Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Potato industry commits $5M to support research program

- NICOLE MILLER

— Wisconsin’s potato industry has had a strong, decadeslon­g partnershi­p with the University of WisconsinM­adison’s potato researcher­s, one that has helped place Wisconsin among the top three potato-producing states in the nation. Now, in order to ensure the ongoing strength of this relationsh­ip, the industry has made a commitment to raise $5M over the next 10 years to support the university’s program.

“This support stems from the great value that our growers and our potato industry see in the University of WisconsinM­adison research team and the related research facilities,” says Tamas Houlihan, executive director of the Wisconsin Potato and Vegetable Growers Associatio­n (WPVGA).

The funds will be raised by the state’s potato growers in the form of an additional assessment on their potato sales. The industry made a first step toward this commitment this past summer, when, at the request of the WPVGA, the Wisconsin Potato Industry Board increased the assessment on potato sales by one cent per hundredwei­ght, raising it from six to seven cents per hundredwei­ght. The Board will consider raising the assessment by another penny next year, the maximum it can be increased in a year.

“We decided the additional support was needed to make sure the relationsh­ip doesn’t end because of a shortfall or cutback in funding to the university,” explains Steve Diercks, owner of Coloma Farms and WPVGA member who helped advocate for the increased assessment. “We want to make sure we are able to keep the potato team—which has worked so well for the industry— intact and vibrant.”

A two-cent increase in the assessment is expected to generate around $500,000 per year. The money will go into a fund that was recently establishe­d at the Wisconsin Foundation and Alumni Associatio­n, which serves as UW-Madison’s nonprofit gift-receiving organizati­on.

The paperwork for the new fund was finalized in December, and the WPVGA and the university plan to celebrate this new commitment at the upcoming UW-Extension and WPVGA Grower Education Conference, which runs Feb. 7-9 in Stevens Point, Wisconsin.

According to Jed Colquhoun, interim associate dean for extension and outreach at the UW-Madison College of Agricultur­al and Life Sciences (CALS), the gift was made possible by the high level of trust that has developed over the decades as growers and researcher­s have worked side by side to solve problems and develop best practices.

“None of this would have happened if we didn’t have that trusting, long-term relationsh­ip to begin with. And that’s the part that I think is extremely unique, based on what I’ve seen in other states. It’s a true partnershi­p. We’re at the table together,” says Colquhoun, a UW-Madison horticultu­re professor and UWExtensio­n fruit and vegetable production specialist.

The WPVGA has been a financial backer of the university’s potato program for many years, including spending around $350,000 per year to fund specific research projects.

The new fund, which will be overseen by a seven-member advisory board made up of potato and vegetable industry representa­tives, will expand the industry’s investment options, giving them more flexibilit­y to invest in the university’s research, staffing or facilities—whatever is needed—to keep the program and the state’s industry at the forefront.

“We’ve seen some of our key researcher­s either retire or leave for various reasons, and a lot of those positions don’t get filled at all, and for others it takes years before they do get refilled. We thought it would be important to have funds available to help retain some of these researcher­s or to entice high-level, top-notch faculty to refill the vacant positions,” says Houlihan.

The funds may also be used to cover operationa­l and maintenanc­e costs at the university’s Agricultur­al Research Stations that help support this work. For instance, the Potato and Vegetable Storage Research Facility at Hancock Agricultur­al Research Station, which was built with WPVGA funds and donated to the university, is now over 10 years old. At some point in the future, notes Houlihan, it will need maintenanc­e and repairs, and he wants the industry to be able to help cover some of those costs, if needed.

The WPVGA’s ultimate goal is to raise $10M for the fund over 10 years, with the help of additional private contributi­ons from growers, vegetable processing companies and other allied industry members.

“We are very grateful for the industry’s investment in us. This will ensure we keep an energized research and extension community involved in potato and vegetable production here at UW-Madison,” says Kate VandenBosc­h, dean of CALS. “It gives us the ability to address new and emerging opportunit­ies that will drive us forward.”

 ?? SEVIE KENYON/UW-MADISON CALS. ?? Researcher­s share their results of the potato harvest at the UW-Madison Hancock Agricultur­al Research Station.
SEVIE KENYON/UW-MADISON CALS. Researcher­s share their results of the potato harvest at the UW-Madison Hancock Agricultur­al Research Station.

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