95-12147. Raisins Produced From Grapes Grown in California; Final Free and Reserve Percentages for the 1994-95 Crop Year for Zante Currant and Other Seedless Raisins  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 95 (Wednesday, May 17, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 26346-26348]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-12147]
    
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
    7 CFR Part 989
    
    [FV95-989-1FIR]
    
    
    Raisins Produced From Grapes Grown in California; Final Free and 
    Reserve Percentages for the 1994-95 Crop Year for Zante Currant and 
    Other Seedless Raisins
    
    AGENCY: Agricultural Marketing Service, USDA.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Department of Agriculture (Department) is adopting as a 
    final rule, without change, the provisions of an interim final rule 
    which established final free and reserve percentages for 1994 crop 
    Zante Currant and Other Seedless raisins. The percentages are 40 
    percent free and 60 percent reserve for each of these varietal types. 
    These percentages are intended to help stabilize supplies and prices 
    and counter the destabilizing effects of the burdensome oversupply 
    situation facing the raisin industry. This rule was recommended by the 
    Raisin Administrative Committee (Committee), which is responsible for 
    local administration of the marketing order.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: June 16, 1995.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Richard Van Diest, Marketing 
    Specialist, California Marketing Field Office, Fruit and Vegetable 
    Division, AMS, USDA, 2202 Monterey Street, suite 102B, Fresno, 
    California 93721; telephone: (209) 487-5901; or Mark A. Slupek, 
    Marketing Specialist, Marketing Order Administration Branch, Fruit and 
    Vegetable Division, AMS, USDA, room 2523-S, P.O. Box 96456, Washington, 
    DC 20090-6456; telephone: 202-205-2830.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This final rule is issued under Marketing 
    Agreement and Order No. 989 (7 CFR part 989), both as amended, 
    regulating the handling of raisins produced from grapes grown in 
    California, hereinafter referred to as the ``order.'' The order is 
    effective under the Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act of 1937, as 
    amended (7 U.S.C. 601-674), hereinafter referred to as the ``Act.''
        The Department of Agriculture (Department) is issuing this rule in 
    conformance with Executive Order 12866.
        This final rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12778, 
    Civil Justice Reform. Under the marketing order provisions now in 
    effect, final free and reserve percentages may be established for 
    raisins acquired by handlers during the crop year. This action 
    finalizes final free and reserve percentages for Zante Currant and 
    Other Seedless raisins for the 1994-95 crop year, beginning August 1, 
    1994, through July 31, 1995. This final rule will not preempt any State 
    or local laws, regulations, or policies, unless they present an 
    irreconcilable conflict with this rule.
        The Act provides that administrative proceedings must be exhausted 
    before parties may file suit in court. Under section 608c(15)(A) of the 
    Act, any handler subject to an order may file with the Secretary a 
    petition stating that the order, any provision of the order, or any 
    obligation imposed in connection with the order is not in accordance 
    with law and requesting a modification of the order or to be exempt 
    therefrom. Such handler is afforded the opportunity for a hearing on 
    the petition. After the hearing, the Secretary would rule on the 
    petition. The Act provides that the district court of the United States 
    in any district in which the handler is an inhabitant, or has his/her 
    principal place of business, has jurisdiction in equity to review the 
    Secretary's ruling on the petition, provided a bill in equity is filed 
    not later than 20 days after the date of the entry of the ruling.
        Pursuant to requirements set forth in the Regulatory Flexibility 
    Act (RFA), the Administrator of the Agricultural Marketing Service 
    (AMS) has considered the economic impact of this action on small 
    entities.
        The purpose of the RFA is to fit regulatory actions to the scale of 
    business subject to such actions in order that small businesses will 
    not be unduly or disproportionately burdened. Marketing orders issued 
    pursuant to the Act, and rules issued thereunder, are unique in that 
    they are brought about through group action of essentially small 
    entities acting on their own behalf. Thus, both statutes have small 
    entity orientation and compatibility.
        There are approximately 20 handlers of California raisins who are 
    subject to regulation under the raisin marketing order, and 
    approximately 4,500 producers in the regulated area. Small agricultural 
    service firms have been defined by the Small Business Administration 
    (13 CFR 121.601) as those whose annual receipts (from all sources) are 
    less than $5,000,000, and small agricultural producers are defined as 
    those having annual receipts of less than $500,000. No more than eight 
    handlers, and a majority of producers of California raisins, may be 
    classified as small entities. Twelve of the 20 handlers subject to 
    regulation have annual sales estimated to be at least $5,000,000, and 
    the remaining eight handlers have sales less than $5,000,000, excluding 
    receipts from any other sources.
        An interim final rule was published in the Federal Register on 
    March 7, 1995 (60 FR 12403), with an effective date of March 7, 1995. 
    That rule established final free and reserve percentages for Zante 
    Currant and Other Seedless raisins for the 1994-95 crop year. The 
    percentages were established in a new Sec. 989.247 of the rules and 
    regulations in effect under the marketing order. That rule provided a 
    30-day comment period which ended April 6, 1995. No comments were 
    received.
        The order prescribes procedures for computing trade demands and 
    preliminary and final percentages that establish the amount of raisins 
    that can be marketed throughout the season. The regulations apply to 
    all handlers of California raisins. Raisins in the free percentage 
    category may be shipped immediately to any market, while reserve 
    raisins must be held by handlers in a reserve pool for the account of 
    the Committee, which is responsible for local administration of the 
    order. Under the order, reserve raisins may be: Sold at a later date by 
    the Committee to handlers for free use; used in diversion programs; 
    exported to authorized countries; carried over as a hedge against a 
    short crop the following year; or disposed of in other outlets 
    noncompetitive with those for free tonnage raisins.
        While this rule continues in effect restrictions limiting the 
    amount of Zante Currant and Other Seedless raisins entering domestic 
    markets, final free and reserve percentages are intended to lessen the 
    impact of the oversupply situation facing the industry and promote 
    stronger marketing conditions, thus stabilizing prices and supplies and 
    improving grower returns. In addition to the quantity of raisins 
    released under the preliminary percentages and the final percentages, 
    the order specifies methods to make available additional raisins to 
    handlers by requiring sales of reserve pool raisins for use as free 
    [[Page 26347]] tonnage raisins under ``10 plus 10'' offers, and 
    authorizing sales of reserve raisins under certain conditions.
        The Department's ``Guidelines for Fruit, Vegetable, and Specialty 
    Crop Marketing Orders'' specifies that 110 percent of recent years' 
    sales should be made available to primary markets each season before 
    recommendations for volume regulation are approved. This goal is met by 
    the establishment of a final percentage which releases 100 percent of 
    the trade demand and the additional release of reserve raisins to 
    handlers under ``10 plus 10'' offers. The ``10 plus 10'' offers are two 
    simultaneous offers of reserve pool raisins which are made available to 
    handlers each season. For each such offer, a quantity of raisins equal 
    to 10 percent of the prior year's shipments is made available for free 
    use.
        Pursuant to Sec. 989.54 of the order, the Committee met on August 
    15, 1994, to review shipment and inventory data, and other matters 
    relating to the supplies of raisins of all varietal types. The 
    Committee computed a trade demand for each varietal type for which a 
    free tonnage percentage might be recommended. The trade demand is 90 
    percent of the prior year's shipments of free tonnage and reserve 
    tonnage raisins sold for free use for each varietal type into all 
    market outlets, adjusted by subtracting the carryin of each varietal 
    type on August 1 of the current crop year and by adding to the trade 
    demand the desirable carryout for each varietal type at the end of that 
    crop year. As specified in Sec. 989.154, the desirable carryout for 
    each varietal type shall be equal to the shipments of free tonnage 
    raisins of the prior crop year during the months of August, September, 
    and one half of October. If the prior year's shipments are limited 
    because of crop conditions, the total shipments during that period of 
    time during one of the three years preceding the prior crop year may be 
    used. In accordance with these provisions, the Committee computed and 
    announced a 1994-95 trade demand of 787 tons for Other Seedless 
    raisins.
        Section 989.54 of the order also authorizes the Committee to 
    consider factors which pertain to the marketing of raisins, including 
    an estimated trade demand which differs from the computed trade demand. 
    At its August 15, 1994, meeting, the Committee computed a trade demand 
    of 500 tons for Zante Currants. The Committee, however, determined that 
    anticipated changes in the market conditions for Zante Currants 
    warranted an estimated trade demand substantially higher than this.
        Entering this season, the California raisin industry was carrying a 
    very large supply of 1992-93 and 1993-94 crop Zante Currants and 
    projected a record production in 1994-95. The Committee recommended 
    actions to help handlers sell their tonnage at prices competitive with 
    other currant prices in domestic and export markets. Because of these 
    actions, the Committee believed that the computed trade demand was 
    insufficient and decided to calculate its percentages based on an 
    estimated trade demand of 2,200 tons.
        When the Committee met on October 5, 1994, the field price for 
    Zante Currants had been established, but the field price for Other 
    Seedless raisins had not. Section 989.54(b) of the order requires the 
    Committee to compute percentages which release 85 percent of the trade 
    demand for varieties for which field prices have been established and 
    65 percent for varieties which have not. Thus, when the Committee met 
    on that date, it computed and announced preliminary crop estimates and 
    preliminary free and reserve percentages for Zante Currant and Other 
    Seedless raisins which released 85 percent and 65 percent of the trade 
    demands, respectively. The preliminary crop estimates and preliminary 
    free and reserve percentages were as follows: 6,074 tons, 31 percent 
    free and 69 percent reserve for Zante Currants; and 4,073 tons, 13 
    percent free and 87 percent reserve for Other Seedless Raisins. The 
    Committee also authorized the Committee staff to increase the 
    preliminary percentages to release 85 percent of the trade demands for 
    varietal types without established field prices when the field prices 
    were established. For Other Seedless raisins, the preliminary 
    percentages were adjusted soon thereafter to 16 percent free and 84 
    percent reserve.
        Also at that meeting, the Committee computed and announced 
    preliminary crop estimates and preliminary free and reserve percentages 
    for Dipped Seedless, Oleate and Related Seedless, Sultana, Muscat, 
    Monukka, and Golden Seedless raisins. On January 12, 1995, the 
    Committee decided that volume control percentages only were warranted 
    for Zante Currant, Other Seedless, and Natural (sun-dried) Seedless 
    raisins. The Committee delayed announcing final percentages for Natural 
    (sun-dried) Seedless raisins until more shipment and production 
    information was available. It determined that the supplies of the other 
    varietal types would be less than or close enough to the computed trade 
    demands for each of these varietals. Thus, volume control percentages 
    would not be necessary to maintain market stability.
        Pursuant to Sec. 989.54(c), the Committee may adopt interim free 
    and reserve percentages. Interim percentages may release less than the 
    computed trade demand for each varietal type. Interim percentages for 
    both Zante Currant and Other Seedless raisins of 39.75 percent free and 
    60.25 percent reserve were computed and announced on January 12, 1995. 
    That action released most, but not all, of the computed trade demand 
    for Zante Currant and Other Seedless raisins.
        Under Sec. 989.54(d) of the order, the Committee is required to 
    recommend to the Secretary, no later than February 15 of each crop 
    year, final free and reserve percentages which, when applied to the 
    final production estimate of a varietal type, will tend to release the 
    full trade demand for any varietal type.
        The Committee's estimates, as of January 12, 1995, of 1994-95 
    production of Zante Currant and Other Seedless raisins were 5,507 and 
    1,973 tons, respectively. For Zante Currants, dividing the estimated 
    trade demand of 2,200 tons by the final estimate of production results 
    in a final free percentage of 40 percent and a final reserve percentage 
    of 60 percent. For Other Seedless raisins, dividing the computed trade 
    demand of 787 tons by the final estimate of production results in a 
    final free percentage of 40 percent and a final reserve percentage of 
    60 percent.
        The free and reserve percentages established by the interim final 
    rule, and continued in effect, without changes, by this rule, apply 
    uniformly to all handlers in the industry, whether small or large, and 
    there are no known additional costs incurred by small handlers. 
    Although raisin markets are limited, they are available to all 
    handlers, regardless of size. The stabilizing effects of the 
    percentages impact both small and large handlers positively by helping 
    them maintain and expand markets.
        Based on available information, the Administrator of the AMS has 
    determined that the issuance of this final rule will not have a 
    significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
        After consideration of all relevant information presented, 
    including the Committee's recommendations and other information, it is 
    found that finalizing the interim final rule, without change, as 
    published in the Federal Register on March 7, 1995 (60 FR 12403), will 
    tend to effectuate the declared policy of the Act. [[Page 26348]] 
    
    List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 989
    
        Grapes, Marketing agreements, Raisins, Reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements.
    
        For the reasons set forth in the preamble, 7 CFR part 989 is 
    amended as follows:
    
    PART 989--RAISINS PRODUCED FROM GRAPES GROWN IN CALIFORNIA
    
        1. The authority citation for 7 CFR part 989 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 7 U.S.C. 601-674.
    
        2. Accordingly, the interim final rule adding Sec. 989.247, which 
    was published at 60 FR 12403 on March 7, 1995, is adopted as a final 
    rule without change.
    
        Dated: May 11, 1995.
    Terry C. Long,
    Acting Deputy Director, Fruit and Vegetable Division.
    [FR Doc. 95-12147 Filed 5-16-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3410-02-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
6/16/1995
Published:
05/17/1995
Department:
Agriculture Department
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
95-12147
Dates:
June 16, 1995.
Pages:
26346-26348 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
FV95-989-1FIR
PDF File:
95-12147.pdf
CFR: (1)
7 CFR 989