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From our December 7, 2000,
edition.
Combs
applauds more federal weevil funds
AUSTIN
— Agriculture Commissioner Susan Combs today applauded increased funding
allocated in an agricultural appropriations conference report to aid
states, including Texas, in boll weevil eradication efforts.
The
conference report, which provides for $79.157 million for the federal
government’s share of boll weevil eradication to states with active
eradication zones, is expected to be signed and finalized by the president
within days.
“This
additional funding will provide a tremendous boost to Texas’ boll weevil
eradication efforts,” Combs said.
“Under
this bill, Texas’ existing eradication zones can expect to receive about
$25 million total. An additional $4 million would be provided by the
federal government if producers in the proposed Southern High Plains/Caprock
Zone vote in November to establish an eradication program in their
eight-county area covering 1.29 million acres.”
The
weevil causes an estimated $50 million in crop losses and crop protection
treatments each year in our state, Combs said.
In
September, Combs declared the 10 counties in the Southern Rolling Plains
Zone near San Angelo to be functionally eradicated of boll weevils. The
declaration was a historic milestone for the state and farmers.
Cotton
is Texas’ top cash crop, earning $1.2 billion in 1999 in cash receipts
with 30 percent of the U.S. cotton grown in the Lone Star State.
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