Business News
NORTH COAST, Calif. – The California Department of Fish and Wildlife, the California Department of Food and Agriculture's CalCannabis Cultivation Licensing Division and the State Water Resources Control Board will be at the Emerald Cup in Sonoma County on Dec. 14 and 15.
All three agencies will be participating in two roundtable discussions and hosting an information table with cannabis-permitting materials, wildlife-friendly literature and a suggestion box.
"We are thrilled to be participating in this event," said Jennifer Nguyen, CDFW's acting Cannabis Program Director. "Our cannabis permitting team along with our sister state agencies will be speaking on two panels, connecting and listening to the cultivator community and sharing wildlife-friendly practices."
Roundtable topics and times:
Saturday, Dec. 14, from 11:15 a.m. to 12 p.m.
Regulator to Cultivator: Keeping an Open Dialogue
State agencies, cultivators and industry stakeholders all have an investment in today's cannabis market. Keeping the lines of communication open during California's historic transition to a regulated commercial cannabis market is crucial. While a regulated market offers many new and exciting opportunities for California's cannabis industry, there are also many challenges to work through by engaging in conversations and receiving feedback from each other.
Saturday, Dec. 14, from 1 to 1:45 p.m.
Environmentally Friendly Cannabis: What Industry Experts Have to Say
With the passage of Proposition 64, thousands of new cultivators are entering the regulated cannabis market. Many are unaware that seemingly harmless farming activities can have big impacts to the environment. Learn more about the state's role in protecting California's natural resources and how some traditional cultivators are raising the bar with their wildlife-friendly practices.
Please note, times are subject to change based on conference schedule adjustments.
Cannabis cultivators with questions can always email CDFW atThis email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. , visit http://wildlife.ca.gov/Cannabis to learn more about permitting or attend an upcoming permitting workshop being held throughout the state.
Learn more about the Emerald Cup at http://theemeraldcup.com.
All three agencies will be participating in two roundtable discussions and hosting an information table with cannabis-permitting materials, wildlife-friendly literature and a suggestion box.
"We are thrilled to be participating in this event," said Jennifer Nguyen, CDFW's acting Cannabis Program Director. "Our cannabis permitting team along with our sister state agencies will be speaking on two panels, connecting and listening to the cultivator community and sharing wildlife-friendly practices."
Roundtable topics and times:
Saturday, Dec. 14, from 11:15 a.m. to 12 p.m.
Regulator to Cultivator: Keeping an Open Dialogue
State agencies, cultivators and industry stakeholders all have an investment in today's cannabis market. Keeping the lines of communication open during California's historic transition to a regulated commercial cannabis market is crucial. While a regulated market offers many new and exciting opportunities for California's cannabis industry, there are also many challenges to work through by engaging in conversations and receiving feedback from each other.
Saturday, Dec. 14, from 1 to 1:45 p.m.
Environmentally Friendly Cannabis: What Industry Experts Have to Say
With the passage of Proposition 64, thousands of new cultivators are entering the regulated cannabis market. Many are unaware that seemingly harmless farming activities can have big impacts to the environment. Learn more about the state's role in protecting California's natural resources and how some traditional cultivators are raising the bar with their wildlife-friendly practices.
Please note, times are subject to change based on conference schedule adjustments.
Cannabis cultivators with questions can always email CDFW at
Learn more about the Emerald Cup at http://theemeraldcup.com.
- Details
- Written by: California Department of Fish and Wildlife
In welcoming Farm Bureau members to the first meeting of the second century of the California Farm Bureau Federation, CFBF President Jamie Johansson said the organization would continue to advocate on behalf of science, improved state and federal policies, and unity in agriculture.
Johansson spoke Monday during the 101st CFBF Annual Meeting in Monterey.
Noting the recent 75th anniversary of the D-Day invasion that led to the end of World War II, Johansson pointed to the crucial role farmers and ranchers had played in the immediate aftermath of the war.
“When it came time to rebuild the world, re-establish stability, agriculture was where they turned,” he said, adding that scientific and technological advancements had made that possible.
“We have succeeded because agriculture has defended the change science has brought, and adopted it and adapted to it, in the last 75 years,” he said. “The challenge before Farm Bureau now is defending the science on our farms.”
Johansson noted Gov. Gavin Newsom’s veto this year of Senate Bill 1, which sought to preserve state environmental and labor standards from federal changes initiated by the Trump administration.
“We’re not going to freeze the science,” he said. “We’re going to move our science forward.”
Johansson expressed optimism about a planned House of Representatives vote this week on the Farm Workforce Modernization Act, which would address short- and long-term shortages of agricultural employees, and urged the House to vote before the end of the year on the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement on trade.
He counseled farm groups to work together in assuring production of nutritious food products.
“It’s not about whether you eat an organic carrot or a conventional carrot. It’s about eating the carrot and not the Cheeto,” he said.
Johansson said Farm Bureau would maintain the active advocacy that drew farmers and ranchers to the organization.
“At the core of what makes a California Farm Bureau member is not an individual who accepts the current politics of our state and nation, but an individual who wants to change the politics and the direction of our state and our country,” he said.
The California Farm Bureau Federation works to protect family farms and ranches on behalf of nearly 34,000 members statewide and as part of a nationwide network of nearly 5.6 million Farm Bureau members.
Johansson spoke Monday during the 101st CFBF Annual Meeting in Monterey.
Noting the recent 75th anniversary of the D-Day invasion that led to the end of World War II, Johansson pointed to the crucial role farmers and ranchers had played in the immediate aftermath of the war.
“When it came time to rebuild the world, re-establish stability, agriculture was where they turned,” he said, adding that scientific and technological advancements had made that possible.
“We have succeeded because agriculture has defended the change science has brought, and adopted it and adapted to it, in the last 75 years,” he said. “The challenge before Farm Bureau now is defending the science on our farms.”
Johansson noted Gov. Gavin Newsom’s veto this year of Senate Bill 1, which sought to preserve state environmental and labor standards from federal changes initiated by the Trump administration.
“We’re not going to freeze the science,” he said. “We’re going to move our science forward.”
Johansson expressed optimism about a planned House of Representatives vote this week on the Farm Workforce Modernization Act, which would address short- and long-term shortages of agricultural employees, and urged the House to vote before the end of the year on the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement on trade.
He counseled farm groups to work together in assuring production of nutritious food products.
“It’s not about whether you eat an organic carrot or a conventional carrot. It’s about eating the carrot and not the Cheeto,” he said.
Johansson said Farm Bureau would maintain the active advocacy that drew farmers and ranchers to the organization.
“At the core of what makes a California Farm Bureau member is not an individual who accepts the current politics of our state and nation, but an individual who wants to change the politics and the direction of our state and our country,” he said.
The California Farm Bureau Federation works to protect family farms and ranches on behalf of nearly 34,000 members statewide and as part of a nationwide network of nearly 5.6 million Farm Bureau members.
- Details
- Written by: Elizabeth Larson





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