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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Potential sale of council farms in Cornwall causes widespread alarm

Cornwall Gateway CIC has issued a public letter to the local authority expressing serious - and offering up a plan

Cows in a field(Image: DC Media)

The potential disposal of Cornwall Council's agricultural estate has sparked considerable unease amongst local farmers and activists.

The authority resolved last week to examine the prospects for its 10,800-acre holding.

Cornwall Gateway CIC has subsequently published an open letter to Cornwall Council voicing grave reservations about the possibility the authority might dispose of its agricultural properties.

The council's prospective action has generated significant anxiety amongst local farmers and activists, who regard it as a temporary financial remedy with enduring implications for food security, public health and rural employment.

"Farms are not just assets on a balance sheet," said Joy Bassett, director of the CIC. "They are the foundation of our food system and a vital part of Cornwall's resilience. Selling them off might ease budget pressures now but at what cost in ten or 20 years?".

"As campaigners working across Cornwall's food and farming community, we believe it's time to come together around a shared vision, one that protects land, livelihoods and our long-term food security."

It is understood that Cornwall Council could reduce its £1.2bn debt through disposing of its agricultural estate – although a sell-off has not yet been agreed.

Following extensive deliberations by its sustainable growth scrutiny committee, councillors approved an investigation into the estate's future, encompassing 10,800 acres of land and 81 farms.