By
Linda Breazeale JACKSON
-- Cotton growers opposed to the boll weevil eradication
program believe a ruling by the Mississippi Attorney
General's Office is good news, but supporters of the program
believe it is good news for the boll weevils. In a
ruling released Jan. 25, prior to a joint meeting of the
House and Senate Agriculture Committees, the attorney
general's opinion was that growers could keep the program
with a two-thirds majority voting in favor of continuing the
program. The
ruling was based on the attorney general's interpretation of
the state legislation which established the eradication
program in 1993. Eradication efforts began in August 1994 in
the 29 counties down the eastern side of Mississippi, known
as Region IV. "Naturally,
growers supporting the program believe it would be more fair
for a two-thirds vote to kill the program," said Kenneth
Hood, president of the Mississippi Boll Weevil Management
Corp. "Region IV growers voted the program in and should be
allowed to continue without a small number of opponents
changing the progress that is being made toward ridding the
area of cotton's No. 1 pest." A
devastating insect year resulted in growers from several
counties accusing eradication efforts for low yields and
crop failures. However, higher than normal insect problems
were noted outside the eradication zone as well. Hood, a
cotton grower in Bolivar County, said based on telephone
calls from growers in Region IV, he believes more growers
are for the program than opponents claim. For the
upcoming referendum to continue the program, at least 50
percent of the eligible growers must vote for the election
to be valid. Program opponents presented a petition to the
Mississippi Boll Weevil Management Corp. in December with
416 names calling for a referendum to determine the
program's future. The date for the two-week vote has not
been set but could begin Feb. 10. The
attorney general's ruling also stated that neither pro nor
con material should be mailed with the ballots. The ruling
also confirmed that the legislation indicates growers could
not be assessed more than $40 per acre to take part in the
program. The
wording of the legislation is unclear on whether the $40
figure is an annual amount or the total amount for the first
five years of the eradication program. The
ballot that growers passed in 1994 called for an assessment
of $101.70 over a five-year period. Those payments would be
broken down annually into payments of $10, $16, $16, $29 and
$30.70. "Regardless
of how the referendum turns out, we will need a
clarification of this issue," Hood said. Released:
Jan. 29, 1996
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Ruling Could
Spell Relief for Weevils
Contact: Dr. George Mullendore (601) 325-2993
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:27:47
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