Washington, D.C.--In a bipartisan letter to U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Thomas Vilsack, U.S. Senate Finance Committee Ranking Member Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) and Chair Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) led Senate colleagues in expressing concern about the potential for potato wart to spread from potato imports originating on Canada’s Prince Edward Island (PEI) to U.S. farms and production facilities, and urging the implementation of additional mitigation measures to prevent introduction into the United States.
Potato wart is a highly destructive disease that can spread via infected potatoes and soil, reduce crop yields and make potatoes unmarketable domestically or internationally. There is currently no treatment available to eliminate it from contaminated farmland where it can persist in the soil for decades.
In the letter, the senators caution: “If potato wart should enter the United States, our farmers and the communities they support will be economically devastated. Given that twenty percent of our potato crop—valued at over $2 billion—is exported, we cannot allow introduction of a disease that would shut off access to international markets, and also curtail domestic production and sales.”
They express concern that, despite current USDA regulations identifying soil testing as the most effective tool to detect potato wart, the USDA does not require testing of PEI fields prior to potatoes being cleared for export to the U.S.
In order to protect this crucial American crop and those who depend on it for salary or sustenance, the senators urge the USDA to take swift action to mitigate the potato wart risk associated with imports from PEI by taking three actions:
In addition to Crapo and Wyden, the letter is signed by Senators Boozman (R-Arkansas), Collins (R-Maine), Cramer (R-North Dakota), Daines (R-Montana), Hoeven (R-North Dakota), Ricketts (R-Nebraska), Risch (R-Idaho), Bennett (D-Colorado), Cantwell (D-Washington), Fetterman (D-Pennsylvania), Hickenlooper (D-Colorado), King (I-Maine), Merkley (D-Oregon), Murray (D-Washington), Stabenow (D-Michigan) and Tester (D-Montana).
Read the full letter here.
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