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TO COMBAT DROUGHTS

N.S. WALES SEEKS NATIONAL SCHEME. (Fegis Oub Own- Comcast ondent.) SYDNEY, June 1. One of the most important moves in the nistory of this State has been commenced by the Xow »South Wales Labour Goveminent. ft has called a conference of experts, who are to ctevise a scheme Shy which the effects of the recurrent droughts may be mitigated. The problem is a huge and complex one and, although every thinking man realised clearly that the future development of this State was bound up with its solution, every Government baulked at it. Decades have passed in talk and nothing has been achieved. Lhe general idea, which is to create a sort of insurance against droughts, involves a number o{ problems, such as —How to conserve water, and to what extent the conservation of water should go hand in hand with iriigaticn; the encouragement of farmers to produce fodder in the good seasons, to be preserved and stored in convenient places, for use when required; the class of fodder to be grown and stored ; the organisation of th e railways for use in time of emergency, but more particularly the creation of a scheme by which the railways will be used for the concentration of fodder in slack seasons. The matter of finance, of course, bulks largely in the consideration of such a scheme. It is proposed that the State Government and the combined pastoral industry should be joint partners in the scheme, and that each should, put up half a million a year for five years. At the end of that time, according to the estimate of one very practical member of the conference. the organisation should be selfsupporting and soundly established. The various experts, who were called together, formed themselves into a genera! committee under (he chairmanship of the State Treasurer, and have arranged to meet once a week. Meanwhile, the main problem has been split up into a number of little problems, along the lines indicated above, and these will be dealt with separately by sub-committees. The general committee will gather together the results of _ the smaller committees’ decisions, and from this will prepare a scheme for submission to Parliament. The manner in which the resources of the big organisation will be brought to the aid of the individual farmer has not been indicated. The idea, presumably, is to save his stock from loss, rather than compensate him for loss-~a thing vastly more important from the point of view of the Suite, which has suffered many severe set-backs a» the result of the wholesale wiping out of sheep and cattle in drought years.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/OW19210621.2.145

Bibliographic details

Otago Witness, Issue 3510, 21 June 1921, Page 42

Word Count
438

TO COMBAT DROUGHTS Otago Witness, Issue 3510, 21 June 1921, Page 42

TO COMBAT DROUGHTS Otago Witness, Issue 3510, 21 June 1921, Page 42

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