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Idaho dairy farmers produce more milk and cheese than almost any state in the nation. Idaho is ranked third behind California and Wisconsin.

Idaho's Perishable Farm Products Languish At Ports

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Flickr Creative Commons
Idaho's agricultural products are stuck at west coast ports like this one in Seattle, Wash.

Farmers in Idaho say hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of beef, potatoes, apples, cheese and other products are languishing in storage because of problems at West Coast ports. The state’s agriculture officials are trying to pressure dock workers and their bosses to resolve a labor dispute and resume normal operations.

Idaho potato farmers say the port delays have prompted some overseas customers to cancel their orders altogether.

Jim Mertz of the Symms Fruit Company in Caldwell says only about 20 percent of their shipments this fall made it out of port on schedule.

We’re in the commodity business and they’re all perishable products," Mertz says. "They don’t last. It’s not like shipping nails and that kind of stuff. They’re fresh commodities.”

Mertz says the company has had to pay for cold storage at Seattle and other ports to keep loads of apples and pears from rotting while they wait.

Longshoremen and shipping companies say they’re in negotiations. The previous labor contract expired in July.

Copyright 2014 Northwest News Network

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