A Canterbury father and son have been fined $47,500 over the failure to register hundreds of cattle with NAIT.
Under the National Animal Identification and Tracing scheme, all cattle or deer must be fitted with a NAIT tag and registered in the NAIT system by the time the animal is 180 days old, or before the animal is moved off farm.
The Ministry for Primary Industries said Keith Bruce Townshend, 69, and his son Joel Charles Townshend, 39, were sentenced today under the NAIT Act in the Ashburton District Court following successful prosecutions by MPI.
Keith Townshend ran farms in the Ashburton and Banks Peninsula areas. He was fined $20,000 on two charges, while Joel Townshend, who ran farms in coastal Wakanui, was fined $27,500 on three charges under the NAIT Act.
“MPI takes non-compliance with NAIT seriously. The scheme provides a critical tool in the fight against biosecurity incursions such as M.bovis or foot and mouth disease.
“Put simply, when people in charge of animals disregard their NAIT obligations, they put the whole agricultural sector at risk because it affects our ability to do our job – track and trace animals,” said MPI regional manager animal welfare and NAIT compliance Murray Pridham.
Inquiries into Keith Townshend’s operation found that, between April and November 2022, he transported 798 cattle from Akaroa to Forks without declaring these movements to NAIT.
He also failed to declare receiving 1034 cattle that were transported from Forks to Akaroa between May and October 2022. He had been educated on NAIT requirements in 2021.
Meanwhile, Joel Townshend took over the lease of a property at Wakanui in April 2022, and 1154 cattle were found unregistered into the NAIT system at this farm. He also failed to register himself as the person in charge of animals.
“The NAIT tag and registration system is only as effective as the information entered in. If you are unsure about what you need to do, reach out. There is plenty of information, advice and support available,” said Pridham.