Part of 1. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Energy, Planning and Rural Affairs – in the Senedd at 1:46 pm on 3 October 2018.
I'm grateful for that indication, because it is critical that we do understand when this will be done. As I said, those impact assessments are vital to understanding the various modelling that is currently being undertaken. But what we do know under the current proposals, obviously—'land managers' are not necessarily active farmers. Now, I personally support the point that it should be an active farmer who should be in receipt of this money, and I declare an interest as a partner in a family farming business. However, your proposals, if they're taken through to their ultimate conclusion, will see a huge increase in the number of participants who could potentially benefit from this money that is supposed to support the rural economy. I believe, at the moment, it's about 17,000 to 18,000 people who are in receipt under the basic payment scheme. Potentially, you could be talking 40,000 to 45,000 applicants being dealt with by the department. What preparation are you putting in place as a department to deal with the uptake of the schemes? Because we all remember what happened back in 2005-06, when the intervention board as was, or the Rural Payments Agency in Reading, struggled to come to terms with the new system that the UK Government introduced back in 2005-06 that led to massive delays and huge financial pressures on rural businesses. What capacity building have you in the department, and what confidence can you give us that you will be able to deal with such a massive uptake in numbers that the department will have to deal with?