California Organic Food, Farming Act signed into law
“California’s state organic program has helped the state become the global leader in organics, but it has also created some duplicative fees and paperwork for producers. COFFA will help limit those duplications and ensure California remains as a top producer of the high quality organic products enjoyed by consumers around the world,” said Stone.
COFFA streamlines the registration process by allowing USDA-accredited organic certifying agents to submit registration information for their clients directly to the state. CCOF will implement this process and anticipates saving CCOF-certified farmers hundreds of hours in paperwork every year, especially farmers growing multiple crops.
The role of the SOP today is to support the USDA National Organic Program‘s (NOP) enforcement of federal organic standards, and COFFA will ensure that SOP processes stay up to date and align with those implemented by the NOP.
COFFA also allows the secretary of agriculture and COPAC to support organic agriculture through education, outreach, and other programmatic activities.
California produces over $12 billion in organic product sales annually (comprised of $9.85 billion in processed products and $2.2 billion in farm commodities). Yet organic acreage in California hovers around 3 percent of the state’s agricultural land.