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Upstate wineries get federal grants

Hosmer Winery has received a "value-added producer grant" of nearly $50,000 from the U.S. Department of Agriculture – Rural Development. 

The $49,990 grant, announced Friday by U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY),  will be used to improve Hosmer Winery’s marketing and distribution of a new wine to the Boston and New England markets.

Meanwhile, Schumer's colleague Kirsten Gillibrand got to announce $394,499 in federal funding for three Western New York entities to help revamp their marketing strategies and develop new products. The funding was allocated through the U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Value-Added Producer Grant (VAPG) program.

They are Olde Chautauqua Vineyards in Portland ($299,999), Spring Lake Winery ($49,500) in Lockport and the Growers Cooperative Grape Juice Co. ($45,000).

The VAPG program is designed to boost farms' income and productivity by increasing access to capital, providing technical assistance, and developing new marketing strategies for independent producers to increase exposure and broaden their customer base.

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Rural Development funds are made available to agricultural producers, like Hosmer Winery, who seek to establish or expand markets for their value-added agricultural products.  The USDA grant will be used as working capital to market and increase sales of a new “off-premise” wine, which will be sold in the New England region.

, New York State Wine Examiner

Bill Dowd is a longtime New York journalist who also is a wine/spirits/beer writer and competition judge. His weekly "Dowd On Drinks" column is distributed throughout North America by the New York Times News Service and Hearst News Service. You can e-mail him at williamdowd@nycap.rr.com.

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