February 26, 2026

Skills training to get tractor-ready

By Joseph Borg, Chairman, CANEGROWERS Mackay

Meeting the seasonal labour demands of the sugarcane harvest is a challenge every year.

It’s one to which CANEGROWERS Mackay has been gamely stepping up for almost two decades, delivering exciting, highly practical training courses each May, that recruits new workers from all walks of life behind the wheel of a haulout tractor and familiar with harvest machinery and activities.

CANEGROWERS Mackay is excited to announce that its highly successful industry skills development program – the annual Haulout Driver Training – has been once again funded by the Queensland Government through the Skilling Queenslanders for Work initiative, under its Community Work Skills program.

Registrations have opened for Haulout Driver Training and if you or anyone you know are interested, please contact Mackay Canegrowers as soon as possible to submit your expressions of interest. We have been running these on-farm courses for almost 20 years. For most of that time, it has been funded through the Queensland Government, for which we are very thankful.

This ongoing support is recognition of the immense value to the sugar industry in skilling twenty new harvest workers every year, ensuring that over the four days of the course they have the opportunity to get behind the wheel of haulout vehicles alongside highly experienced grower trainers, learn the basic skills of driving, harvest procedures and most importantly, safety.

It was positive to have our local politicians Member for Whitsunday, Minister for Families, Seniors and Disability Services Amanda Camm, and Member for Mirani Glen Kelly attend our media launch and to personally congratulate Mackay Canegrowers. Ms Camm said that programs like this gave real pathways to employment for jobseekers, adding: “Our sugar industry is the backbone of many regional communities, and initiatives like Skilling Queenslanders for Work are helping ensure we have the skilled local workforce needed for the future.”

Mr Kelly has offered great support to the local industry, and said: “On-farm training, practical experience and strong safety culture are the bedrock of primary industries across Queensland, and programs like this are helping set people up with the real skills employers are looking for.”

Thanks to the Skilling Queenslanders for Work funding, there is no charge to participants, with wrap-around training extending to support to help participants obtain work in the industry with growers and contract harvesters actively seeking staff.

It’s a four-day boot camp with real-life grower trainers, getting behind the wheel of tractors. On top of that, we have an accredited trainer-assessor on-site, taking the trainees through RTO-backed modules towards the Cert II Agriculture. It’s a great starting point for people wanting to work in ag, and particularly the sugarcane harvest. To deliver training in 2026, Mackay Canegrowers is working with RTO Ausintec Academy Pty Ltd, and local accredited Trainer Assessor Earl Nielsen, who has successfully delivered the courses modules in the past and has strong cane industry experience.  

This is just one of the many initiatives that Mackay Canegrowers is putting into practice to help ease the labour shortage which the sugar industry is facing.  As well as this, advertising locally, interstate and even overseas has been utilised in the past to attempt to fill all the vacancies across the canefields of the wider Mackay-Plane Creek district.  As well as filling the vacancies, it gives a wide demographic of participants the opportunity to re-skill and make a start in an industry which they may not otherwise have to opportunity –or the incentive – to enter into, leading to potentially long associations with sugarcane growers and harvesters, and explore new career opportunities and pathways.

Head to www.mackaycanegrowers.com.au to find out more!