Officials from Pandol Bros. and DiMare to testify before Congress
David Dever, chief operating officer and president of Delano, CA-based Pandol Bros. Inc., and Tony DiMare, vice president of DiMare Homestead Inc. and DiMare Ruskin Inc., both in Florida, will testify Thursday, April 2, before the House of Representatives' Committee on Agriculture in Washington, DC, in what is being described as an educational and informational public hearing.
Historic pear group closes doors
After 96 years of continuous operation, the Fruit Growers League, based on Oregon's Rogue Valley, has ceased operation.
The organization was founded in 1913, and its membership numbered as many as 400 people and businesses involved with pear production in Jackson County. The area is known for the Comice pear.
Condensed marketing window anticipated for small California avocado crop
The good news for buyers is that with an increase in import volumes, the amount of avocados in the marketplace in the United States over the course of the 2009 calendar year is expected to be greater than last year and could potentially approach a record 1.1 million pounds, according to some projections.
Unfortunately for California avocado growers facing one of the smaller California crops in years, possibly in decades, the California share of that market will only be somewhere around 20 percent of the total. The remainder will come primarily from Mexico and Chile.
Salmonella testing leads to large pistachio recall
WASHINGTON -- With the food industry still reeling from a massive peanut recall, a California firm is recalling some 1 million pounds of pistachios after food processors detected Salmonella during routine testing. "We are trying to be proactive," said David Acheson, the Food & Drug Administration's associate commissioner for foods, who held an evening press call March 30 to announce the recall. The new FDA acting commissioner, Joshua Sharfstein, who took over running the agency March 30, "wants to clearly get out in front of this," said Dr. Acheson.
INDUSTRY VIEWOINT: Food safety help, not hindrance
Federal policymakers rely on laws and regulations to safeguard the food supply. This is understandable, since these are the tools at their disposal. But it overlooks the expertise our supply chain has gained over the years to enhance safety. I believe that it is our industry's obligation -- and that it works to our benefit -- to bring that information and expertise to Washington, DC, where significant changes to our food-safety system are now being considered.
Chilean fruit season expected to end with heavy volumes
"The grape season up to now has actually been quite good," Mark Greenberg said March 13.
Michelle Obama to grow vegetable garden at White House
WASHINGTON -- Nothing sells organic produce like a picture of the first lady Michelle Obama and a team of fifth graders planting a vegetable garden for the White House kitchen.
Just days after Alice Waters, owner of Berkley, CA-based Chez Panisse and a well-known food activist, called for a White House organic garden on the weekly news show "60 Minutes," the first lady gathered 26 school children to begin digging a 1,100-square-foot organic garden on the South Lawn.
Cut in Jersey Fresh program proposed
The Jersey Fresh program may be operating with far less money than in previous years if a proposal by New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine comes to pass.
The original appropriation act for the current year (fiscal year 2009) had called for $475,000 for the Jersey Fresh program, according to Tom Vincz, a spokesperson for the New Jersey Treasury Department, although "for all intents and purposes," the Jersey Fresh budget for advertising and promotion was about $400,000.
David Kannenstine dies at 47
David Kannenstine, vice president of New York metro sales and marketing for Red Jacket Orchards in Geneva, NY, died surrounded by his family March 18 following a battle with pancreatic cancer. He was 47.
Mr. Kannenstine headed the New York City office of the family-owned-and- operated orchard and juice company, where he worked for 12 years.
Mocettini named VP of sales at Ippolito
Produce industry veteran Paul Mocettini has been named vice president of sales and marketing at Salinas, CA-based Ippolito International LLP. In this new position, he will spearhead customer and new product development.
Mr. Mocettini, who has been in various produce industry sales, commodity management and executive sales management capacities since 1987, said that the potential growth and Ippolito's commitment to premium-quality products and customer service were instrumental in his decision to join the company.