September 18, 2006
Docket No. APHIS-2006-0114
Regulatory Analysis and Development
PPD, APHIS, Station 3A-03.8
4700 River Road Unit 118
Riverdale, MD 20737-1238
RE: Citrus Canker; Quarantine of the State of Florida
Please accept the following comments offered in response to amended
regulations governing the movement of regulated citrus articles from the state of
Florida.
In April 2006 USDA-APHIS-PPQ gave consideration to three interim
strategy options for handling the movement of regulated citrus articles, including
citrus fruit, out of Florida. These options offered decreasing degrees of restrictive
measures and were designated Option A, Option B and Option C, respectively. In
May 2006 the state of Louisiana, a citrus-producing state, responded to the USDA-
APHIS-PPQ request for response with the following comments:
?The state of Louisiana favors Option C of the federal talking points.
Option C is not significantly different than the current safeguarding measures
currently followed for movement of Florida citrus fruit into citrus-producing states.
In addition, the state of Florida has proposed a 60-day pre-harvest inspection
interval and intends to add additional resources at the packing process level to
inspect for evidence of canker as part of the Option C proposal.
The USDA document ?Evaluation of asymptomatic citrus fruit as a pathway for the
introduction of citrus canker disease (USDA-APHIS March 2006)? clearly
indicates that movement of viable canker inoculum on packing house fruit is highly
unlikely, concluding that the risk of infestation through this pathway is minimal.
Any one of the three options offered will place an additional regulatory burden on
citrus-producing states; however, Option C probably places the least burden.
Florida citrus fruit originating from quarantined areas would be labeled as such,
simplifying spot checks at retail and wholesale sites. Under Option A or B, no
Florida citrus fruit would be allowed to enter Louisiana, yet transshipments of
Florida fruit from non citrus-producing states is likely, thus increasing and
complicating our spot-check activities. Transshipped fruit will likely have lost its
origin and it will be difficult to determine whether it should or should not be entering
the state.
If no Florida citrus fruit is available to Louisiana retail and wholesale locations, the
likelihood of smuggled fruit will increase. In addition, the shipment of foreign-
source citrus fruit into Louisiana and other citrus-producing states will increase
significantly, possibly increasing pest risks that are greater than those posed by
Option C. ?
The state of Louisiana has not changed its stance on this response.
We believe the interim rule is more restrictive than is necessary to properly
safeguard citrus-producing states from the minimal threat of citrus canker
movement and introduction on fruit that has undergone mitigative treatments.
Therefore, we do not support the rule as amended.
In addition to imposing undue restrictions, the provisions of this interim
rule will be extremely difficult to enforce. PPQ presence in some citrus-producing
states, including Louisiana, is limited. Accidental introduction, transshipment,
movement to retail/wholesale distribution centers and purposeful movement of
prohibited fruit will be common occurrences. Limited permit fruit will continually be
brought in by retailers, wholesalers and the general public, often without complete
knowledge of the federal quarantine restrictions. Regulatory action on the part of
PPQ will present a constant drain on time and resources.
Thank you for the opportunity to comment on this issue.
Sincerely,
Tad N. Hardy, Admin. Coordinator
Quarantine Programs
Comment from Tad Hardy, Louisiana Department of Agriculture & Forestry
This is comment on Rule
Citrus Canker; Quarantine of the State of Florida
View Comment
Attachments:
Attachment to Hardy comment
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Attachment to Hardy comment
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