Moving Day will go ahead as planned this year, but with strict controls to help prevent the spread of Covid-19, Agriculture Minister Damien O'Connor has announced.
On June 1 each year, the first day of the dairy season, a large number of dairy farming families, sharemilkers, contract milkers and employees move to new farms to commence new employment and milking contracts. This movement of people, their possessions, livestock and machinery is known as Moving Day, but is also commonly known as Gypsy Day.
"This annual movement is a critical part of the dairy industry – an industry that contributes over $18 billion dollars a year in exports to our economy and provides jobs for around 46,000 people in our rural communities", O'Connor said.
"It's also an industry that will play a critical role in New Zealand's economic recovery after Covid-19, so it was vital that Moving Day went ahead. Since the alert level 4 lockdown was announced, and dairy farming was deemed an essential service, the Government has been committed to finding a way to enable it to proceed.
"The Government has been working with sector leaders from organisations including DairyNZ, Fonterra, Federated Farmers and FMG to find solutions which work for those in the sector and protect the economy without jeopardising anyone's health and safety. MPI then worked with the Ministry of Health and MBIE and found solutions that allow Moving Day to proceed under any alert level.