Nicole Sallaberry takes a look at organic garlic from Fallon-based Lattin Farms.
Nicole Sallaberry takes a look at organic garlic from Fallon-based Lattin Farms.

Unless legislators agree to a funding increase, Nevadaโ€™s organic certification program could expire within a year.

The state program, which ran on general funds until around 2008, needs $65,000 to stay afloat. If it tanks, farmers and produce handlers must go through private certification channels instead, in a potential switcheroo that has some local business owners concerned. Amber Sallaberry, co-founder and general manager of the Great Basin Community Food Co-op in Reno, described the issue in ways that are both practical and symbolic.

โ€œThere are numerous farmers who are already in the program, whoโ€™ve already paid for the marketing, who have been a part of it and helped build it for years,โ€ she said. โ€œThey would lose that certification and would have to go to an outside agency, either CCOF [California Certified Organic Farmers, a household name in the organic biz] or a private agency, a privatized company โ€ฆ or we could go to Oregon, someplace like that.

โ€œTheyโ€™d have to pay additional fees for travel, to get the certified inspectors in. Itโ€™s all feasible, but at the end of the day itโ€™s just really, really regressive.โ€ Should the program disappear, Sallaberry said, โ€œIt would just be a huge failure in our leadership. Theyโ€™d be ignoring what people want in our community. Theyโ€™d be ignoring the business thatโ€™s actually thriving.โ€

Sallaberry, who has garnered support from more than 60 area businesses and organizations, also hopes to see a livestock component added to the state program. If meat, eggs and honey become part of the deal, she explained, โ€œthat would take care of the budget right there.โ€

Nevada has no private certification programs of its own, but some organic businesses hereโ€”almost half of them, actuallyโ€”are certified by out-of-state companies anyway, according to the Nevada Department of Agriculture. Private certification costs are pretty variable, said NDA administrator Dawn Rafferty.

โ€œItโ€™s really hard to compare, because they all charge differently,โ€ she said, though she did note that some small farms may struggle to keep up financially if state certification disappears.

The NDA has no problem with organic certification, Rafferty added, save for the fact that the program is penniless. The livestock addition would require bout $10,000 in staff training, she said, โ€œso weโ€™ve been reluctant to enter into that until we know thereโ€™s a really big demand for it.โ€

Thatโ€™s why the co-op is now compiling a list of would-be organic ranchers for the NDA.

โ€œItโ€™d be really nice to have the program be in-state; to be represented in our local economy, and to have those fees going back to our state,โ€ said Nicole Sallaberry, Amberโ€™s colleague and sister. โ€œOrganic practices not only require that you donโ€™t use synthetic fertilizers, you donโ€™t use GMOs, and you donโ€™t use irradiation or sewage sludge, but you also have to improve the land and promote biodiversity. So itโ€™s something thatโ€™s really beneficial.โ€

Though the organic industry has grown more than 3,000-fold in recent decades, she said, โ€œI just donโ€™t see any interest from the Nevada Department of Agriculture. I donโ€™t know if thatโ€™s coming from higher-ups, or if itโ€™s a political battle between people wanting to grow GMO crops here, but thereโ€™s definitely [consumer] interest.โ€

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