A $12 billion bailout for farmers includes $1 billion for specialty crop and sugar growers. That addresses a concern raised by several members of Florida’s congressional delegation.
Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent announced this week the “bridge payments” for American farmers hit by trade disruptions and increased production costs. Leaders in the Donald Trump administration blamed the “failed” Joe Biden administration for inflation and trade deficits.
While the U.S. Department of Agriculture set aside $1 billion for specialty crops and sugar, details on the timeline for payments in those areas are still under development, pending further study of market impacts and economic needs.
The announcement was made at an event with farmers from eight other states, including Florida. But the agency addressed a key concern raised by several Florida lawmakers.
“Florida’s specialty crop growers help feed America and support jobs across our state,” said U.S. Rep. Scott Franklin, a Lakeland Republican.
“Our delegation made it clear specialty crops must be part of this assistance and I’m pleased the Trump Administration answered that call. This $1 billion commitment will help our farmers stay competitive, recover from storm losses and keep doing what they do best. When Florida agriculture is strong, our whole state benefits. This is a big win for the growers who make that possible.”
Specialty crops in Florida include citrus, with 17% of U.S. production coming from Florida groves, according to Citrus Industry Magazine. But Florida is also the No. 2 producer of tomatoes, behind California. Other specialty crops, such as peppers and snap beans, also make up a large share of Florida agriculture. And about 90% of sugar in the U.S. is produced in either Florida or Louisiana.
U.S. Sen. Rick Scott also sent a letter to Rollins last week, urging the USDA to consider specialty farmers in any assistance package.
“For years, Florida’s specialty crop producers have battled unfair trade practices and market distortions caused by Communist China, Latin America, and other foreign markets while also facing challenges such as citrus greening and hurricanes,” the Naples Republican wrote.
“Many of their foreign competitors enjoy government subsidies and operate under far weaker labor and environmental standards – even for imports into the United States – while Florida’s growers are held to some of the highest production standards in the world, leaving them to compete on an uneven playing field.”
In October, Franklin also led a bipartisan letter to Rollins, noting that past federal relief packages have paid attention to specialty crops.
“In prior mitigation efforts, certain specialty crops were included alongside row crops. This precedent acknowledges that specialty crops are also vulnerable to trade and cost disruptions and that their exclusion would undermine the goal of stabilizing the agricultural economy. Any new aid program must explicitly include specialty crops and respond to actual economic pressures across the agriculture sector,” the letter reads.
That was signed entirely by members of the Florida U.S. House delegation, including Republican U.S. Reps. Gus Bilirakis, Kat Cammack, Byron Donalds, Neal Dunn, Carlos Giménez, Mike Haridopolos, Laurel Lee, Cory Mills, John Rutherford, Daniel Webster and Democratic U.S. Reps. Jared Moskowitz, Darren Soto and Debbie Wasserman Schultz.
USDA officials said the Marketing Assistance for Specialty Crops program has distributed $1.8 billion in assistance to 52,000 producers, and more than $2.5 billion in block grants has been delivered to states and sugar beet and cane processors to cover losses from 2023 and 2024.