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<blockquote data-quote="Goweresque" data-source="post: 7186628" data-attributes="member: 818"><p>You don't really have much choice, if you hope to continue farming the land after the current FBT is up. Stand on your rights and say no will mean you probably don't get offered a new FBT in 5 years time, swallow your pride and agree the changes and you probably will. That said a lot can change in 5 years given the current climate in farming, in 5 years time landlords may be desperate for tenants so any ill will created by a refusal now would be forgotten. Equally you might agree now and still not be offered a new FBT as there's a fortune to be made out of ELMS or some other climate mitigation type stuff. </p><p></p><p>As predicting the future is a mugs game, personally I'd try to just make the next 5 years as simple as possible, ask to mitigate the design problems so it causes you least hassle going forward, and also get some sort of written agreement from the landlord that this is the last piece of land that you will be asked to release for the period of the tenancy.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Goweresque, post: 7186628, member: 818"] You don't really have much choice, if you hope to continue farming the land after the current FBT is up. Stand on your rights and say no will mean you probably don't get offered a new FBT in 5 years time, swallow your pride and agree the changes and you probably will. That said a lot can change in 5 years given the current climate in farming, in 5 years time landlords may be desperate for tenants so any ill will created by a refusal now would be forgotten. Equally you might agree now and still not be offered a new FBT as there's a fortune to be made out of ELMS or some other climate mitigation type stuff. As predicting the future is a mugs game, personally I'd try to just make the next 5 years as simple as possible, ask to mitigate the design problems so it causes you least hassle going forward, and also get some sort of written agreement from the landlord that this is the last piece of land that you will be asked to release for the period of the tenancy. [/QUOTE]
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