RENSPA: REGISTRATION OF FAMILY FARMERS IN MISIONES
Senasa also trained students in agricultural schools
Tuesday June 4, 2019
Resistencia (Chaco) - The missionary town of San Pedro, the National Health
Service and Food Quality (Senasa) trained ** * students of agricultural
schools and family farmers enrolled in the National Health Registry of
Agricultural Producers (RENSPA).
The training session on RENSPA, attended by 50 students from the Institute
of Agricultural Education No. 2 and the Superior Technician in
Bromatological Inspection of the School of Agricultural Family (EFA),
sought to teach the children or relatives of farmers family area procedures
for pre-registration in the registry.
Agents Senasa also reported Documents Electronic Plant Transits (DTV-e) and
for the movement of animals (DT-e) and recommended how to manipulate
agrochemicals, among other important features of Good Agricultural
Practices (GAP) while they explained zoonotic diseases, such as trichinosis
and echinococcosis.
Senasa veterinarian, Javier Alarcon said that "it was a positive approach
producers in the area, because they themselves work the land and have the
characteristic of being mixed productions. The importance lies in training
young people, families who have affinity with New Information Technologies
(ICTs) and know that the territories where they work must be registered
with the Senasa ".
On the other hand, the mobile Senasa was in the premises of the
Municipality of San Pedro where 35 family farmers enrolled in the RENSPA,
rehabilitated 3 transport and performed the closing DTVe and DTE.
The conference was organized jointly with the Secretariat for Family
Agriculture of the Nation (SSAF), the Municipality of San Pedro (Misiones)
and was attended by the Senasa, of referents of its National Directorate of
Plant Protection (DNPV) of the Commission RENSPA NEA regional Center and
its Management Information Technology regional (DTI), as well as family
farming.
Alarcon stressed that the Senasa Mobile once again demonstrated its
importance to reach producers in areas of difficult access. This innovative
tool works for family agriculture producers access to register their
production lots in the RENSPA, and shipping to markets by issuing its
production Plant Electronic Transit Document (DTV-e).
Tuesday June 4, 2019
Resistencia (Chaco) - The missionary town of San Pedro, the National Health
Service and Food Quality (Senasa) trained ** * students of agricultural
schools and family farmers enrolled in the National Health Registry of
Agricultural Producers (RENSPA).
The training session on RENSPA, attended by 50 students from the Institute
of Agricultural Education No. 2 and the Superior Technician in
Bromatological Inspection of the School of Agricultural Family (EFA),
sought to teach the children or relatives of farmers family area procedures
for pre-registration in the registry.
Agents Senasa also reported Documents Electronic Plant Transits (DTV-e) and
for the movement of animals (DT-e) and recommended how to manipulate
agrochemicals, among other important features of Good Agricultural
Practices (GAP) while they explained zoonotic diseases, such as trichinosis
and echinococcosis.
Senasa veterinarian, Javier Alarcon said that "it was a positive approach
producers in the area, because they themselves work the land and have the
characteristic of being mixed productions. The importance lies in training
young people, families who have affinity with New Information Technologies
(ICTs) and know that the territories where they work must be registered
with the Senasa ".
On the other hand, the mobile Senasa was in the premises of the
Municipality of San Pedro where 35 family farmers enrolled in the RENSPA,
rehabilitated 3 transport and performed the closing DTVe and DTE.
The conference was organized jointly with the Secretariat for Family
Agriculture of the Nation (SSAF), the Municipality of San Pedro (Misiones)
and was attended by the Senasa, of referents of its National Directorate of
Plant Protection (DNPV) of the Commission RENSPA NEA regional Center and
its Management Information Technology regional (DTI), as well as family
farming.
Alarcon stressed that the Senasa Mobile once again demonstrated its
importance to reach producers in areas of difficult access. This innovative
tool works for family agriculture producers access to register their
production lots in the RENSPA, and shipping to markets by issuing its
production Plant Electronic Transit Document (DTV-e).