MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE
2003 Regular Session
To: Agriculture
By: Representative Holland
AN ACT TO CONFORM THE ORGANIC CERTIFICATION LAW WITH THE NATIONAL ORGANIC PROGRAM; TO AMEND SECTION 69-47-3, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, TO REMOVE REFERENCE TO LIVESTOCK AND DAIRY PRODUCTION IN THE ORGANIC CERTIFICATION LAW; TO AMEND SECTION 69-47-5, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, TO REQUIRE TISSUE TESTING OF A CROP GROWN IN AN ORGANICALLY MANAGED FIELD THAT IS LOCATED WITHIN TWENTY-FIVE FEET OF A FIELD TO WHICH A PROHIBITED PESTICIDE HAS BEEN APPLIED; TO REPEAL SECTIONS 69-47-29 AND 69-47-31, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, WHICH PROVIDE PENALTIES AND ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES FOR VIOLATIONS OF THE ORGANIC CERTIFICATION LAW; AND FOR RELATED PURPOSES.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI:
SECTION 1. Section 69-47-3, Mississippi Code of 1972, is amended as follows:
(a) Crop, including all fruits, vegetables and herbs, production standards;
(b) Manufacturing, processing, packaging and labeling standards;
(c) A materials list of permitted and prohibited substances;
(d) Procedures governing the certification process; and
(e) Standards and procedures for approving out-of-state organic products and ingredients.
SECTION 2. Section 69-47-5, Mississippi Code of 1972, is amended as follows:
(2) An applicant for certification must document that the land, individual field or greenhouse units to be certified shall be managed organically. Documentation for certification shall be in the form of a detailed, three-year farm plan for land, fields or units and in a format acceptable to the department. The application shall be reviewed by the organic certification program director.
(3) The farm plan shall include:
(a) Three-year rotation and nutrient-stabilization plans for each field or unit under organic management;
(b) One-year, agronomic field-by-field crop practice and spray plans for each field or unit of the farm which is organically managed;
(c) A map of the field to be organically managed which also indicates all buffer zones and their width, with at least a thirty-foot buffer zone separating land managed organically from other cultivated agricultural land and at least a fifteen-foot buffer zone separating greenhouse units managed organically from other units;
(d) A description of facility and methods that shall be used to keep organically managed crops and livestock from post-harvest segregated from nonorganically managed crops and livestock;
(e) A description of facilities and methods that will be used to keep farm equipment from contaminating organically managed fields; and
(f) A description of facilities and methods that shall be used to store and handle prohibited materials separately from permitted materials.
(4) A crop grown in an organically managed field, any part of which is located within twenty-five (25) feet of a field to which a prohibited pesticide has been applied, shall be tissue-tested for residues of that pesticide before the harvest of the organic crop.
(5) The department shall not certify a field as organically managed that is part of a farm unless there exist distinct, defined boundaries between fields under organic management and other fields.
(6) The department shall not certify land that has no previous history as cultivated cropland, orchard or improved pasture, and that is being converted to organic for the sole purpose of replacing land abandoned because of chemical contamination or depleted fertility resulting from previous farm-management practices.
(7) In order to be certified, greenhouse units must be used solely for organically produced agricultural products in compliance with this chapter and applicable regulations.
(8) An applicant for certification shall present soil fertility test results for each field or greenhouse unit to be certified initially and every third year thereafter.
(9) An applicant shall also present the results of water residue and plant-tissue tests as required by the department.
(10) The department shall reserve the right to use a certification rating system in evaluating the application.
SECTION 3. Sections 69-47-29 and 69-47-31, Mississippi Code of 1972, which provide penalties and administrative proceedings for violations of the organic certification law, are repealed.
SECTION 4. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after July 1, 2003.