S-2897-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry.
Sponsored by Mazie Hirono (D-HI)
What it does
This bill would establish a Tropical Plant Health Initiative as a high-priority research and extension area within the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). It would authorize grants for developing science-based tools and treatments to combat pests and noxious weeds affecting tropical plants — including coffee, cacao, macadamia, bananas, plantains, mangos, vanilla, and floriculture crops. The bill would also reauthorize USDA competitive research and extension grants, including funding for high-priority areas, through fiscal year 2030.
Who benefits
Farmers and growers of tropical crops in Hawaii, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, and other U.S. territories where these crops are commercially grown. Agricultural researchers and university extension programs that would receive grant funding. Domestic consumers who may benefit from a more stable supply of U.S.-grown tropical products. Nursery and floriculture businesses that rely on healthy tropical plant stock. Rural economies in tropical growing regions that depend on these crops for employment and income.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who fund the grants, though the bill does not specify a dollar amount. Foreign tropical crop exporters who compete with U.S. producers could face a more competitive domestic industry if the initiative succeeds. Researchers and institutions in non-tropical agricultural areas may face increased competition for USDA grant funding if tropical plant health becomes a higher-priority area.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that U.S. tropical crop producers — concentrated in Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and the territories — face severe and ongoing threats from invasive pests and diseases, such as coffee leaf rust and the coconut rhinoceros beetle, that have devastated yields and livelihoods. They contend that designating tropical plant health as a USDA high-priority area would direct targeted federal research resources to a segment of American agriculture that has historically been underserved compared to mainland commodity crops, helping protect both food security and rural economies in these regions.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that creating a new designated high-priority research area adds bureaucratic structure without guaranteeing measurable outcomes, and that existing USDA competitive grant programs already allow researchers to apply for tropical plant health funding without a separate initiative. They contend that the bill's reauthorization through FY2030 extends federal spending commitments without requiring rigorous performance benchmarks, and that limited USDA research dollars may be better allocated through open competition rather than directed toward a narrow set of specialty crops grown in a small geographic footprint.