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San Diego County Agricultural Industry Thrives

ByCity News ServiceDwane Brown / KPBS Evening Edition Anchor/Reporter
Published September 10, 2014 at 2:40 PM PDT
This story was published more than 10 years ago.
Crop Report Shows San Diego's Agriculture Industry Thriving
San Diego County Agricultural Industry Thrives
The value of the region's agriculture industry last year was $1.85 billion, up 6 percent from 2012, according to an annual crop report released Wednesday by San Diego County officials.

Despite the challenges from California’s ongoing drought, San Diego County’s agriculture industry continues to thrive.

The value of the region's agriculture industry last year was $1.85 billion, up 6 percent from 2012,according to an annual crop report released Wednesday by San Diego County officials.

“In a recovering economy, this is a testimony of the determination and resourcefulness of our local growers," saidHa Dang, the county’s agricultural commissioner.

Dang said it was also a testament to the farmers that they showed this growth during a prolonged drought.

Agriculture Facts

Here are some stats about San Diego County’s agricultural industry from the 2013 crop report:

305,573 acres: Amount of land covered in the county by agriculture.

5,732: Number of farms in the county, more than any other county in the United States.

4 acres: The median size farm in the county.

40: The number of crops that are valued in excess of $1 million each.

She released the report at the Armstrong Garden Centers in El Cajon, which made sense because for the fifth year in a row the most valuable crop was ornamental trees and shrubs. Both are plentiful at the commercial nursery.

The crop accounted for $424.9 million, or 23 percent of the county's agricultural production, according to the report. Total revenue for ornamental trees and shrubs was well above the $387 million of the year before.

Measured on a per-acre basis, however, indoor flower and foliage plants was king, with a value of $457,000 an acre and overall income of $329.5 million, according to the report.

Among other leading crops, measured in total sales across major categories, were fruit and nuts, up 23 percent to $415.6 million; vegetables and vine products, down 9 percent to $170.7 million; and livestock and poultry, up 10 percent to $84.7 million.

The fruit and nut category received a major boost from avocados, which shot up 25 percent in value to $198 million following a poor yield in 2012.

Other more specific crops covered in the report were bedding plants, valued at $203.7 million; tomatoes, $92.7 million; lemons, $80 million; eggs, $76.3 million, miscellaneous berries, $34.3 million; herbaceous perennials, $26.7 million; and cacti and succulents, $26.5 million.

More than 305,000 acres in San Diego County are devoted to agriculture, spread across more than 5,700 farms — the most of any county in the U.S., according to the report.

While the numbers are impressive, the county hopes to give the agricultural industry a boost by relaxing regulations that go into the beer-making business so the craft beer boom can spread to the rural backcountry, said county Supervisor Dianne Jacob. “And then we’ll have the beer industry be able to open up tasting rooms and do retail sales in agricultural areas in our county,” she said.

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Brown started his career with KPBS in the early '90s as a radio anchor and reporter before expanding his broadcast news experience at CBS radio and television in New York. He’s been a news director, anchor, reporter and correspondent in San Francisco and has worked as a writer, producer, assignment editor and talk show host. He returned to KPBS in 2005. As the former anchor for KPBS Evening Edition, Brown provided an in-depth look at issues and stories relevant to San Diego. He spent nearly seven years as anchor/host of Morning Edition on KPBS Radio. Between 2006 and 2010, the San Diego Press Club named Brown "Best Morning Newscaster" in San Diego Radio. In 2006, the Society of Professional Journalists also named him "Best Morning Newscaster." During that time he managed and taught a two-week high school boot camp for aspiring radio reporters at KPBS in conjunction with the California Chicano News Media Association. Brown studied English/Journalism at San Diego State University and is a Fast Trac graduate from UC Berkeley's Haas School of Business. He’s a popular public speaker and Toastmaster International member. He’s been master of ceremonies for the American Red Cross, VA Medical Center San Diego, Urban League, San Diego Office of Emergency Services and numerous foundations. Brown is also a voice actor for movie, documentary, television, radio and Internet projects.
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