Citrus Greening and Date Palm Seminars Being Held in Arizona and California

May 3rd, 2016

Upcoming events in both Arizona and California will focus on Asian Citrus Psyllid (ACP) status updates, quarantines and citrus greening.  Additionally, a Date Palm seminar focusing on invasive pests, disease and pesticides is being held in Arizona.

The University of Arizona, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, is sponsoring two citrus seminars in Arizona in May.  The first seminar — the Yuma County Citrus and Date Palm Seminar — will take place on Thursday, May 19, 2016, beginning at 9:00 a.m. at the University of Arizona Yuma Agriculture Center.  Morning sessions will provide updates on ACP/HLB in California, Arizona, Texas and Florida as well as upcoming federal regulations while afternoon sessions will concentrate on a variety of issues involving Date Palms.

VIEW YUMA COUNTY CITRUS AND DATE PALM SEMINAR ITINERARY

The University of Arizona’s second seminar will be held the next day on May 20, 2016, at 9:00 a.m. in Phoenix at the University of Arizona Maricopa County Cooperative Extension office. Like the Yuma seminar, the Maricopa County Citrus Seminar will focus on ACP/HLB issues and will break after lunch. The seminar will NOT include sessions on Date Palm issues.       

VIEW MARICOPA COUNTY CITRUS SEMINAR ITINERARY

VIEW THE LATEST MAP WITH THE DISTRIBUTION OF ACP IN THE REGION

Lunch is included at both events. Please RSVP to Dr. Glenn Wright at 928-782-5876 so an accurate lunch count can be obtained.

In California, the Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) has scheduled scoping meetings to discuss proposals for changes to the ACP and HLB regulations. The meetings will cover changes regarding citrus commodities and nursery stock.

Read our previous Spotlight story for more information and for meeting details starting on May 6, 2016, in Tulare.

Inspection Fees for Terminal Market Inspections to See First Rate Increase in 10 Years

May 10th, 2016

The Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has announced an increase for fees in 2016 for the Terminal Market Inspection Program. The increase follows the agency’s publication of a final rule in the Federal Register in 2014 for calculating fees charged by AMS for user-funded programs. The Program has not seen a fee increase since 2007. According to the announcement, fees for some inspection services will increase by 10 percent effective October 1, 2016.

The Specialty Crops Inspection Division (SCI) provides voluntary grading, inspection and certification services that support the marketing of U.S. specialty crops and related products. Western Growers fully supports the inspection services offered by SCI, as they are valuable tool in determining the outcome of disputes under the Perishable Agricultural Commodities Act (PACA).

To emphasize our support for the inspection services and its importance to our members, Western Growers will be submitting comments to the USDA. Specifically, the comments will communicate the continued need for high-quality inspections as well as the need to ensure that USDA inspection offices throughout the country be properly manned to handle the inspection requests.    

Brown Takes Executive Action to Make Conservation a “Way of Life” in California

May 10th, 2016

Yesterday, Governor Jerry Brown issued an Executive Order to establish long-tern conservation measures for the state in anticipation of enduring drought conditions. The Governor built on the temporary statewide emergency water restrictions previously established by requiring “permanent monthly water use reporting, new permanent water use standards in California communities and bans on clearly wasteful practices such as hosing off sidewalks, driveways and other hardscapes.”

The Executive Order focuses on the following areas:

  • Using Water More Wisely
  • Eliminating Water Waste
  • Strengthening Local Drought Resilience
  • Improving Agricultural Water Use Efficiency and Drought Planning

According to the Governor’s press release, “California droughts are expected to be more frequent and persistent, as warmer winter temperatures driven by climate change reduce water held in the Sierra Nevada snowpack and result in drier soil conditions. Recognizing these new conditions, the executive order directs permanent changes to use water more wisely and efficiently, and prepare for more frequent, persistent periods of limited supply.”

View the Governor’s Full Press Release 

Agencies Announce WG Backed Streamlining Measures to Improve H-2A Processing Issues

May 10th, 2016

Yesterday, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) and the U.S. Department of State (DOS) announced the launch of two Western Growers’ promoted initiatives designed to streamline and bring bureaucratic efficiencies to the H-2A application process. The processing changes come after continued engagement by WG staff and less than a month after WG Chairman Larry Cox led a delegation of board members to Washington, D.C. to present officials from USCIS, DOS and the Department of Labor (DOL) with their concerns about the program and the specific fixes each agency could undertake to prevent a processing calamity ahead of the height of the harvest season later this year.    

Congress’ inability and unwillingness to move immigration reform have forced farmers to use the H-2A Program, a program that has historically seen little use, particularly in California. Although it is the only federal program that allows farmers to hire a legal workforce to harvest their crops, the program is well known to be slow, inefficient, bureaucratic and costly.  

While in Washington, D.C. for the Association’s Annual Board Fly-in, WG President and CEO Tom Nassif heralded the announcements as progress and good start to overhauling the program. “Yesterday’s announcements are welcome news for our members who are now being forced to rely on the H-2A Program. Coincidentally, the announcements come at a time while our members are in our nation’s capital to engage with members of Congress, their staffs and agency officials on issues of importance to them and their businesses. High on the list of those issues is simplifying the H-2A Program. Just last month, our Chairman and members of our board met with officials from each of the processing agencies to hear our concerns and solutions. We greatly appreciated their willingness to do so and are very pleased that they heard us. Western Growers looks forward to continued engagement with USCIS, DOS and the U.S. Department of Labor as we continue to press them on implementing our other recommended streamlining measures so that our farmers can continue to provide citizens of the U.S. and the world with the freshest and best produce on the planet.”   

The first announcement involves the launch of the USCIS/DOS e-Approval for Form I-129 (Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker) for the H-2A (temporary agricultural worker) classification. The new electronic process will allow USCIS to send approval information for H-2A petitions to DOS by the end of the next business day. DOS will accept this electronic information in place of a Form I-797 approval notice allowing consular posts to proceed with interviews and processing H-2A applications. The new process will begin on Wednesday, May 11, 2016. View the full announcement HERE.

Coinciding with the launch of USCIS/DOS e-Approval, USCIS will begin using pre-paid mailers provided by petitioners to send out receipt notices for H-2A (temporary agricultural worker) petitions starting on Wednesday, May 11, 2016. The agencies revised how they process pre-paid mailers for H-2A petitions and communicate approvals with one another in recognition of stakeholder interest in expediting the delivery of receipt notices and processing of petitions for the very time-sensitive H-2A classification. This is a change from standard processing at USCIS service centers, which normally use pre-paid mailers only for final decision notices. View the full announcement and the details of the action HERE.

For more information, contact Jason Resnick at (949) 885-2253. 

Appeals Court Reverses & Remands Gerawan Public Access Case Back to Fresno Superior Court

May 12th, 2016

A “Public Access” case filed in Fresno Superior Court filed by Gerawan Farming, Inc. has been ruled on by the 5th District Court of Appeal in favor of Gerawan. The case stems from a farm worker, Lupe Garcia — a Gerawan employee — being denied access to a mediation hearing between his employer and the Agriculture Labor Relations Board (ALRB) in 2013. The two sides were meeting as part of the state’s mandatory mediation and conciliation process to discuss an employee contract. Garcia had requested to sit in on the hearing, but was denied access by the ALRB.  The Agency later stated that such meetings are not public and Garcia did not have a right to be present.    

Gerawan filed suit in Fresno Superior Court stating that Garcia had the right under the federal and state constitutions to be part of the meeting. The Superior Court ruled against Gerawan and also stated that it did not have the jurisdiction to rule on such a case. However, last week’s Appelate Court decision reversed the lower court’s ruling “and remanded the case back to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with” the opinion it rendered.   

Western Growers has been supportive of efforts by Gerawan and its employees to force the ALRB to count votes cast as a result of an election held to decertify the UFW from representing them. The company and its farm workers allege that the union lost its right to represent workers when it abandoned them for almost 20 years. The appellate court’s decision against the ALRB comes on the heels of the Board’s decision to toss out the workers’ petition to decertify the union and void the election; a decision also to be reviewed by the court of appeal. 

For more information, contact Jason Resnick at (949) 885-2253.     

Senate Committee Holds Hearing on Western Drought Legislation

May 17th, 2016

Today the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee held a hearing on a package of Western water bills, demonstrating that Chairwoman Lisa Murkowski [R-AK] is still dedicated to identifying potential solutions to the ongoing drought crisis.

The group of bills heard by the Water and Power Subcommittee includes the revised California water legislation introduced by Senator Dianne Feinstein [D-CA] in February, as well as bills introduced by Senators Cory Gardner [R-CO], Harry Reid [D-NV] and Jeff Flake [R-AZ].

Together, the bills represent a bipartisan, region-wide effort that addresses the needs of diverse stakeholders throughout the West. Included in the legislative package are components critical to helping the western states become more resilient in the face the current and future droughts, such as:

  • Revising the flawed policies restricting water capture and storage in California
  • Streamlining new surface water storage facilities
  • More creative financing for water infrastructure projects
  • Greater flexibility for states and water agencies to manage their water supplies

Western Growers issued a press statement praising the Committee for staying engaged on the issue and encouraging Members to quickly move these bills to mark up and, ultimately, to the floor for a vote by the full Senate.

The House of Representatives passed their version of drought relief legislation, authored by David Valadao [CA-21], in July of last year. If the Senate passes its own bill, negotiators from both chambers will be required to meet in conference to resolve the disagreements between the two work products.

To avoid the distractions of the upcoming presidential elections, Western Growers pushed for immediate Senate action, noting that failure to move on a bill would condemn the West to another year of increasing water uncertainty with potentially irreparable environmental and human harm.

For more information, contact Dennis Nuxoll at (202) 296-0191.

WG Hits Back at LA Times’ Skelton Piece Attacking Ag

May 19th, 2016

The LA Times’ George Skelton recently wrote a tired column deriding corporate agriculture’s use of water and parroting the talking points of environmental activist groups like the Natural Resources Defense Council. Skelton’s attack on nut and fruit tree growers prompted a swift and blistering attack from Western Growers. The rebuttal, written by WGs’ Director of Strategic Planning and Communications Cory Lunde, was widely circulated on social media channels, including to Mr. Skelton and the LA Times.

See how Western Growers is fervently defending our members and READ THE PIECE HERE.

DOL Announces Final Rule on FLSA White Collar Exemptions

May 19th, 2016

On May 18, 2016, President Obama and Labor Secretary Perez announced the publication of the Department of Labor’s final rule updating the overtime regulations under the Fair Labor Standards Act. The Final Rule focuses primarily on updating the salary and compensation levels needed for Executive, Administrative and Professional workers to be considered exempt from overtime requirements (i.e., the so-called “white collar exemptions”). The changes will go into effect on December 1, 2016, with future automatic increases to occur every three years, beginning January 1, 2020.

Key Changes of the Final Rule:

  • Sets the minimum salary level to claim the white collar exemption at $913 per week or $47,476 annually.
  • Sets the total annual compensation requirement for highly compensated employees (HCE’s) subject to a minimal duties test to $134,004, of which $913 per week must be paid on a salary basis. (Note that California does not have an exemption for HCE’s.)
  • Establishes a mechanism for automatically increasing the salary and compensation levels every three years to maintain the levels at the 40th percentile of full-time non-hourly workers in the region of the country where the salary level is lowest. For HCE’s, the base salary will be based on the 90th percentile of full-time non-hourly workers nationally.
  • Amends the salary basis test to allow employers to use nondiscretionary bonuses and incentive payments (including commissions) to satisfy up to 10 percent of the new standard salary level.

These rules will impact many California employees. Under California law, an employee is generally exempt from overtime if s/he earns at least double the state minimum wage for full-time employment. This is currently $800 per week ($41,600 annually), increasing to $880 per week ($45,760 annually) on January 1, 2017, when the minimum wage increases. Because the federal minimum has been considerably lower for a long time, the federal minimum has never been relevant for California employers, who have always needed to satisfy the more stringent California requirement. Under the new federal rule, California employers, and indeed all employers across the country, will have to pay anyone who earns less than $913 per week ($47,476 annually) overtime pay, unless they work in “agriculture.” 

“Agricultural” employees, unless covered by very limited exemptions, are subject to the minimum wage portion of the FLSA, but are exempt from the overtime provisions of the FLSA, thus the new rule won’t have an effect on “agricultural” employees. However, if an employee performs non-agricultural work at any time during the week, the exemption from overtime is void and the employee must be paid overtime for any hours over forty.

The Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on the overtime rule first appeared in the Federal Register last July. The DOL received over 270,000 comments in response from stakeholders on all sides. In response to those comments, the base salary level in the Final Rule is lower than the $970 per week ($50,440 per year) originally proposed. The proposed rule also called for annual automatic increase, while the Final Rule adjusts the salary every three years.

Despite these somewhat favorable changes, House and Senate Republicans have introduced legislation intended to halt the rule and send DOL back to the drawing board, but only after it has conducted an economic impact analysis, and issues a rule that comports with that analysis. However, this is a partisan bill that would surely be vetoed by any current or future Democratic president. Thus, employers should plan on the new rules going into effect as scheduled unless they hear otherwise.

Regardless of whether the new regulations go into effect or not, the new rule presents employers with a unique opportunity to audit employee classifications and make changes if necessary. For those employees who may be improperly classified as exempt from overtime, employers may consider changing their classifications to non-exempt referencing the DOL’s new regulations as the impetus for the change, which could potentially minimize any legal liability. Any such change should be reviewed with employment counsel.

Look for updates and announcements on an upcoming webinar in future editions of Western Growers Spotlight.

For further information, contact WG Vice President and General Counsel, Jason Resnick at (949) 885-2253.

Approved Emergency Groundwater Regulations Go into Effect in June

May 19th, 2016

Yesterday, the California Department of Water Resources (DWR) sent out a notification to stakeholders announcing the California Water Commission approved emergency groundwater regulations outlined in the historic Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA).

The regulations will be filed with the Office of Administrative Law (OAL) by June 1, 2016.  OAL then has 10 days in which to review and approve the emergency rulemaking file, after which it files the regulations with the Secretary of State’s Office. The regulations are effective once filed with the Secretary of State’s Office.

The regulations will post HERE when in effect.

Read the Department’s Full Release

For more information on SGMA, contact Gail Delihant at (916) 466-1435. 

WG Reiterates Support of TPP Following Trade Commission’s Positive Impact Analysis

May 19th, 2016

Yesterday, the International Trade Commission (ITC) released an analysis of the likely impact of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) agreement on the U.S. economy. The release prompted Western Growers’ President and CEO Tom Nassif to issue a statement reiterating our support for the trade deal which would achieve a higher level of fairness between American farmers and their TPP trading partners through tariff reductions and potentially more favorable Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) measures.

READ NASSIF’S FULL STATEMENT

For more information, contact Ken Barbic at (202) 296-0191.

 

WSJ Publishes Nassif Op-Ed on New Immigration Reform Approach

May 20th, 2016

Western Growers President & CEO Tom Nassif was published in this morning’s edition of the Wall Street Journal.

In his op-ed titled, “Why Governors Need an Immigration Plan,” Nassif introduces a novel plan for achieving real movement on immigration reform: “Who can break the gridlock and establish genuine bipartisan consensus?

Who can get Congress to finally embrace a reasonable and defensible compromise on immigration? I believe the time has come to look to current and former state governors as potential arbiters of this crisis.”

Click here to read the op-ed and find out why and how Nassif believes a Governor’s Immigration Reform Bill could serve as a template for a new effort in Washington.

More Progress Made on Efficiency Requests for H-2A Applications

May 24th, 2016

On May 20, 2016, the Employment and Training Administration (ETA) of the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) issued a notice announcing it had revised the H-2A Appendix A form which eliminates the requirement for the employer and agent to obtain the “wet signature” on their special blue paper. 

Since this requirement was imposed several years ago, it has added days of delay to an H-2A process already fraught with delay. WG staff and select Board Members have asked DOL for the elimination of the requirement in an effort to achieve reasonable streamlining of the H-2A program. We are pleased that the department heard us and acted on our request. This will easily shave a few days off the process or the expense of same day air travel to get the form signed.

We will continue to press the three federal processing agencies with requests that will improve the efficiency and handling of H-2A applications by our members.

See our PRESS RELEASE on other recently announced efficiencies by processing agencies and our most recent Spotlight story on this topic. For a breakdown of WG H-2A activity, check out: Western Growers’ Leadership in H-2A document.

For more information, please contact Jason Resnick at (949) 885-2253.   

Western Growers Asks Feinstein to Reconsider Her Position on Ag Overtime Bill

May 24th, 2016

Late last week, California Senator Dianne Feinstein unexpectedly issued a letter of support to Speaker Anthony Rendon for AB 2757, a UFW-sponsored farmworker bill that would change the overtime rules for agriculture.

In response, Western Growers President and CEO Tom Nassif sent a letter to the senator asking her to reconsider her position after detailing the substantial regulatory burdens already placed on California farmers, especially in the wake of the $15/hour minimum wage bill recently signed into law.

Nassif followed the letter to Feinstein with an e-blast to members asking them to contact her and register their displeasure with her position on the bill.  

In early April, Western Growers initiated an advocacy campaign to kill the bill in the California Assembly asking members to contact their assembly members to tell them to vote ‘NO’ on AB 2757. We continue to urge our membership to contact their assembly members expressing their opposition to the bill.

For more information, contact Matthew Allen at (916) 446-1435. 

Water Education Foundation to Hold Free Drought Briefing on June 1 in Fresno

May 24th, 2016

The Water Education Foundation is offering a free one–day briefing on June 1, 2016, in Fresno for anyone interested in understanding how San Joaquin Valley groundwater conditions have responded to the multi-year drought and to learn more about what actions are being taken towards sustainable groundwater management.

Topics to be discussed include:

  • Hydrologic conditions and drought status
  • San Joaquin Valley groundwater conditions and status of Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA) implementation
  • Monitoring valley land subsidence with remote sensing
  • Beginning SGMA implementation – the local perspective
  • Private residential wells and drought

Event Info
Water Year 2016: San Joaquin Valley Groundwater Conditions Briefing
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
Alice Peters Auditorium (PB 191)
University Business Center
Fresno State University
Fresno, California

Check-in/registration begins at 9:30 a.m. Complimentary coffee will be served.

The program runs from 10 a.m. to noon and from 1:30 to 3 p.m. Lunch is on your own.

For more information and to register, CLICK HERE.

House Approves Valadao Drought Bill as Amendment to Senate-passed Energy Bill

May 26th, 2016

Yesterday, the House approved an amendment to an energy bill that includes drought relief legislation introduced by California Congressman David Valadao (CA-21).

The inclusion of the amendment in the previously passed Senate energy bill, the Energy Policy Modernization Act of 2016 (S. 2012), provides impetus for discussions on drought related matters, particularly for California, but also for a multitude of several other Western states with critical drought related priorities. 

In response, Western Growers President and CEO Tom Nassif, issued a statement commending the House for including the amendment in the bill and encouraged Western state senators to engage their House counterparts “in good faith” to find an acceptable compromise that all parties can agree to. 

Read Nassif’s Full Statement

For more information, contact Dennis Nuxoll at (202) 296-0191.    

Western Growers Joins Amicus Brief in Challenge to MMC before State Supreme Court

May 26th, 2016

Western Growers, along with five other organizations representing agriculture and the general business community, has filed an amicus brief supporting Gerawan Farming Company’s challenge of California’s “mandatory mediation and conciliation process.”

Gerawan successfully challenged the MMC provision of the Agricultural Labor Relations Act in the California court of appeal on constitutional grounds. That ruling is now on appeal to the California Supreme Court.

Unique in the nation, the MMC provision compels agricultural employers and their employees into collective bargaining agreements, the terms of which are dictated by a “mediator.”

MMC, which is referred to throughout the brief as the “Compulsion Regime,” is unconstitutional for two reasons, according to the brief:

First, it imposes “mini-labor codes” to govern the relations of individual employers and their employees’ unions. It doesn’t provide any safeguard to ensure that similarly situated employers or unions will be treated similarly. It allows mediators to wield legislative authority irrationally and arbitrarily. It therefore denies affected parties the equal protection of the laws, in violation of the U.S. and California Constitutions.

Second, the compulsion regime delegates substantial legislative authority to private-party mediators. It doesn’t provide these mediators with any goal or purpose that they must achieve in drafting collective bargaining agreements and fails to establish any adequate safeguards against the abusive exercise of the power delegated. The compulsion regime therefore violates the non-delegation doctrine—delegating legislative powers to an executive agency—and the separation of powers.

The amicus brief was drafted by Damien Schiff at Pacific Legal Foundation. For more information, contact Jason Resnick at (949) 885-2253.

PRESS RELEASE: U.S. District Court Grants Western Growers’ Amicus Status in Organic Compost Case

May 4th, 2016

IRVINE, Calif. (May 3, 2016) – Today, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California granted Western Growers amicus status in a lawsuit challenging the National Organic Program’s (NOP) Guidance 5016: The Allowance of Green Waste in Organic Production Systems.

In this lawsuit, the plaintiffs – Center for Environmental Health, Center for Food Safety, and Beyond Pesticides – are seeking to invalidate the Guidance on procedural grounds but argue it is flawed because it does not require that all compost used on organic farms is proved – by analytical testing – to be free of all disallowed synthetic substances.  The current Guidance protects certified organic farmers when organic compost contains incidental residues of prohibited substances that the farmer did not cause.  

The truth is, since the inception of the federal organic program, USDA has recognized compost containing de minimis levels of chemical residues is nearly unavoidable. Under the USDA’s Guidance, compost is allowed on organic farms provided its use does not contribute to contamination of soil, crops or water. This is consistent with organic farming practices long before the federal government got involved. It recognizes there is no analytical testing that can confirm the absence of all disallowed chemical substances, and the cost of trying to conduct such testing would be prohibitive and could render organic production economically infeasible. 

Western Growers asked the court to consider the impact of plaintiffs “zero tolerance” approach on organic farmers, compost manufacturers and consumers before agreeing to invalidate the Guidance. The court granted Western Growers’ motion to appear in the case to provide a perspective on the fairness and legal propriety of any final remedy.

A major issue facing the court is whether a procedural flaw would justify eliminating the protection organic farmers have always had from lawsuits claiming their compost must be free of every synthetic substance used in conventional agriculture and grounds maintenance. Plaintiffs’ apparent preference for lawsuits would expose nearly every single organic farmer to significant and unknown financial liability.

The Organic Trade Association and California Certified Organic Farmers have jointly requested authorization to join the case and to join the arguments submitted by Western Growers. The court said: “[G]iven the importance of the issue before the Court, the Court is inclined to allow the Organic Trade Association and the California Certified Organic Farmers to appear and submit their proposed declarations.” We welcome their support.

About Western Growers:
Founded in 1926, Western Growers represents local and regional family farmers growing fresh produce in Arizona, California and Colorado. Our members and their workers provide half the nation’s fresh fruits, vegetables and tree nuts, including nearly half of America’s fresh organic produce. For generations we have provided variety and healthy choices to consumers. Connect with and learn more about Western Growers on our Twitter and Facebook.

###

PRESS RELEASE — Western Growers Applauds USCIS & State Department on Streamlining H-2A Application Process

May 10th, 2016

IRVINE, Calif. (May 10, 2016) — While in Washington, D.C. for the Association’s Annual Board Fly-in, Western Growers President and CEO Tom Nassif heralded the announcements made by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) and the U.S. Department of State (DOS) to streamline the H-2A application process:

“Yesterday’s announcements are welcome news for our members who are now being forced to rely on the H-2A Program. Coincidentally, the announcements come at a time while our members are in our nation’s capital to engage with members of Congress, their staffs and agency officials on issues of importance to them and their businesses. High on the list of those issues is simplifying the H-2A Program. Just last month, our Chairman and members of our board met with officials from each of the processing agencies to hear our concerns and solutions. We greatly appreciated their willingness to do so and are very pleased that they heard us. Western Growers looks forward to continued engagement with USCIS, DOS and the U.S. Department of Labor as we continue to press them on implementing our other recommended streamlining measures so that our farmers can continue to provide citizens of the U.S. and the world with the freshest and best produce on the planet.”   

Agency announcements:

https://www.uscis.gov/news/alerts/uscis-and-department-state-launch-e-approval-h-2a-petitions

https://www.uscis.gov/news/alerts/uscis-will-now-use-pre-paid-mailers-send-h-2a-receipt-notices

About Western Growers:
Founded in 1926, Western Growers represents local and regional family farmers growing fresh produce in Arizona, California and Colorado. Our members and their workers provide half the nation’s fresh fruits, vegetables and tree nuts, including nearly half of America’s fresh organic produce. For generations we have provided variety and healthy choices to consumers. Connect with and learn more about Western Growers on our Twitter and Facebook.

###

PRESS RELEASE: Western Growers Encourages Senate Committee to Act on Western Water Bill

May 17th, 2016

IRVINE, Calif. (May 17, 2016) — Statement by Western Growers President and CEO Tom Nassif encouraging the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee to move to mark-up of Western drought legislation:

“We are pleased that the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee remains committed to resolving the short- and long-term challenges related to the ongoing drought facing the Western United States. The five Western water bills considered today by the Senate Water and Power Subcommittee represent welcomed progress toward the goal of bringing a final product to the Senate floor.

While we support the California water package introduced by Senator Dianne Feinstein [D-CA], we recognize that success is dependent on a bipartisan, regional effort that addresses the needs of diverse stakeholders throughout the West.

In addition to revising the flawed policies restricting water capture and storage in California, we are interested in a legislative solution that provides for the streamlining of new surface water storage facilities, more creative financing of water infrastructure projects and greater flexibility for states and water agencies to manage their water supplies – elements of which are included in several of the bills heard today by the Water and Power Subcommittee.

However, today’s hearings must be viewed by our Senate leaders as an intermediate – not final – step in the process. We encourage the Committee Members to quickly clear a path for these bills so they can be marked up and passed along for consideration by the full Senate. The House has already done their part. It is time to bring them a bill that can be negotiated in conference.

To avoid the distractions of the upcoming presidential election, Senate action on Western drought legislation must happen now. There is no alternative. Either our Senators help ensure the West is resilient enough to withstand future droughts, or they risk condemning the region to another year of increasingly uncertain water supplies with potentially irreparable environmental and human harm.

About Western Growers:
Founded in 1926, Western Growers represents local and regional family farmers growing fresh produce in Arizona, California and Colorado. Our members and their workers provide half the nation’s fresh fruits, vegetables and tree nuts, including nearly half of America’s fresh organic produce. For generations we have provided variety and healthy choices to consumers. Connect with and learn more about Western Growers on our Twitter and Facebook.

###

PRESS STATEMENT: WESTERN GROWERS REITERATES SUPPORT FOR TRANS-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT

May 19th, 2016

IRVINE, Calif. (May 19, 2016) — Statement by Western Growers President and CEO Tom Nassif reiterating support for the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) agreement following the release of the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) analysis of its likely impact on the U.S. economy:

“The ITC report released yesterday confirms that the recently-concluded TPP agreement will be a net positive for the American economy, including the fresh produce industry. If enacted, the TPP agreement will increase fruit, vegetable and tree nut exports by nearly $1 billion, or 8.3 percent. Expanded opportunities to access the Vietnamese and Japanese markets will drive the majority of this growth.

Currently, the U.S. fresh produce industry has a $6 billion balance of trade deficit with the TPP partner countries. By implementing significant tariff reductions for fruits, vegetables and tree nuts – one of the major barriers to foreign markets – the agreement will achieve greater (though not complete) fairness between American farmers and their TPP trading partners.

Even with these tariff reductions, the ITC report notes that longstanding Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) measures may still function as a barrier for American farming companies seeking to enter TPP markets. While we appreciate the beneficial steps taken in the agreement, it is critical that the TPP partners continue moving forward toward a more scientifically-based and consistently-applied SPS system. Indeed, we expect that the U.S. government will need to work deliberately and diligently to ensure the new SPS provisions are being complied with after the TPP agreement is ratified.

Farming is a business filled with risk, one dependent on the weather and made worse this year by the ongoing drought in the western United States. Exporting products to eager foreign markets allow farmers to offset some of the inherent risks they face, and may be the difference between profits and losses in many years.

The TPP agreement is a positive step in the right direction. We encourage our Congressional leaders to quickly move TPP to a vote so that American businesses in all sectors may realize the benefits our trade representatives worked so hard to secure. This deal, negotiated in good faith, must not be allowed to get caught up in the politics of the presidential campaign.”

About Western Growers:
Founded in 1926, Western Growers represents local and regional family farmers growing fresh produce in Arizona, California and Colorado. Our members and their workers provide half the nation’s fresh fruits, vegetables and tree nuts, including nearly half of America’s fresh organic produce. For generations we have provided variety and healthy choices to consumers. Connect with and learn more about Western Growers on our Twitter and Facebook.

###