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EstablishEd 1917                                                    a CEntury of sErviCE






















         GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE • GARY W. BLACK, COMMISSIONER • WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8, 2020 • VOL. 103, NO. 8 • © COPYRIGHT 2020
                                                         Finding a new normal


          Food distributors seek ways to help others and themselves through COVID-19 response

                                                  By Amy Carter                                          ing for creative ways to move product to non-traditional customers,”
                                                            100th Anniversary
                                                                    1917 – 2017
                                                  amy.carter@agr.georgia.gov                             said Paul Thompson, deputy director of the Georgia Department of
                                                    You either sell it or smell it in the produce business.  Agriculture’s Marketing Division.
                                                                                                           Prior  to  the  coronavirus  outbreak,  a  diversified  customer  base
                                                    That was a favorite saying of the late Gene Sutherland, whose  was thought to be enough to help most businesses weather economic
                                                  children and grandchildren are motivated by those words to find al-  downturns, “but all of our customers are being hit basically at the
                                                  ternate channels for tons of fresh fruits and vegetables left unclaimed  same time with the same sort of problem,” Wilson said.
                                                  on the shelves of their fourth-generation foodservice business by the   Schools and colleges have been dismissed, and restaurants have
                                                  global outbreak of COVID-19.                           been ordered to close their dining rooms and serve only take-out or
                                                    “Most of our customers, a lot of them are government entities –  curbside meals. Grocery stores are selling out of staples, and while
                                                  schools especially, lower and higher education. We also have some  supply is plentiful, the supply chain is struggling to keep up with
                                                  health care, lots of restaurants, and we have chain stories,” said Bon-  demand. Sutherland’s is opening its inventory to the public for bulk
                                                  nie Sutherland Wilson, vice president and chief financial officer of  purchases of food like ground beef and chicken, as well as more elu-
                                                  Sutherland’s Foodservice based at the Atlanta State Farmers Market  sive products like toilet tissue, paper towels and disinfectant wipes.
                                                  in Forest Park.                                          Families, churches, neighborhoods and businesses have respond-
                                                    Atlanta’s 150-acre terminal market serves as a collection point  ed to the company’s social media postings, splitting up the packages
                                                  for produce and other agricultural commodities grown regionally,  amongst themselves and friends and neighbors in need.
                                                  nationally and worldwide, which is then distributed throughout the   Another market tenant, the Nickey Gregory Company, was able to
                                                  Southeast. As such, the market is home to several businesses like  use its inventory and delivery trucks to help grocery stores fill gaps
        Athena Farms, a produce distributor based at the Atlanta
        State Farmers Market, has delivered more than 800 relief   Sutherland’s that are struggling to survive despite being engaged in  caused by panic-buying. This was a fairly quick flip for the company
        boxes packed with unsold fruits, vegetables and other   one of the most essential enterprises of all: moving food from farm  after its primary business as a wholesale distributor of fresh produce
        perishable products to restaurants in Atlanta to help food   to fork.                            to food service companies and other wholesalers slowed.
        service staff laid off due to COVID-19. (Athena Farms photo   “Our vendors who serve the food service industry – hotel, restau-  Andrew Scott, director of business development and marketing,
        via Facebook)                             rant, etc. – have been greatly impacted by this situation and are look-  See NEW NORMAL, page 16
        Georgia growers brace for economic side effects of COVID-19 global outbreak


        By Jay Jones                          Many farms in Georgia depend                                                        have already been vetted, and the
        jay.jones@agr.georgia.gov             on temporary workers from other                                                     Department of State is relaxing re-
                                              countries, who are granted entry                                                    quirements for workers who have
           Georgia agricultural producers are work-  on a temporary work visa known                                               been here before,” Hall said.
        ing to keep their food supply chains running  as an H-2A, and the outbreak has                                               “Some of the work contracts
        efficiently and safely this spring as they deal  caused a lot of concern about get-                                       are starting right now. Of course,
        with disruptions caused by the Coronavirus  ting them across the border and                                               the ship date for Vidalia onions is
        outbreak.                             into the fields.                                                                    April 16, so Vidalia will need their
                                                 “As we go into the harvest sea-                                                  workers fairly quickly,” Hall add-
        Fruits and Vegetables                 son, we just need more and more                                                     ed. “Certainly, (soon), you’ll see a
           A labor shortage for harvesting is the  labor coming in,” Hall said. He ex-                                            lot of workers come in so that they
        biggest concern for farmers, according to  plained the visa process has slowed                                            can ship out by the 16th.”
        Charles Hall, executive director of the Geor-  due to U.S. consulates being un-                                              The demand for produce is high
        gia Fruit and Vegetable Growers Association.  derstaffed or reduced to limit the                                          in stores, as most people eat at
                                              spread of the virus.                                                                home. However, Hall said the pro-
                                                 Hall commended Georgia Agri-                                                     duce market is split almost evenly
                                              culture Commissioner Gary Black                                                     between retail grocery stores and
                                              for working with the Trump Ad-                                                      the food service industry. The un-
                                              ministration to find a solution. One   Georgia Agriculture Commissioner Gary Black set April 16th as the pack date   certainty for growers is the possi-
                                              measure that should help is relax-  for Vidalia onions. Sixty registered growers in 20 Georgia counties planted   bility of surplus supply and its ef-
                                              ing an interview requirement for   9,400 acres of Vidalia onions for the 2020 season. (Vidalia Onion Committee)  fect on prices.
                                              incoming workers who have been                                                         “If food service is not taking
                                              in the United States in the past two years.  the same workers coming back to their farm  their part of the market, where is that prod-
                                                 “Most growers will get 70 to 75 percent of  year after year after year, so a lot of these guys   See GEORGIA GROWERS, page 14
                                              Complaints of pesticide drift are on the decline

                                              UPW training program educates growers to eliminate problems
          Please deliver this paid subscription to:  Published by the Ga. Department of Agriculture Gary W. Black, Commissioner  jay.jones@agr.georgia.gov  state. He said the training has been particular-  pesticides  while  UGA  Extension adminis-
                                              By Jay Jones
                                                                                    eral types of pesticides that are used across the  anyone who seeks certification to apply crop
                                                                                    ly successful in reducing drift from dicamba  ters the training. Applicators who go through
                                                 Complaints of pesticide drift in Georgia  applications, which is used on cotton to fight  UPW training learn best practices for using
                                              dropped  75 percent in six years since the  weeds.
                                                                                                                          pesticides such as dicamba and 2,4-D herbi-
                                              “Using Pesticides Wisely” training program
                                                                                       “We use a lot of these products here in  cides on crops.
                                                                                                                            According to the UGA Extension Service,
                                              began. State regulators and the University of  Georgia on our cotton crops, well over a mil-
                                                                                    lion acres, and I just have to feel like this has  agents recorded 289 drift complaints in 2014
                                              Georgia Extension Service both cite the train-
                                                                                                                          across 48 counties. Complaints dropped to
                                              ing as the primary reason for the reduction in  been the difference maker,” Gray said.
                                                                                                                          150 in 2015, the first year of UPW training.
                                                                                       UPW training and certification is a part-
                                              complaints.
                                                 Tommy Gray, director of the Georgia De-
                                                                                    nership between the GDA and University of  Drift complaints have since dropped steadily
                                              partment of Agriculture’s Plant Industry Divi-
                                                                                    Georgia Cooperative Extension Service that  in each of the following years. In 2019, Exten-
                                                                                                                                 See PESTICIDES, page 16
                                                                                    began in 2015. GDA requires the training for
                                              sion, explained that UPW training covers sev-
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