Florida Agriculture Commissioner Announces Environmental Leadership Awards
The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services has announced the Agriculture-Environmental Leadership Award winners, which recognizes enterprises that are at the forefront of developing and adopting environmentally innovative farming practices.
“These recipients represent the best of the best in developing and implementing progressive techniques to safeguard the environment and conserve natural resources,” said Commissioner of Agriculture Adam Putnam. “All three share a commitment to protect and preserve Florida’s resources while continuing to provide top-notch agricultural products for our state, our country, and across the globe.”
The awards were presented recently at the 72nd Florida Farm Bureau Annual Convention in Ponte Vedra Beach.
The 2013 winners are:
Barbara Goering of The Farmton Tree Farm, a 59,000-acre forest timber operation straddling Volusia and Brevard counties. In partnership with local counties, Miami Corporation, which manages the land, created the Farmton Local Plan, an innovative 50-year vision for the future to place nearly 80% of the land into conservation, including a critical regional wildlife corridor and environmentally significant habitat. The Farmton Tree Farm serves as a model for large-scale and long-range planning efforts, by creating sustainable places for jobs, recreation, and living in the future.
Dudley Calfee of Ferris Farms Inc., in Floral City. Ferris Farms has harvested the first commercial flats of strawberries in the state for the past six years and produces more than 200,000 flats of strawberries and more than 250,000 pounds of blueberries each year. All the while, the farm has reduced the use of pesticides, plastic mulch, and plastic drip tube and has perfected techniques to reuse 35% of these materials each year and reduced fungicide application by 50%. They are a leading example of increasing crop yields and decreasing production cost through innovation.
Shane Platt of Kissimmee Park Properties, LLC, in St. Cloud. Kissimmee Park Properties’ goal has been to protect the ranch as both an economic source and as a sustainable wildlife habitat and ecological component to the region. The ranch has been under the same family ownership for 135 years and operates a 250 head cow-calf operation. The ranch has always operated in an environmentally and economically sound method to ensure the natural environment can be passed on to the family’s sixth generation of ranchers. Kissimmee Park Properties recognizes both the economic and ecological value of a well run cattle operation — and represents Florida cattlemen well.