from those businesses in food production and health and safety–they have no choice but to deal with legislation being governed by their respective government departments.

For human resources, it wasn’t necessarily the lack of people to employ but the added responsibility of being an employer.

Rural connectivity was about the lack of internet coverage and cell phone coverage, not knowing the best or most appropriate software to use within their businesses and the lack of postal services. There is a great example of a community fighting to fix its internet woes and one of my survey respondents is part of that community.

Work-life balance evoked a range of emotions, especially when the family home was the place of business or the business seemed to play second-fiddle to the farm. Distractions fell into the same category, especially when the ‘distractions’ were children, farm work or house work.

I discovered the best things business owners can do is get help, ask for advice and improve their own knowledge. To quote one of the HR websites I visited: “Getting it right is so important and so cost effective. Getting it wrong is very costly.”

Knowledge is power. It doesn’t necessarily have to be your own knowledge – that’s where networking, mentors and coaches can be useful. But I would implore small, rural business owners to take the time to try to improve their knowledge – it will help them and help their business. But on the flip side, don’t be scared to pay the experts in areas of great difficulty or implications.

They need to do their homework early, involve an accountant or similar consultant early in the creation of their business, spend time researching to-do lists and business plans.

This project includes three case studies of women who started their businesses with young families in tow.

Angela Payne’s children are grown now and Agri-Lab has been in operation since 1998 , but she has a world of wisdom for someone starting out – including the need for support and her “goddess principle”. Look after yourself first.

Gretchen King and AgRecord are coping with growth – in the business and in their family. She brought forward the interview with me because of the impending early arrival of baby #2. In the middle of one conversation later, she laughed wryly, and said “Babies, toddlers and business… tell them not to do it Kate.”

The enthusiasm from Michelle Burden with her Fantail’s Nest was infectious. She smiles when she talks about what she does and all the future holds for her business and her family. That’s why we do it.

Running a small, rural business has its challenges.

But they’re worth it.

This a personal project – I know many of the people I have interviewed and surveyed and I have made personal comments in the Findings & Discussions that relate to my own small, rural business.

Rural areas present many opportunities but business people in those areas face challenges they must learn to navigate (Siemens 2010).

When urban people think rural, they often simply think farms. They think sheep and cattle, pasture and fertiliser, tractors and motorbikes. They drive through farmland to get to the beach. They drive through farmland to get from one city to another. But often the communities and the livelihoods that make rural New Zealand are not in their sights.

Rural people know how special rural New Zealand is, that’s why we fight so hard to stay out here running businesses alongside our farms or within our homes.

Drivers Of On-Farm Compliance.

Executive Summary

Meeting the requirements of compliance is an area that farmers struggle with. They are great at working the land and with animals and get frustrated at having to slow down to complete what is sometimes seen as needless paper work. Compliance in the agricultural sector is only going to increase and become more complex. Local communities and customers are demanding ethical environmentally sound products. They want safe, healthy, affordable food and don’t want the production of that food to be at the expense of the environment or animal welfare. The social licence to operate is becoming more important as communities are expecting more from agriculture. If the agricultural industry doesn’t act quickly to the pressures of the community, then regulation will only continue to increase.

 
Health and safety regulation changed relatively recently in response to poor health and safety statistic in the agricultural industry. The tide is changing but slowly, there are still those around with antiquated views who see health and safety as PC rubbish. You only need to scroll through the NZ Farming Facebook page for examples. Agricultural leaders need to take a hard line in this area, call out poor behaviour and distance themselves from supporting those who continue to display it.
 
To help farmers navigate the compliance minefield we need to understand what it is that drives them to comply. If we understand that, we will be in a better position to help farmers get up to standard and move beyond compliance. Moving beyond compliance and proving that farmers are meeting their obligations will slowly build the trust back within the local market.
 

Profitability will always come first in a business. This is not greed, it is economics. If a business does not turn a profit or break even it will not survive. Farmers need to be shown that compliance doesn’t have to be a cost, and in fact can improve profitability. All the farmers surveyed saw each area, Environment, Product Quality, Health and Safety and Animal Welfare as very important. the desire to do the right thing is there so If we can show how complying in these areas will help in running a profitable business, we should be able to help them progress. Desire and importance alone is not enough to drive compliance. Farmers are busy, and tasks are constantly getting prioritised; tasks where a farmer can directly link it back to profitability and success are always going to move to the top of the list.

There are three ways that farmers can be encouraged to comply with regulation, farm accreditation programs that will give them preferred access to market and premiums. Education around how complying can make their businesses more profitable and reduce their risks and lastly, negatively hit their profitability with fines and tighter restrictions. The first two options will be more successful. Option three doesn’t promote cultural change and relies on the regulator constantly looking over the farmers shoulder, as soon as the regulators back in turned behaviour will revert.

As an industry we need to move quickly to implement change and always be looking for better, more efficient, cleaner, safer and kinder ways of farming. We shouldn’t wait to see what society gets outraged about next and then respond. We need to predict what might become a problem and innovate around that now. We need to choose to change not be forced to change.

The time for change is now.

Executive Summary

If you talk to any vet out there, I can almost guarantee it wasn’t an offhand decision in their final year of high school that took them to vet school. The dream would have taken place years before. If you ask any vet, there will be a moment in their childhood; an experience or situation, that led them to say “I want to be a vet”. They then had to work hard at school and university to realise their dream and for the majority this became their focus and passion.

How sad is it then, that after ten years of being a vet only 60% of people are re-registering? What has happened to the fire and the passion over these years?

I surveyed 205 veterinarians and they have provided me with a lot of information about the good side and the down side to rural practice in New Zealand. I themed these up into 6 main areas:

  1. The job – the clients, the variety, after hours and job satisfaction
  2. The practice – the people, the culture and flexibility
  3. The lifestyle of a rural veterinarian
  4. The production animal industry- the changing role of rural vets
  5. Wellness – a look into stress, anxiety, mental health and wellbeing
  6. Other things that help retain vets – the side comments that I couldn’t ignore

It is up to all veterinary business owners and managers to ensure they do everything possible within their power to retain vets. Without young vets staying on and potentially they themselves investing in practices, what will the local veterinary practice look like in 30 years’ time? A few big corporate clinics over the whole country? Lay companies doing the ‘technician’ work and the odd ambulatory vet patching up the problems?
The main findings from my research were that although we cannot expect anyone to stay in their initial job after graduating there are fundamental problems within the rural veterinary profession that do need attention to help with retention issues.
Practices need to have good people work for them, who are supportive and aware and enhance the culture of the practice. There is a need for good strong leaders that also show understanding. Employers need to be innovative, flexible and adaptable; and ensure the healthy well being of all their employees.