Ag News
How the Georgia Citrus Commission Assessment will work
Posted on Nov 07, 2024 at 6:27 AM
In 2023, at the request of Georgia citrus producers, the Georgia Agricultural Citrus Commission (Georgia Citrus Commission) was created under the Georgia Commodity Promotion Act (O.C.G.A 2-8-2). Under the Commodity Promotion Act, the Georgia Citrus Commission is allowed to create a Marketing Order which allows for collection of an assessment on marketed fruit.
This market order was voted and approved by growers of record in April of 2024 with an approval rate of 94%. The assessment rate approved is two tenths of a cent per pound of marketed fruit ($0.002 per pound)
Georgia growers who produce and market 50,000 pounds or more of citrus fruits on a seasonal basis are subject to and required to pay the assessment. This is applicable even if an out-of-state marketer or packer handles your citrus fruit. Even if producers do not meet the minimum poundage requirement of 50,000 pounds on a seasonal basis, they are asked to report their poundage. This will allow the Citrus Commission to better track the total production for Georgia.
How is the assessment paid?
If a packer or marketer handles and sells the fruit, the GDA asks the marketer/packer to collect the assessment from the producer’s settlement, report, and pay to the Georgia Citrus Commission on the producer’s behalf. It is ultimately the grower’s responsibility for the assessment to be paid. The marketer/packer form can be accessed here.
Growers who self-market their fruit are responsible for paying the assessment and reporting to the Georgia Citrus Commission. The grower form can be accessed here.
The Georgia Department of Agriculture urges growers to pay assessments monthly, but the final payment is due no later than 30 days after they are finished marketing the fruit. Payment is to be made to Georgia Citrus Commission. The Georgia Department of Agriculture has field auditors that will be conducting audits to verify correct payment is collected of fruit marketed.
Under the Commodity Promotion Act, funds can only be used for areas of research, education and promotion of the commodity. The Citrus Commission’s primary focus is to support research projects that impact Georgia citrus production, plant breeding, pest management, and fruit handling.
The forms can also be found at http://agr.georgia.gov/cpf, under assessment forms.
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