Jim Wysocki elected president of National Potato Council
Jim Wysocki elected president of National Potato Council
At the National Potato Council's annual meeting Jan. 3-7 in Las Vegas, Jim Wysocki, potato grower and fresh packer from Bancroft, WI, was elected to lead the council as president in 2006. He is a second-generation council president; his father, Louis, led the council in 1979.
Mr. Wysocki's priorities include leading the council's efforts in the drafting of the 2007 farm bill, assisting in the creation of a grower pesticide-use database and increasing the involvement of women in the industry and in the council.
Some of the major opportunities and challenges facing Mr. Wysocki and the council over the next year are the promotion of free trade including the removal of non- scientific phytosanitary barriers as well as tariffs, the drafting of the new farm bill, Endangered Species Act reform, and the passing of national uniformity legislation for a food-safety warning label.
"We have some really good opportunities out there this year," stated Mr. Wysocki. "The council will use all its grassroots resources to work with Congress to advance our legislative agenda on the farm bill, ESA reform and national uniformity legislation, along with pursuing new market opportunities."
Mr. Wysocki serves as chief financial officer of the Wysocki Cos., a large farming operation based in Bancroft, WI, which raises 11,000 acres of vegetables, including 3,000 acres of potatoes. He has served on the council since 2002, and is a former president of the Wisconsin Potato & Vegetable Growers Association. He was the association's Volunteer of the Year in 2004 and received the Young Grower of the Year Award from the association in 1996.
He and his wife, Sharon, have five children and live in Ellis, WI.
Mr. Wysocki's priorities include leading the council's efforts in the drafting of the 2007 farm bill, assisting in the creation of a grower pesticide-use database and increasing the involvement of women in the industry and in the council.
Some of the major opportunities and challenges facing Mr. Wysocki and the council over the next year are the promotion of free trade including the removal of non- scientific phytosanitary barriers as well as tariffs, the drafting of the new farm bill, Endangered Species Act reform, and the passing of national uniformity legislation for a food-safety warning label.
"We have some really good opportunities out there this year," stated Mr. Wysocki. "The council will use all its grassroots resources to work with Congress to advance our legislative agenda on the farm bill, ESA reform and national uniformity legislation, along with pursuing new market opportunities."
Mr. Wysocki serves as chief financial officer of the Wysocki Cos., a large farming operation based in Bancroft, WI, which raises 11,000 acres of vegetables, including 3,000 acres of potatoes. He has served on the council since 2002, and is a former president of the Wisconsin Potato & Vegetable Growers Association. He was the association's Volunteer of the Year in 2004 and received the Young Grower of the Year Award from the association in 1996.
He and his wife, Sharon, have five children and live in Ellis, WI.