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CITRUS GROWERS ARRIVE AT TRADE TALKS
Publication:
Naples Daily News
Printed: Thursday, November 20, 2003
Wrtitten by: Laura Layden |
MIAMI -- The reinforcements have arrived.
They didn't come with riot gear or protest signs. They weren't police
or marchers.
They were citrus growers and their representatives.
About a dozen of them arrived in Miami on Wednesday, greeted by swarms
of police who were preparing for a labor march and rally today that's
expected to be the biggest in Miami since negotiations for a Free Trade
Area of the Americas (FTAA) agreement got under way over the weekend.
The citrus growers and their representatives have joined a few others
in the industry who have been in Miami since Monday to keep a watchful
eye on and give comment on negotiations for an FTAA in the city that
calls itself "the gateway to Latin America."
Now that more Florida citrus growers are in Miami, they plan to make
their voices heard by the 34 ministers negotiating the FTAA, a proposed
treaty for the Western Hemisphere that would create the largest trading
bloc in the world, excluding Cuba.
The citrus group hopes to convince hemispheric leaders -- who meet today
and Friday for a negotiating session on the FTAA in Miami -- not to remove
the tariff on Brazilian orange juice. Many Florida growers say it's the
only thing keeping the industry alive in this state.
At stake is a $9 billion commercial citrus industry in Florida and an
industry that pumps more than $500 million into Southwest Florida's economy.
Two of the citrus growers who reached Miami on Wednesday are from Southwest
Florida: Tom Jones, director of government affairs for Silver Strand,
a Barron Collier Partnership; and George Austin, a small grower and citrus
consultant.
"
I think for a lot of us this is an educational experience," said
Austin, a second-generation citrus farmer who owns about 200 acres of
groves in Lee and Hendry counties. "We haven't been to these types
of events before. We want to get an understanding of what goes on. We
want to have the opportunity to convey our message."
Austin got to Miami around 4 p.m. Others arriving Wednesday were Squire
Smith, president of Florida Citrus Mutual, the industry's largest trade
group; Joe Davis Jr., a large grower in Central Florida; and Dan Richey,
an East Coast citrus grower and packer and commissioner with Florida's
Department of Citrus.
The reinforcements wasted no time bending the ears of trade ministers.
Most attended a by-invitation-only reception in honor of the 34 ministers
at The Vizcaya Museum and Gardens on Wednesday night. It was a chance
to talk to ministers and their staffs directly.
"Most of the negotiators understand our concerns," said Andy LaVigne,
executive vice president and CEO of Florida Citrus Mutual. "You
do continue to have people come into the process and leave the process.
So we are constantly reminding them why our situation is different."
Florida's situation is different because this state and Brazil are the
top producers of orange juice, and if the tariff on Brazil's juice is
lifted it would create a monopoly, which goes against the ideals of free
trade and would not benefit consumers, he said.
For the past three days, LaVigne has been working behind the scenes to
get support for keeping the tariff on Brazil's juice, which equals about
30 cents a gallon.
He's hoping to find allies in developing countries that produce citrus,
such as Mexico, Costa Rica and Belize.
He participated in the Americas Business Forum, which gave more than
800 business leaders from around the hemisphere the opportunity to have
a say in the trade negotiations.
Participants, who discussed everything from government procurement policies
to market access and agricultural subsidies, made their recommendations
to ministers on Wednesday.
One of the recommendations coming from business leaders is to have a
four-pronged phase-out of tariffs. Some would go away immediately, some
in five years, some in 10 years and others would be around longer. LaVigne
is hopeful that ministers will support the idea, and that the citrus
tariff on Brazil's juice will be put in the "longer" category.
Robert Coker, a vice president for Southern Gardens Citrus and U.S. Sugar
Corp. in Clewiston, feels the same way and hopes sugar lands in the last
category, too.
At the FTAA meeting, he has been battling on two fronts. As a representative
for one of the largest citrus growers in the state and one of the largest
sugar producers in Florida, he's fighting against the tariff on Brazilian
juice and against a reduction in tariffs on sugar imported into the United
States. He hoped to see business leaders make a more definitive recommendation
to ministers on products that should be excluded from the FTAA, and that
citrus and sugar would be among them.
But the group that discussed agriculture didn't reach a consensus, and
agreed only that some tariffs should be eliminated immediately. They
did not decide which ones.
If the FTAA reduces sugar tariffs, Coker said the U.S. industry will
be at a real disadvantage because international tariffs throughout the
world will still be high. It could mean lost jobs in Southwest Florida
and that's why about 60 workers with U.S. Sugar in Clewiston plan to
participate in the 2.2-mile anti-FTAA labor march through downtown Miami
today that could involve more than 20,000 protesters.
Florida sugar workers, who are riding over to Miami in two buses, will
wear bright orange vests and carry radios in the march. According to
organizers, their job will be to "maintain order and peace," as
they're fighting for their jobs.
Copyright 2003, Naples Daily News. All Rights Reserved. |
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