The Maui News

Farm grants

105 small farms helped

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A $2.5 million grant program has helped 105 small farms across Maui County purchase much-needed supplies and boost their visibility online.

Maui County’s Agricultur­al Micro Grants Program, which is administer­ed by the nonprofit Maui Economic Opportunit­y, purchased tractors, chippers and other supplies; put up fencing and sheds; and establishe­d an online presence for the farms.

The program was establishe­d to allow small farms to receive grants up to $25,000 to directly increase the availabili­ty of local produce, livestock, poultry and farm products while increasing agricultur­al capacity, productivi­ty, name recognitio­n and income, MEO said in a news release Monday.

With the program winding to a close, MEO Business Center Director David Daly said Monday that his team is working on putting the finishing touches on the last couple of grants and the program.

To qualify, farms had to have a state general excise tax number, and the owners had to reside in Maui County. Preference was given to socially disadvanta­ged applicants, such as women and Native Hawaiians, and food-producing farm businesses that operate on fewer than 12 acres in Maui County.

Carol Voss of citrus fruit farm Laoa Farms in Kula received a $14,000 grant and used the money to buy farm equipment, including a chipper/shredder, lawnmowers and weed whackers, as well as fertilizer.

“We needed equipment; that’s our biggest drawback,”

Voss said.

The farm produces about 5,000 pounds of lemons, limes, oranges, peaches and nectarines annually. Voss said the pandemic did not really affect their business because their distributo­r, LocalHarve­st, kept accepting their fruit.

Her husband, David, is the mechanic for the 4-acre farm, keeping the old and hand-medown machinery going. He recently learned that he had cancer, and the treatment sapped his energy and his ability to care for the equipment.

Then they learned about the grant from the Maui County Farm Bureau.

“I appreciate the county and whoever put this together for small farmers,” Voss said. “Usually, everything’s big grants, you gotta make $50,000 to get something. This was nice that it was small . . . . I assume it benefited a lot of small farmers on this island.”

Her husband, meanwhile, is on his way to recovery.

Payments through the grants program were made directly to vendors, according to MEO. Daly noted that vendors have been paid but that some farmers have not yet received equipment or materials due to manufactur­ing shortages and weather issues.

The money was used for farming equipment and machinery; processing and storage equipment; farm expansion, such as fencing and sheds; supplies, including fertilizer­s, soil amendments, seeds, plants and small tools; packing and packaging materials; technology equipment; marketing supplies and services, including website developmen­t; health and safety upgrades; and profession­al developmen­t and education.

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 ??  ?? Laoa Farms on 4 acres in Kula produces citrus fruits, including lemons, limes, oranges, peaches and nectarines and avocados.
Laoa Farms on 4 acres in Kula produces citrus fruits, including lemons, limes, oranges, peaches and nectarines and avocados.

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