Northland Farmer prohibited from owning or managing cattle and sheep for 10 years, fined $6,500

0
11

Source: Ministry for Primary Industries

A farmer who failed to adequately feed cattle, treat animals for worms and tend to ill and injured cattle, has been fined and banned from owning or managing animals for a decade.

Michael William Goodwin (75) is mainly a cattle farmer with up to 200 Hereford cattle, along with a small number of sheep. He appeared for sentencing at the Dargaville District Court (15/2/22) after being prosecuted by MPI on 6 charges under the Animal Welfare Act. 

Along with being fined $6,500, he was ordered to reimburse veterinarian costs totalling $2,252.40. The sentence included prohibition from owning or exercising authority over cattle and sheep for 10 years.

MPI regional manager animal welfare and NAIT (National Animal Identification and Tracing) compliance, Brendon Mikkelsen, says this outcome – particularly the prohibition should send a strong message to all people responsible for production animals.

“People in charge of animals are responsible for their animal’s health and wellbeing at all times. Most farmers recognise this and provide enough feed for their animals, drench them to manage parasites, and treat their injuries.”

Mr Goodwin’s animal welfare offending was discovered between March 2020 and October 2020 after MPI received 2 complaints.

MPI’s animal welfare inspectors found evidence of animals in pain and distress at Mr Goodwin’s farm, including 2 animals showing signs of bottle jaw and 1 with signs of a mouth infection (known as woody tongue). They also found a Hereford bull with an injured right hind leg, in a severely lame state. Seven of Mr Goodwin’s cattle and sheep had not been provided proper and sufficient feed, 14 cattle were discovered with parasitic worms, and a Hereford bull was found with a severely infected puncture wound. 

Mr Goodwin failed to comply with MPI’s direction to improve the animals’ welfare.

“Despite knowing what he had to do, Mr Goodwin failed to take necessary and reasonable actions which would have improved the welfare of his animals.

“When MPI becomes aware of neglect or deliberate cruelty to animals – you can be assured, we will investigate and bring the matter before the courts if necessary. Again – we would strongly advise farmers – particularly those who are aging, to create a succession plan,” Mr Mikkelsen says.

MPI strongly encourages any member of the public who is aware of animal ill-treatment or cruelty to report it to the MPI animal welfare complaints freephone 0800 00 83 33.

MIL OSI

Previous articleNZ cricket milestone almost went unnoticed
Next articleShadow Board calls for substantial tightening over the coming year