Baldwin announces $23M to support dairy industry
USDA awards will support Baldwin’s Dairy Business Innovation Initiatives
U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.) has announced $23 million in grant funding is available to support dairy businesses' processing capacity expansion, onfarm improvements and technical assistance services under the Dairy Business Innovation Initiatives grant program. Baldwin authored the bill creating the Dairy Business Innovation Initiative program, successfully shepherding its passage in 2018 and securing funding in the subsequent years.
The Dairy Business Innovation Initiatives provide valuable technical assistance and subgrants to dairy farmers and businesses across Wisconsin, supporting them with business plan development, marketing and branding, as well as increasing access to innovative production and processing techniques to support the development of value-added products.
“Wisconsin’s dairy businesses are key economic drivers of many of our rural communities and I’m proud to be working to deliver our dairy farmers and processors with the direct support they need to carry our state’s proud tradition of being America’s Dairyland into the future,” said Baldwin. “Through the support of my Dairy Business Innovation Initiatives, this federal funding from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) will help Wisconsin dairy businesses innovate, reach new markets and spur economic growth.”
The funds will be awarded noncompetitively to the current initiatives at the University of Wisconsin, the California State University Fresno, the University of Tennessee, and the Vermont Agency of Agriculture, Food and Markets.
“The Dairy Business Innovative Initiatives use their on-the-ground knowledge and their ability to target funding where it will have the most regional and local impacts to make significant improvements to the U.S. dairy supply chain,” said USDA Under Secretary for Marketing and Regulatory Programs Jenny Lester Moffi tt. “This program is a great example of USDA’s efforts to build capacity from the bottom up and the middle out by supporting small and mid-sized dairy operations.”