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Public Accounts Committee enquiry into ELMS
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<blockquote data-quote="renewablejohn" data-source="post: 7931803" data-attributes="member: 1136"><p>Brilliant Janet. Now just apply the same logic to ALL farmers as a fixed cost of entry to the scheme (say 10k) then add the crumbs your already proposing for Elms and I think you will get a good response from farmers. Can easily be funded by scrapping the nonsense of the "15" projects which appear to be brown envelope promises. Farmers will do 30 year comittments but not if their going to be shafted as in my case by the Forestry Commission and other cases reported on TFF by Natural England. That really is down to English Law. The terms and conditions need to be as of the day the contract is signed. You cannot run any business with an open ended clause which allows for changes in the rules without any redress which is what the government have got away with in the past.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="renewablejohn, post: 7931803, member: 1136"] Brilliant Janet. Now just apply the same logic to ALL farmers as a fixed cost of entry to the scheme (say 10k) then add the crumbs your already proposing for Elms and I think you will get a good response from farmers. Can easily be funded by scrapping the nonsense of the "15" projects which appear to be brown envelope promises. Farmers will do 30 year comittments but not if their going to be shafted as in my case by the Forestry Commission and other cases reported on TFF by Natural England. That really is down to English Law. The terms and conditions need to be as of the day the contract is signed. You cannot run any business with an open ended clause which allows for changes in the rules without any redress which is what the government have got away with in the past. [/QUOTE]
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