From the USDA -- This is a great opportunity for agricultural ventures in Central New York and farmers' markets.
Agriculture
Secretary Tom Vilsack announced this week the availability of nearly $10.5
million in U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) grants to help
agricultural producers enter into value-added activities designed to
give them a competitive business edge.
"U.S. agriculture is connected to one in
12 American jobs, and value-added products from homegrown sources are
one important way that agriculture generates economic growth," Vilsack
said.
"Supporting producers and businesses to create value-added
products strengthens rural economies, helps fuel innovation, and
strengthens marketing opportunities for producers – especially at the
local and regional level."
The funding is being made available through the Value-Added Producer Grant
program. Grants are available to help agricultural producers create new
products, expand marketing opportunities, support further processing of
existing products or goods, or to develop specialty and niche products.
They may be used for working capital and planning activities. The
maximum working capital grant is $200,000; the maximum planning grant is
$75,000.
Eligible applicants include independent
producers, farmer and rancher cooperatives, and agricultural producer
groups. Funding priority is given to socially disadvantaged and
beginning farmers or ranchers, and to small- to medium-size family
farms, or farmer/rancher cooperatives.
The Value-Added Producer Grant program is
one of many USDA programs that support the development of strong local
and regional food systems as part of the Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food
initiative.
Launched in 2009, the initiative strengthens ties between
agricultural producers and their local communities, helping meet growing
consumer demand and creating opportunities for small business
development. Initiatives like this create new income opportunities for
farmers, generate wealth that will stay in rural communities, and
increase access to healthy, local foods in underserved communities. All
of these actions boost local economies.
The announcement comes as more than 1,400 communities nationwide gear up to support Small Business Saturday,
a day dedicated to championing small businesses on one of the busiest
shopping weekends of the year. This year's Small Business Saturday is Nov. 30.
No comments:
Post a Comment