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Specialty Crops. Tom Bewick. Outline. Definition Other USDA programs SCRI/CDRE Questions. Specialty crops are defined as: fruits and vegetables, tree nuts, dried fruits, horticulture and nursery crops (including floriculture). Agricultural Marketing Service.
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Specialty Crops Tom Bewick
Outline • Definition • Other USDA programs • SCRI/CDRE • Questions
Specialty crops are defined as: fruits and vegetables, tree nuts, dried fruits, horticulture and nursery crops (including floriculture)
Agricultural Marketing Service • Specialty Crop Block Grant Program • Over $63.2 million • Allocated to State Dept. of Ag on formula that considers acreage and value • State contacts and application due dates can be found at www.ams.usda.gov/scbgp
Agricultural Marketing Service • Federal-State Market Improvement Program • Provides $1 million in matching funds to State Dept. of Ag , state colleges and universities and other appropriate state agencies • Funds will support research projects that address challenges in marketing, transporting and distributing US agricultural products domestically and internationally.
Agricultural Marketing Service • Farmers Market and Local Food Promotion Program • $26.6 million – half for each component • FMPP supports projects for direct farmer-to-consumer marketing • LFPP supports intermediary cupply chain activities for local or regional food
Food and Nutrition Service • Farm to School Programs • $6 million • 4 project types • Planning • Implementation to allow schools to expand existing programs • Support service grants – support to get local produce into schools • Training grants
Foreign Agricultural Service • Market Develop Programs – 5 total • Technical Assistance for Specialty Crops • Sanitary, phytosanitary and technical barriers that threaten US export • Industry rather than brand • $500 K/yr for up to 5 yr
SCRI Absolute requirement that all projects address both research and Extension. Some projects are more weighted to Extension than research.
Farm Bill 2014 Changes • USDA labs and institutions eligible for capacity funds (Hatch, Smith-Lever, MacIntire-Stennis, Evans-Allen, etc) and their partners are excepted from matching requirement • A two-tiered review system is required • No longer required to obligate 10% of available funds in each of 5 mandated legislative focus areas.
Two-tiered Review • 1st phase is industry relevance • 7 page pre-application • Must contain a logic model chart • Industry panels determine which pre-apps invited to submit full application
Relevance Criteria • The issues/challenges being addressed are relevant on a state, regional or national scale. • The described research and extension approach will result in impacts/outcomes that are important to the target stakeholders. • Stakeholders were involved in identifying and developing project goals and objectives. • Plans are in place for stakeholders to remain actively engaged in project activities. • Information developed by the project team will be delivered to stakeholders in ways that allow them to implement new and/or improved practices. • Stakeholders will be involved in program evaluation. • Project team has at least some members who have worked with the target stakeholders in the past and have experience with the described research and extension approach
Relevance Review Decision • Panels created so applications are in the same crop group • All panelists review all applications • Conference calls used to discuss pre-apps • Panelists decide which pre-apps to invite
Scientific Merit Review • Standard process • After rating for scientific merit, relevance rankings are combined with scientific merit to place in funding recommendation category
National Initiative for Consumer Horticulture • 80 million US households garden • 3 million community gardens in US • Steering committee formed to draft strategic plan • Academia, NGOs, industry, gov’t • 1st workshop Aug 6 at ASHS meeting