USDA PROPOSES SALMONELLA GUIDELINE FOR HOG SLAUGHTER FACILITIES

USDA Invites Comments on Salmonella Best Practices Guideline for Hog Slaughter Facilities

DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) issued TODAY a Notice of Availability and Opportunity for Comments on its Compliance Guideline for Controlling Salmonella in hog slaughter facilities.


The guidance provides information on best practices that may be applied at a hog slaughter facility to prevent, eliminate, or reduce levels of Salmonella on hogs at all stages of slaughter and dressing. This guideline will help hog slaughter establishments better comply with the relevant regulatory requirements.


FSIS invites interested persons to submit comments on this notice until March 7, 2014.

2016-05-31T19:42:22-07:00January 6th, 2014|

FDA WILL AGAIN REVISE FSMA LANGUAGE

FDA Revises Key Provisions of

Proposed FSMA Affecting Farmers

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced TODAY that they will propose revised rule language and open another comment period on two Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) rules, Produce Safety and Preventive Controls for Human Food. FDA anticipates rule language to be published by early summer 2014 to be followed by a public comment period.
The changes encompass key provisions associated with water quality standards and testing, standards for using raw manure and compost, certain requirements affecting mixed-used facilities, and procedures for withdrawing the qualified exemption for certain farms. Additional revisions may follow FDA’s initial review of the over 25,000 comments received on these two proposed food safety rules.

“Vermont Agency of Agriculture, Food, and Markets (VAAFM) is a strong advocate of food safety for both consumers and producers. It’s absolutely critical that the rules are written right to begin with.” said Secretary Chuck Ross. “We will closely examine the revised proposed rules from FDA to ensure that this second round best fits the community-based, diversified agriculture that is so essential to Vermont and New England.”

FSMA remains the most sweeping reform of our nation’s food safety laws in more than 70 years and was signed into law by President Obama on January 4, 2011. FSMA aims to ensure the U.S. food supply is safe by shifting the focus from responding to contamination to preventing it.

The Standards for the Growing, Harvesting, Packing, and Holding of Produce rule, published January 2013, proposes enforceable safety standards for the production and harvesting of produce on farms.

The Current Good Manufacturing Practices and Hazard Analysis and Risk-Based Preventive Controls for Human Food rule, published January 2013, would require makers of food to be sold in the United States, whether produced at a foreign- or domestic-based facility, to develop a formal plan for preventing food products from causing foodborne illness.

2016-05-31T19:42:22-07:00January 6th, 2014|

Could Calif. Dairy Climate Really be Improving?

A New Year…So What’s On The Agenda?



By Rob Vandenheuvel, General Manager of the Milk Producers Council



2013 is now officially in the books, and we have embarked on 2014. There seems to be a cautious optimism in the air, with dairy markets at historically strong levels and prices for some of the primary feed commodities – particularly corn – down significantly from recent highs. 

                                                                                     Photo: The Shelby Report


Of course, in an industry with markets as volatile as the dairy industry, we’ve seen this before, but for some reason, this time feels different. After five years of mostly struggles in the industry – particularly here in California – it seems that we are on the verge of “turning the page” and setting on a better course. What happens in the coming days and months will determine whether that actually happens.



Reports indicate that a Farm Bill is close to being completed, perhaps even this month. 

This has been several years in the making, but it appears that we are on the verge of fundamentally reforming our dairy safety net programs. Of course, it doesn’t solve every problem our industry faces, but it solves one of the biggest: providing dairy farmers – both large and small – with a meaningful option to protect against prolonged market downturns.



And if Congress can read through the propaganda constantly churned out by nation’s processors, who’s main goal in this debate has been to keep milk as cheap as possible, we may have a stand-by Market Stabilization Program that helps shorten those market downturns in the first place, which is ultimately the best outcome for our industry.



A Federal Milk Market Order in California appears to be moving forward at a rapid pace. 

Of course, it’s a lengthy process that will certainly not be completed in 2014, but nonetheless, after trying every method possible to get the much needed changes to the California system – whether through administrative hearings, legislation, or even a lawsuit – California dairy families appear to be very focused on going down this path to a Federal Order.



Producers certainly have questions about this process, many of those focused on how it will handle our State quota program or how the pooling rules will be different. While we don’t know all the answers yet, they are certainly all solvable issues, and I expect that the coming months will bring a lot of clarity to this process.


While those two items appear to be on the fast track in the near term, there are other issues that MPC and others will certainly be involved with as well.



It looks like Congress is planning to take a serious look at the nation’s corn-based ethanol policies. 

This is an issue that’s been brewing for years, and with a bipartisan Senate bill introduced late last year and a comparable House bill planned soon, the issue is poised for a serious discussion in 2014. Of course, given the impact this policy has had on feed commodity process, MPC and many others have been involved in this debate for years. 

But more recently, the ethanol policies have grown to a point where it is actually mandating a volume of ethanol that isn’t even feasible to blend with our nation’s fuel supply, given current market conditions. We saw preliminary action by EPA late last year to start correcting this problem, but it’s anticipated that Congress will debate/discuss more fundamental changes in the coming months.



Immigration, as in years past, continues to be on Congress’s agenda as well. 

Last year, we saw significant progress, with the Senate approving a bold, comprehensive plan that includes much needed changes for dairy and other agriculture. However, that effort has been stalled in the House of Representatives, where there seems to be political problems with taking up immigration in a comprehensive manner. They have been saying they prefer a piecemeal approach, dealing with the major immigration issues one-by-one. Given that it’s an election year, it’s tough to know whether a year from now we’ll have seen any progress, but this is certainly an important issue for dairy farmers around the country, and as such is a major priority for us all.



Finally, there is some increasing chatter about tax reform in Congress. 

As I wrote above, given that it’s an election year, I’m not sure how realistic the prospects are, and President Obama recently nominated the chief tax policy writer in the Senate – Sen. Max Baucus from Montana – to serve as the U.S. Ambassador to China. However, one issue that has come up as part of a potential tax reform package is the removal of the “cash-basis accounting” option for the largest farmers. As you all know, cash-basis accounting is a key component of the tax-planning methods used by U.S. farmers, so dairy and other agriculture interests will obviously be closely watching this debate.



While the items above would certainly keep any industry busy all year, we know that this is not an all-inclusive list. Whether it’s a California bill aimed at micro-managing the way farmers care for their animals, or helping to get ready for the implementation of Obamacare (at least the implementation on businesses; I’ve already been forced to get my individual Obamacare plan), there is never a dull moment in this industry. Let’s hope that 2014 brings continues strong dairy markets and at least the first two items above. 

It should go without saying that it’s a whole lot easier to tackle the other items on the agenda if we’ve at least got the tools to help your dairy maintain profitability long-term. And of course without sustained profitability, the other issues are moot anyway.


2016-05-31T19:42:22-07:00January 4th, 2014|

RAISIN INDUSTRY LOSES A LEADER

The Raisin Industry Mourns the Passing of Ernie Bedrosian
Linda Kay Abdulian, President/CEO, National Raisin Company issued the following message:
It is with great regret and sadness I inform you that early morning January 1st, Raisin Industry Icon, Family Patriarch and Co-Founder of National Raisin Company, Ernest Bedrosian passed away. 
As all of you know, Ernie was an exceptionally gifted leader whose boundless energy galvanized the Raisin Industry and led to so many accomplishments and contributions including the formation of the Raisin Bargaining Association.  Throughout his life, Ernie genuinely cared about the industry as a whole, from grower to handler to customer.  Uncle worked tirelessly to develop new markets and establish the California Raisin as the Premier Dried Fruit globally.  We all knew Ernie as a dynamic and charismatic person, who many called a “tiger” but whose work ethic benefitted us all. 
From the entire Bedrosian Family we thank you for your thoughts and prayers.  Funeral arrangements will be announced shortly.
Gary Schulz, President and General Manager California Raisin Marketing Board
2016-05-31T19:42:22-07:00January 4th, 2014|

Earl Williams Noted as a Uniter

California Cotton Ginners and Growers Associations Announce the Retirement of President/CEO Earl P. Williams

It was announced TODAY, that after an incredible career that has spanned two decades at the California Cotton Ginners and Growers Associations, Earl P. Williams has retired effective December 31st.  For more than twenty years Earl has seen many successes, not the least of which was achieving 100% membership in both the Ginners and Growers Associations on a voluntary basis.  

When Earl started at the Associations in 1993, only 60% of the cotton growers in the state were members and only 85% of the cotton gins were members.  Unheard of with organizations that aren’t mandatory check-off programs, the 100% membership in the two associations is a testament to the success the Associations have enjoyed under Earl’s leadership. 

Preparing and submitting numerous Section 18’s for critical crop protection chemicals, the passage of several industry related legislative bills (module truck axle weights, truck tractor/trailer type vehicles as implements of husbandry, etc.), getting the gins on agricultural rates in the PG&E and SCE territories, and the passage of the partial sales tax exemption for tractors, parts and fuel for agriculture are just a few of the critical highlights that occurred during his storied career.  

Earl had the uncanny ability to bring diverging opinions together and unite them towards a common goal. 


This characteristic was evidenced in the opening of the one variety law, and dealing with tough issues like sticky cotton, pima prep and seed coat fragments.  At a special event celebrating his retirement, Williams was recognized for his outstanding career with the first ever California Cotton Ginners and Growers Associations’ Lifetime Achievement Award! 

On behalf of the entire membership, staff and Boards of Directors of these Associations, we wish to thank Earl for all that he has done for the California Cotton Industry and wish him the very best in his future!   He will truly be missed!

Effective January 1, 2014, Executive Vice President Roger A. Isom will assume the duties of President/CEO of the California Cotton Ginners and Growers Associations. 

2016-05-31T19:42:22-07:00January 4th, 2014|

Bare Ground and Very Little Snow Found

First Snow Survey of 2014 Shows Dry Conditions California Braces for Possible Third Dry Year


SACRAMENTO – As California’s dry weather pushes into the new year, the Department of Water Resources (DWR) today announced that its first snow survey of the winter found more bare ground than snow.



Manual and electronic readings record the snowpack’s statewide water content at about 20 percent of average for this time of year. That is a mere 7 percent of the average April 1 measurement, when the snowpack normally is at its peak before melting into streams and reservoirs to provide a third of the water used by California’s cities and farms.



“While we hope conditions improve, we are fully mobilized to streamline water transfers and take every action possible to ease the effects of dry weather on farms, homes and businesses as we face a possible third consecutive dry year,” said DWR Director Mark Cowin. “And every Californian can help by making water conservation a daily habit.”



The last time California’s statewide snowpack was this dry was in 2012 when it also was 20 percent of the historical average. The readings today and in 2012 are the driest on record.



Today’s electronic readings indicate that water content in the northern mountains is 11 percent of normal for the date and 4 percent of the April 1 average. Electronic readings in the central Sierra show 21 percent of normal for the date and 8 percent of the April 1 average. The numbers for the southern Sierra are 30 percent of average for the date and 10 percent of the April 1 average.



In addition to the sparse snowpack, many areas of California ended calendar year 2013 with the lowest rainfall amounts on record. Normally one of California’s wettest spots with an average annual rainfall of nearly 100 inches, Gasquet Ranger Station in Del Norte County ended the year with only 43.46 inches. Sacramento, which normally gets about 18 inches, ended up with 5.74 inches of precipitation. And downtown Los Angeles, which since 1906 has averaged 14.74 inches of rain, ended the year with 3.4 inches, beating the previous low of 4.08 inches recorded in 1953.



DWR and cooperating agencies conduct manual snow surveys around the first of the month from January to May. The manual measurements supplement and check the accuracy of real-time electronic readings.

Results of today’s manual readings by DWR off Highway 50 near Echo Summit are as follows:

Location

Elevation

Snow Depth

Water Content

% of Long Term Average

Alpha

7,600 feet

7.9 inches

2 inches

15

Phillips Station

6,800 feet

9.3 inches

2.3 inches

20

Lyons Creek

6,700 feet

15.4 inches

3.6 inches

31

Tamarack Flat

6,500 feet

inches

inches

Missing


Historic Comparison

The average January 1 snowpack water content at Phillips Station is about 12 inches and the April 1 average 27.6 inches. Phillps had its lowest water content reading of 0.1 inch in 2012, in a snow depth of only 0.6 inches. On January 2 last year (2013) at Phillips there were 12.1 inches of water in 48.8 inches of snow. Besides 2012, the driest years at Phillips were 1987 (0.9 inches of snowpack water content), 1981 (2 inches), 1976 (2.7 inches) and 2000 (3 inches). 

Records at Phillips go back 50 years.

DWR currently estimates it will be able to deliver only 5 percent of the slightly more than 4 million acre-feet of State Water Project (SWP) water requested for calendar year 2014 by the 29 public agencies that collectively supply more than 25 million Californians and nearly a million acres of irrigated farmland. It is hoped the initial 5 percent delivery estimate – tied with calendar year 2010 for the lowest initial allocation ever — will increase as winter storms develop. The initial 2010 delivery estimate, made on the heels of the 2007-2009 drought, was eventually increased to 50 percent as winter storms developed.

The final SWP allocation for calendar year 2013 was 35 percent of the slightly more than 4 million acre-feet requested. In 2012, the final allocation was 65 percent. It was 80 percent in 2011, up dramatically from an initial allocation of 25 percent. The final allocation was 50 percent in 2010, 40 percent in 2009, 35 percent in 2008, and 60 percent in 2007. The last 100 percent allocation – difficult to achieve even in wet years because of Delta pumping restrictions to protect threatened and endangered fish – was in 2006.



DWR weather watchers note that it’s early in the season and this winter could still turn out wet. The concern, however, is that irrigation-dependent San Joaquin Valley farms and some other areas will be hard hit if we have another dry year without the cushion of reservoir storage that we had in calendar year 2013 due to the storms in late 2012 before California began sliding toward drought.



Lake Oroville in Butte County, the State Water Project’s (SWP) principal reservoir, today is at only 36 percent of its 3.5 million acre-foot capacity (57 percent of its historical average for the date). Shasta Lake north of Redding, California’s and the federal Central Valley Project’s (CVP) largest reservoir, is at 37 percent of its 4.5 million acre- foot capacity (57 percent of average for the date).



San Luis Reservoir, a critical south-of-Delta reservoir for both the SWP and CVP, is a mere 30 percent of its 2 million acre-foot capacity (43 percent of average for the date) due both to dry weather and Delta pumping restrictions last winter to protect salmon and Delta smelt. Delta water is pumped into the off-stream reservoir in winter and early spring for summer use in the Bay Area, San Joaquin Valley, Central Coast and Southern California.



The continuing dry weather prompted Director Cowin on December 13 to mobilize DWR’s drought management team “to offset potentially devastating impacts to citizen health, well-being and our economy.”

Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. has united DWR and other agencies in an Interagency Drought Task Force.



DWR and other agencies will streamline transfers of water from areas of relative abundance to areas of critical need, monitor water supply impacts in small rural communities whose groundwater sources are stressed by prolonged dry conditions, and take other steps to mitigate the effects of dry weather.


Electronic snowpack readings are available on the Internet at:

http://cdec.water.ca.gov/cdecapp/snowapp/sweq.action

Electronic reservoir readings may be found at:

http://cdec.water.ca.gov/cdecapp/resapp/getResGraphsMain.action

2016-05-31T19:42:23-07:00January 3rd, 2014|

BIG WATER RALLY JAN. 16TH AT STATE CAPITOL

Thousands Needed to Voice Immediate Solutions


California Ag Today urges everyone to attend the huge Water Rally and Press Conference 11 am Thursday, January 16th at the Capitol Steps.


Bus transportation will be available from points throughout the Valley.


For further information, please contact:

Manuel Cunha at (559) 251-8468 or

Mario Santoyo msantoyo1@verizon.net
California Ag Today will be there!



2016-05-31T19:42:23-07:00January 3rd, 2014|

FACTORS INFLUENCING AVOCADO FRUIT SET AND YIELD

Guest Lecture on Avocado Fruit Set and Yield Factors


Iñaki Hormaza, Professor, La Mayora Research Station (CSIC) Malaga, Spain will guest lecture about Factors Influencing Avocado Fruit Set and Yield on Jan. 13th and Jan. 14th. 

Iñaki’s research is applicable to California Avocado growers since it is important to know why certain flowers produce fruit and others do not.


Hormaza’s research has examined the role of starch (energy) on fruit set and yield, pollen viability, pollen tube growth and ovule viability. He is also conducting research looking at pollinizers, new varieties and rootstocks. 



Pre-registration is required by Friday, Jan. 10th.  To register, contact John Cornell at 
avocadoguy@gmail.com or (360) 550 1965.




To view the full invitation, please click here.




Lecture Times and Locations: 



Monday, January 13, 2014 
9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. 
Fallbrook Public Utility District (FPUD)990 E Mission Rd, Fallbrook, CA 92028 




Tuesday, January 14, 2014 
9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. 
University of California Cooperative Extension Office669 County Square Dr., Suite 100, Ventura CA 93003


This event is sponsored by: California Avocado Society, California Avocado Commission, Del Rey Avocado Co., Eco Farms, Hofshi Foundation, Index Fresh, University of California

2016-05-31T19:42:23-07:00January 3rd, 2014|

GRAPE MARKET INSIGHTS

Domestic Grape Market Challenges Imports

Produce industry veteran Rick Eastes continues to have great insight on the evolving grape market.

Availability of heavier late-season grapes from California in early January could create some marketing tension between domestic and imported grape supplies, Eastes believes.

There are many newer and later season varieties from California still in the marketplace and will be there for weeks.

The heavy late season grapes could be in the way of product coming from Chile and other areas in the Southern Hemisphere. Whether or not the U.S. supply will cause tension is not known.

Consumers can help by buying an extra bunch and taking them home to eat.
2016-05-31T19:42:23-07:00January 3rd, 2014|

California Ag News on Ag Crime

Ag Crime Alert

Image shows what Stolen Panels
look like.

Fence Panels Stolen in Yuba County

A Yuba County rancher has reported that 20 or more of his aluminum panels have been stolen. 

The panels were grabbed sometime last week in the Yuba Goldfields by Hammonton and Smartville Road.

If you have any information please contact the Yuba County Sheriff’s Department (530) 749-7777.

2016-05-31T19:42:23-07:00January 2nd, 2014|
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