NEPC to feature exciting guests
BURLINGTON, MA "- The New England Produce Council will hold its fifth annual Produce & Floral Expo on April 6 at the John B. Hynes Veterans Memorial Convention Center in Boston.
The NEPC expo is the region?s premier event for executives and buyers in the produce industry to network and see the latest in produce and floral products. Attendance at this year?s expo is expected to be close to 1,000, with 250 booths.
New facility a base for Cleveland Growers' expanded services
A new, state-of-the-art, 100,000-square-foot warehouse is great for operations. But Cleveland Growers Marketing Co. in Cleveland has used such a facility to launch a wide array of customer services to expand its business.
Ed Tousel, executive vice president and chief operating officer of Cleveland Growers, said that his company hired Ken Carnevale as director of business development to institute the firm?s expanded services.
Potato Passion drives CPAC activities
Diet trends aside, love has not been lost for potatoes. That fact stood out among key conclusions reached during recipe contests and focus groups recently sponsored by the Colorado Potato Administrative Committee, prompting CPAC Executive Director Chris Voigt to suggest, "Perhaps instead of "Potato Lovers Month? we should call February "Potato Passion Month." " Mr. Voigt said that in consumer focus groups sponsored in summer 2004 by CPAC, comments were "vociferous against trendy regimens that did not consider the role potatoes play in a healthy diet."
Referendum planned to include greenhouse tomatoes in California Tomato Commission
The California Tomato Commission currently governs all field-grown tomato production in California, whether mature green or vine-ripe, but does not have oversight over hydroponic greenhouse-grown tomatoes. That appears about to change.
?The commission is going to referendum in the nest few months? to determine whether its scope will be expanded to include the greenhouse tomato industry in California, said Ed Beckman, president of the Fresno-based commission.
California asparagus growers "cautiously optimistic?
While 2004 was considered a "salvageable? year for California asparagus growers, it appears that 2005 needs to match or better that result to keep some growers from throwing in the towel on the crop. But favorable weather conditions " including sufficient rain and ample chill hours " and an aggressive promotion program have growers cautiously optimistic about the 2005 season.
President Bush elevates immigration reform debate during State of the Union
WASHINGTON " Grower-based organizations are hoping that President Bush?s call for action on immigration reform during the State of the Union address will help Congress pass long-awaited reforms for the agriculture guest worker program.
?Those of us in agriculture who have been pleading for immigration reform are heartened by the president?s courageous call to action and we are optimistic that a solution can be found to solve the immigration crisis," said Tom Nassif, president of Western Growers Association in Irvine, CA.
Super sweet claim leaves sour taste with some melon importers
In a recent press release about its new fresh-cut melon line, Fresh Express Inc. in Salinas, CA, claims that it uses Chilean fruit because it is "far sweeter than the cantaloupe or honeydew usually offered in the United States during the winter." That statement, and other language contained in the release, has left a sour taste in the mouths of a number of melon importers and marketers.
Top management change has FDI going in a new direction
Mike Browne, president, CEO and founding partner of Fresh Directions International in Ventura, CA, is no longer part of the company?s management, but he retains his 25 percent interest in the business, according to Manuel Castillo Jr., the son of the majority partner who is "helping out through the transition? until a replacement is named.
Bab? Farms and Phillip Moreland part ways
Santa Maria, CA-based Bab? Farms Inc. and Phillip Moreland, the company?s vice president of sales and marketing, have come to an amicable parting as of Feb. 1.
Greg Pedigo, president of Bab? Farms, told The Produce News Feb. 7, that he and Mr. Moreland mutually agreed to the split. "It wasn?t the right fit," Mr. Pedigo said. "I consider him a friend and would recommend him [for employment]."
Florida on an aggressive campaign to spur movement of tomatoes
The Florida tomato industry has launched a campaign designed to reach consumers with the message that there is no shortage of tomatoes from the Sunshine State.
The effort includes participation from virtually every segment of the tomato industry " from suppliers to trade associations to the Florida Department of Agriculture & Consumer Services and even to retailers.
Why people might think there is a shortage " and a subsequent increase in retail prices " is due to a chain of events that has occurred over the past six months.