Letter to Sonny Perdue, Secretary of Agriculture - Hawai'i Congressional Delegation Urges USDA to Provide COVID-19 Relief Funding to Aid Hawai'i's Mac Nut, Pineapple, Coffee, Speciality Crop Farmers

Letter

Date: May 26, 2020
Location: Honolulu, HI

Dear Secretary Perdue:

We are extremely concerned with the list of specialty crops announced on May 19, 2020 as eligible for assistance under the USDA's Coronavirus Food Assistance Program (CFAP). With specialty crops making up 70 percent of Hawai"i's top agricultural commodities, those producers are amongst the hardest hit by the pandemic. Yet, USDA's list fails to include the majority of our state's specialty crops. Hawai"i's farmers need immediate relief, and we request that you expand eligibility to include specialty crops that make up our top twenty agricultural commodities. We urge you to also work with Farm Service Agency personnel in Hawai"i to recognize all specialty crops produced in our state as soon as possible.

The majority of Hawai"i's farms are diversified with specialty crops. Our state leads the U.S. in acres producing macadamia nut, papaya, passion fruit, taro, bananas, coffee, pineapple, and ginger root--and yet, from that list only papaya and taro are on the USDA's current list for relief. The most recent statistics for Hawai"i's top agricultural commodities from the National Agricultural Statistical Service (NASS) underscore this concern:

Commodity

Value of Production (millions)

Specialty Crop Status

Seed Crops

$120.8

Macadamia Nuts

$53.9

YES

Cattle

$43.891

Coffee

$43.774

YES

Other Aquaculture

$41.177

Algae

$35.19

Landscape Plant Material

$22.354

YES

Papayas

$9.4

YES

Milk

$9.214

Lettuce

$8.705

YES

Bananas

$6.028

YES

Palms, potted

$4.607

YES

Plant Rentals

$3.44

Dendrobiums, potted

$3.24

YES

Sweet Potatoes

$3.12

YES

Anthurium

$2.892

YES

Honey

$2.374

YES

Dry Onions

$2.080

YES

Cabbage, Chinese

$1.725

YES

Ginger Root

$1.7

YES

While a handful of specialty crops from this list are currently on the USDA's list of specialty crops immediately eligible for relief under CFAP, the specialty crops that are currently omitted leave a large number of Hawai"i's farmers either waiting and hoping to be included in the list of eligible specialty crops, or in the same category as wheat, soy, corn, and other row crops.

Furthermore, crops currently left off the list, like bananas and ginger, are locally consumed and contribute to our food security. Failing to provide these producers with relief may force them to pivot to export crops and decrease our local food production. We appreciate that USDA is working to gather information from industries to assess the possibility of including additional specialty crops as eligible at a later date. However, impacts to farmers in Hawai"i began months ago and timing of assistance is critical to keep our farmers in production.

Hawai"i's economy has been exceptionally hard hit during the pandemic because of the state's dependence on the hospitality industry and visitor spending. The University of Hawai"i Economic Research Organization (UHERO) projected real visitor spending to decline by 17 percent in the second quarter, but the actual impacts could easily exceed the forecast. For example, the Honolulu Star Advertiser reported that visitor arrivals and associated visitor spending were down nearly 54 percent and 52 percent, respectively, from March last year.

The pandemic has had severe impacts on the state's agricultural producers, but it is difficult to provide definitive statistics at this time. On April 27, UHERO published data from a survey of 623 businesses statewide, and reported the following figures for agriculture, forestry, fishing, and hunting: a 21 percent loss in agricultural jobs from January to April of this year, causing a 17 percent loss in revenue. According to the Hawai"i Department of Labor and Industrial Relations, to date over 238,000 unemployment claims, representing roughly 34 percent of the total workforce, have been filed since March 1.

The severe economic impacts from the pandemic have left Hawai"i's farmers in dire need of financial assistance to remain in production, and we request your leadership and assistance in providing them much needed immediate relief.


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