209 Business Journal May 2018

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k e e p i n g

BUSINESS JOURNAL

b u s i n e s s e s

c o n n e c t e d ™

MAY 2018

VOLUME 3 ■ ISSUE 5

IN PROFILE

TARIFF WORRIES

Morris Nursery has bulked up their offerings of flowers, plants, and trees as gardeners get to work.

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NEWS

Opportunity Stanislaus names the list of companies making it onto the Best Places to Work: Central Valley ranking for 2018. PAGE 9

Local growers, ranchers discuss impacts on industry BY ANGELINA MARTIN 209 Business Journal

Farmers nationwide are feeling the effects of new tariffs announced by China on April 2, but California growers have been hit the hardest. Secretary of the California Department of Food and Agriculture Karen Ross met with local farmers Thursday in Lodi to highlight just how devastating the roughly $500 million in new duties on the nation’s agricultural goods is to the state’s economy. On March 8, the Trump administration announced global steel and aluminum tariffs to protect U.S. producers, exempting many nations – but not China. The country fired back at America by levying 12 to 25 percent tariffs on $3 billion worth of American goods, including scrap aluminum, frozen pork, dried fruits, nuts and wine. The tariffs greatly impact California’s almond, walnut, wine, cherry and many other commodities, increasing the cost of exportation, depressing the prices of farm futures and harming trade relationships that have taken decades to develop. Ross, along with California Farm Bureau Federation President Jamie Johansson and Farmers for Free Trade Executive Director Brian Keuhl, spoke about the tariffs with Aaron Lange of LangeTwins Family Winery and Vineyards, Lodi Farming Compa-

ny President Jeff Colombini and California League of Food Processors President and CEO Rob Neenan at LangeTwins on Thursday, where each shared how the tariffs will affect a state that exported more than $2 billion in agricultural products to China in 2016-2017. “California means something in our foreign markets…we don’t

appreciate being a bargaining chip in brand international deals, and we know the benefits that come to us if we have free and fair trade,” Ross said. “Being able to negotiate bilateral and multilateral trade agreements is critical to our continued success.” Lange shared the immediate impacts of the tariffs on his winery, which, when announced, re-

sulted in an importer from China cancelling an order. “It was a small order, but it was the beginning of a new relationship with an importer in China and it was cancelled almost immediately,” Lange said. Another, larger order of 700 cases of wine that was set to be SEE TARIFFS, PAGE 10

KRISTINA HACKER/209 BUSINESS JOURNAL

California Agriculture Secretary Karen Ross talks about how free trade is essential to the wellbeing of the state’s — and nation’s — economy during a press conference held by ag leaders on Thursday to discuss the Trump administration’s global steel and aluminum tariffs and China’s retaliatory tariffs on U.S. agricultural products.


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