Release
PRESS ADVISORY
CONTACT: Brise
Tencer or Bob Scowcroft, 831-426-6606
Organic
Programs See Small Victories
in Difficult Fiscal Year
SANTA CRUZ,
Calif. (December 20, 2004) - The 2005 Appropriations Omnibus
bill, signed by President Bush on Dec. 8, provides key organic agriculture
programs with funding levels equal to amounts appropriated in 2004.
Organic advocates are calling these funding measures a small victory
during a difficult fiscal year, in which many substantial cuts have
been made to federal programs. “Level
funding for these programs this year is evidence that Congress is
increasingly aware of the value of organic farming to both farmers
and consumers,” said Brise Tencer of the Organic Farming Research
Foundation (OFRF).
Congress
allocates money annually to the U.S. Department of Agriculture and
other federal programs, but only in recent years has funding been
directed specifically to organic farming research programs. OFRF
and allies on Capitol Hill worked hard over the past 10 months to
secure renewal of these funds. The Organic Caucus, a bipartisan
group of 35 members of the U.S. House of Representatives that formed
in 2001, worked particularly closely with OFRF to protect this funding.
“Organic farming
offers many opportunities for current and future farmers as more
Americans want organically produced products,” said Organic
Caucus member Congressman Virgil Goode, R-Va., who serves on the
House Agriculture Appropriations subcommittee.
Organic provisions
in the $388.4 billion Fiscal 2005 omnibus bill included $2 million
for Organic Standards (the National Organic Program at the USDA),
$1.89 million for the Organic Transitions research grant program,
and $500,000 for collecting data on the scale and growth of organic
agriculture in the U.S.
"Organic
farming is becoming more widespread every year, and it's critical
that we support that growth by funding organic programs," said Congressman
Sam Farr, D-Calif., a strong Congressional advocate for organics
standards.
Thanks
to the help of Representative Farr and California Sen. Dianne Feinstein,
OFRF was able to secure an additional $125,000 for expanded research
at the USDA Agricultural Research Service (ARS) station in Salinas, Calif., the only ARS research station with a dedicated
organic research scientist.
"The increased
funding to the Organic Minor Crops project at Salinas places dollars
where they can be most effective," said Jim McCreight, Research
Director at ARS-Salinas. Dr. Eric Brennan's organic research (the
focus of the additional funding) emphasizes cover cropping systems
and crop rotations for organic strawberry and vegetable producers
in California's
central coast.
While some additional
funding requests made by OFRF for USDA organic programs were not
appropriated, Congress included language that directs the USDA’s
Agriculture Research Service to better serve organic producers and
consumers:
“The
Committee encourages ARS, when appropriate, to direct research resources
in a manner that reflects the growing interest in organic production
and the need to provide enhanced research for this growing organic
sector.”
The Organic Farming
Research Foundation was founded in 1990 to foster the improvement
and widespread adoption of organic farming practices. To that end,
our mission is to sponsor research related to organic farming; to
disseminate research results to organic farmers and to growers interested
in adopting organic production systems; and to educate the public
and decision makers about organic farming issues.
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