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With Blueberries In Trouble, Maine Eyes Commission Overhaul

In this July 27, 2012 file photo, wild blueberries await harvesting in Warren, Maine.

A legislative panel is considering a measure that would expand the number of growers on a commission that promotes the state’s wild blueberry industry.

Currently, there are eight members on the Wild Blueberry Commission of Maine, including five processor representatives. The legislation would hike the number of grower representatives from three to five, increasing commission membership to 10.

Wild Blueberry Commission Interim Executive Director Patricia Kontur says it’s in the industry’s best interest to have growers and processors working together on key issues and initiatives.

“Having a more diverse board structure would reflect the broader grower perspective. Also, we wanted to make sure that we responded to a desire for change from the growing community,” she says.

Maine’s wild blueberry industry has seen a downward trend in recent years. Kontur says there has been more competition from cultivated blueberries and Canadian wild blueberries. She says the commission is optimistic that, following some new marketing efforts, the downturn has ended and things are headed back up.

A committee vote is likely Thursday.

Ed is a Maine native who spent his early childhood in Livermore Falls before moving to Farmington. He graduated from Mount Blue High School in 1970 before going to the University of Maine at Orono where he received his BA in speech in 1974 with a broadcast concentration. It was during that time that he first became involved with public broadcasting. He served as an intern for what was then called MPBN TV and also did volunteer work for MPBN Radio.