HLB funding prioritized in farm bill proposal

California Citrus Mutual said the proposed farm bill would allocate more than $25 million in funding to the USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture to discover a cure for Huanglongbing.

Huanglongbing, citrus greening on fruit
Huanglongbing, citrus greening on fruit
(Photo courtesy of USDA/David Bartels)

California Citrus Mutual has commended Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow of the Senate Agriculture Committee and Chairman Glenn “GT” Thompson from the House Agriculture Committee for prioritizing the citrus industry’s fight against Huanglongbing, also known as HLB or citrus greening disease, in the Senate and House’s frameworks for the 2024 farm bill.

California Citrus Mutual said each chairperson’s framework continues support of the Emergency Citrus Disease Research and Extension Program at $25 million per year for the life of the farm bill.

“This is a significant step towards reaching a bipartisan farm bill compromise that will continue critical research to find a cure to Huanglongbing,” California Citrus Mutual President and CEO Casey Creamer said in a news release. “While this isn’t the finish line, it clearly signals that Congress supports maintaining citrus funding. We thank the chairs of the committee and our California congressional delegation for championing our needs.”

The $25 million in funding will go to the USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture to fund research to find a cure for HLB. The funding is overseen by grower representatives from California, Texas and Florida.

“This is a big win for the citrus industry as there were significant headwinds with the current fiscal battles in Washington, D.C., including escalating farm bill baseline expenditures and competing priorities within agriculture,” California Citrus Mutual said in a statement. “It proves the strength of the advocacy partnership with Florida and Texas Citrus Mutuals in addition to the strong support received from allied industry organizations.”

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