Citrus Department facing smaller budget, staff cuts

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The Florida Department of Citrus could get a pared-down budget that will result in staff cuts.

The Citrus Commission, which oversees the department, meets Wednesday to consider the $20.6 million spending plan.

If approved, the department’s full-time employees would be reduced to 23 from 39.

Commissioners won’t vote on that budget, but will offer “feedback,” department spokeswoman Shelley Rossetter said.

The final proposed budget will be presented for a vote on June 14, she added.

The tax per box that growers pay will be voted on in October after the first USDA crop estimate of the season, Rossetter said.

The department is “charged with the marketing, research and regulation of the Florida citrus industry,” its website explains.

It’s funded “by a tax paid by growers on each box of citrus that moves through commercial channels.”

But, because the citrus crop is shrinking, so are the department’s finances.

An so-far incurable disease called citrus greening is attacking fruit, causing it to turn green and bitter, and eventually killing the tree. Florida’s renowned oranges are most at risk.

The department did get nearly $7.7 million in general revenue in the 2016-17 state budget, but Gov. Rick Scott put restrictions on how that money can be spent.

They include having the governor’s office vet any new contracts using state money “to ensure transparency and competitive procurements.”

A dozen growers, including Florida Citrus Hall of Famer Ben Hill Griffin III, sent a letter in February to Florida Citrus Commission Chairman Ellis Hunt Jr.

Copies of the letter went to Scott, Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam, House Speaker Steve Crisafulli and others.

The growers said they “do not believe (the department’s) current marketing programs are generating an economic return.”

The current proposed budget includes an overall reduction of $9.7 million, or 32 percent, and salary reductions of $1.4 million, according to a summary.

“That reduction in staff will not be finalized until the budget is approved in June and will not take place until at least July 1, the start of our new fiscal year,” Rossetter said. “We are working with the Florida Department of Management Services, as required of any state agency, on a transition plan.”


Update—Rossetter reports after the meeting: “The commissioners requested staff add a research study concentrating on the health benefits of orange juice as a rehydration drink to the Scientific Research budget. The study, which was originally approved for funding in the current year, was canceled due to a change in crop size. That study is projected to cost about $86,000.”

Jim Rosica

Jim Rosica is the Tallahassee-based Senior Editor for Florida Politics. He previously was the Tampa Tribune’s statehouse reporter. Before that, he covered three legislative sessions in Florida for The Associated Press. Jim graduated from law school in 2009 after spending nearly a decade covering courts for the Tallahassee Democrat, including reporting on the 2000 presidential recount. He can be reached at [email protected].



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