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March 23, 2006
 
Georgia winds up agrosecurity trainings
 
Agrosecurity classes will come to an end during April.
 
For the past year, the Georgia Committee on Agriculture and Food Defense and University of Georgia Cooperative Extension have worked to make sure Georgia’s agriculture industry is as safe as possible.
Complete Story

By Stephanie Schupska
University of Georgia

For the past year, the Georgia Committee on Agriculture and Food Defense and University of Georgia Cooperative Extension have worked to make sure Georgia’s agriculture industry is as safe as possible.

Training classes across the state have helped prepare Georgians to respond to an agrosecurity incident.

“Agriculture and food affect every single county in the state,” said Don Hamilton, Homeland Security coordinator for UGA’s College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences. “Food is distributed in every county through grocery stores, and it’s transported through every county. Agriculture and food span the continuum from farm to fork.”

The committee is hoping to have 3,500 people trained by the end of April when the agrosecurity trainings will draw to a close. The last trainings will be held Tuesday, March 28 in Dawson; Thursday, April 6 in Brunswick; Tuesday, April 11 in Thomasville and Thursday, April 13 in Lawrenceville and Marietta.

The training is free and open to potential agriculture emergency responders. Other classes may be offered through the end of April depending on demand.

“The purpose of these trainings is to get information from the various groups – like farmers and emergency workers – to each other so they will know what the other’s roles are and what each can bring to the table,” Hamilton said.

The class teaches those in emergency management and agriculture- related businesses how to recognize an agricultural incident and minimize potential problems through proper training. It is also geared towards responders from local and state governments and volunteer organizations who respond to all types of emergencies.

“People generally know their own jobs and do them well,” Hamilton said, “but they don’t necessarily know what others will be doing in the same situation.”

For those looking for credit hours, CEUs are available through various agencies. The training is sponsored by the U.S. Office of Domestic Preparedness in cooperation with the Georgia Emergency Management Agency, Georgia Department of Agriculture, UGA and the USDA.

For more information or to register, go to www.agrosecurity.uga.edu.

 
 
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AUTHOR
Stephanie Schupska
College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
706-542-8981

(Stephanie Schupska is a news editor with the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.)

 
SOURCE
Don Hamilton
706-542-1073
 
 
RELATED WEB SITES
  Agrosecurity home page
 
MULTIMEDIA

Graphics included in this story:
  agrosecurity1low.jpg
  agrosecurity1.jpg


 


 
 
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