Home » Farming and Environment » VFF war widens after dairy farmers fight erupts

VFF war widens after dairy farmers fight erupts

THE besieged Victorian Farmers Federation is now under attack on the dairy front.

Federal Court Justice Jonathan Beach is expected to hand down his ruling on whether the VFF will have to stage an extraordinary general meeting which supporters want to remove president Emma Germano.

Now its dairy farmer members are demanding Craig Dwyer, their member on the board, be removed and replaced with former Nationals MP and Lockington dairy farmer Paul Weller.

Mr Weller is also the man most likely to be the next VFF president if the bid by former grains council leaders to sack Ms Germano at an extraordinary meeting gets up.

United Dairyfarmers of Victoria president Bernie Free has confirmed his policy council met VFF chief executive Brendan Tatham last week to have Mr Dwyer removed.

The latest fight to engulf the VFF was sparked by its board decision to drag eight UDV nominees off the Australian Dairy Farmers national council with a more than $300,000 debt at the heart of the stoush.

Former VFF Grains Council president Brett Hosking said both parties had presented their cases to the court and everything was on hold until Justice Beach’s ruling.

He said there was nothing more to be said until that happened.

VFF also declined to comment on the issue before the court judgment.

Mr Dwyer has told The Weekly Times he had not been disendorsed.

When contacted late last Friday, Mr Dwyer texted the paper a copy of a motion the UDV policy council had passed on Monday last week, which backed him on the basis he ensured “UDV is represented at national level”.

However Mr Free claimed the policy council had “rescinded that resolution” at 2.27pm on Friday and had called on the VFF to follow its constitution and allow the UDV to replace Mr Dwyer.

The constitution is the same weapon the grains-driven campaign is using in its fight to dump Ms Germano, along with VFF vice-president Danyel Cucinotta.

Section 7.2.1 (e) of the VFF constitution says commodity groups such as the UDV should each establish a policy council to “nominate representative(s) of the commodity policy council to the board”.

While the battlefront widens in Victoria, on the national stage the ADF appears almost dysfunctional with just one Victorian, Ben Bennett, on its board, and none on its 15-member national council.

The election of a new ADF president should have been completed last month, but even a week’s delay to give the VFF time for its UDV to fill its national council nominees failed to deliver.

The VFF owes ADF $344,000 in subscriptions but is refusing to pay on the grounds of value for money.

In August it told members “the ADF are the most expensive agricultural advocacy organisation for the VFF to be a member at $344,000”.

VFF said the figure was “nearly seven times the cost of the second most expensive national peak council and 60 per cent more expensive than NFF membership”.

Digital Editions


  • A word from the mayor

    A word from the mayor

    A message from Mayor Cr Stuart King Big week for sport It’s been an exciting week for sport in Swan Hill, with the Ken Harrison…

More News

  • Tourism boom

    Tourism boom

    SWAN Hill is booming, with visitor numbers surging past three million in a calendar year for the Murray River destination. New data shows more than 3.05 million visits were recorded…

  • Bulldogs, Lions in opening round clash

    Bulldogs, Lions in opening round clash

    CENTRAL MURRAY FOOTBALL NETBALL LEAGUE OPENING ROUND TYNTYNDER v HAY SATURDAY, MARCH 28 ALAN GARDEN RESERVE, 1PM A youthful but determined Hay outfit will be out to cause an opening…

  • Hewitt hits town

    Hewitt hits town

    The Swan Hill Tennis International is hitting its stride as it passes the halfway mark of a week-long showcase, drawing strong crowds and an impressive field of emerging talent to…

  • New steps in Ouyen plan

    New steps in Ouyen plan

    OUYEN is set to get a new walking and cycling blueprint aimed at improving the township’s road safety for pedestrians and cyclists. Known as the Ouyen Walking and Cycling Plan,…

  • Transport insider questions train sale

    Transport insider questions train sale

    AN insider with connections to the Victorian transport industry has claimed that a Mildura rail line could be effortlessly implemented by overhauling locomotives withdrawn from service on other lines. Victoria’s…

  • Please be kind

    Please be kind

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 529869 Jade Benham Member for Mildura AUSTRALIA’S and indeed Victoria’s and our region’s fuel situation is no longer a distant policy debate between different…

  • There’s nowhere like New Orleans

    There’s nowhere like New Orleans

    “If you put your hands over your ears and look around, the bright lights could put you in any city but take your hands away, let the music and sounds…

  • A life grounded in faith, family and community

    A life grounded in faith, family and community

    ROSE Rogers was born and raised on the island of Cebu in the Philippines, growing up in a close-knit family compound. Community and family shaped her early life, but at…

  • Tractor pull roars to life

    Tractor pull roars to life

    POWER, precision and pure country grit will return to Quambatook this Easter, with the 48th annual Australian Tractor Pull Championships set to roar into life on Easter Saturday, 4 April…

  • Extraordinary collection of Tucker portraits

    Extraordinary collection of Tucker portraits

    A RARE glimpse into the private world of one of Australia’s most influential artists is set to go on display in Swan Hill this week. The Art Gallery of Swan…