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Senate proposal aims to help New England maple producers tap into more federal funding

Sap buckets hang from maple trees, Wednesday, March 19, 2014 in Loudon, N.H. New England senators are proposing legislation to help the region’s syrup producers.  (AP Photo/Jim Cole)
Sap buckets hang from maple trees, Wednesday, March 19, 2014 in Loudon, N.H. New England senators are proposing legislation to help the region’s syrup producers. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)

As climate change and rising temperatures have put increasing stress on the maple syrup industry, a group of New England senators is sponsoring legislation to help the region’s syrup producers.

The proposal would increase funding for the federal maple support program to $30 million dollars to support new research, education, natural resource sustainability and promotion for the industry.

New Hampshire syrup producers said the help is much needed.

Mike Benton, a fifth-generation maple producer in Thornton, New Hampshire, said many sugar houses need updated equipment to adapt to rising temperatures, which affect production patterns in maple trees.

“If [smaller producers] can get some more technology to work with they’d be better off in the long run because it’s not the way it used to be,” he said.

Mark Fortin of Two Sappy Guys Sugar House in Bedford, New Hampshire, shared excitement about the prospect of any increased support.

“We’re a small producer, so any help we can get certainly helps," he said. "We’ve never operated in the green, we’re always in the red."

The act would be part of the U.S. farm bill, which Congress reauthorizes every five years to support agriculture nationwide. In New Hampshire, the state government and research institutions like the University of New Hampshire would be eligible to apply.


This story is a production of the New England News Collaborative. It was originally published by New Hampshire Public Radio.  

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