Other U.S. Agencies in Belize
USDA Animal & Plant Health Inspection Service
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United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) |
The Animal & Plant Health Inspection Service, International Services (APHIS/IS) is a division of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) and has been present in Belize since 1977. The USDA Belize office is under the direct technical supervision of USDA Regional Office in Guatemala City, Guatemala. The Mission of APHIS/IS abroad is to protect American agriculture. This is achieved by working in cooperative programs with foreign governments in dealing with the different plant and animal pest and diseases of regional importance. In Belize, the pest of main importance is the Mediteranean Fruit fly. The United States, Mexico and Guatemala have joined together in their efforts to combat this pest in the region and have formed the Moscamed Commission. The Commission is presently working on the eradication of the Fruitfly from Mexico and Guatemala. Belize is not formally part of the Moscamed Commission, however, the USDA maintains an office in Belize and has a Memorandum of Understanding of a Cooperative Program to combat this pest by providing trapping supplies, training of personnel, equipment and direct field work assistance from the USDA officer in Belize. Throughout the years Belize has been able to detect and eradicate all medfly introductions with the assistance of the USDA. The USDA recognizes the effort by the Belizean government to maintain its agricultural sector free of the medfly and has granted official recognition of this status through the publication of a ruling in the Federal Registry in August of 2000.
The USDA/APHIS/IS office in Belize also is responsible for dealing with the Belize Ministry of Agriculture in matters related to export of fruits and vegetables to the U.S. from Belize but more importantly the importation from the U.S. to Belize in compliance with the sanitary and phytosanitary standards set by the World Trade Organization.
The USDA in Belize also assists with plant and animal quarantine. It encourages surveillance systems for exotic diseases such as Foot and Mouth disease, Classical Swine Fever, and Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (Mad Cow). Should any of these diseases come into Belize, the risk of their getting into the U.S. is significantly increased because of Belize's geographical proximity to the U.S. In an effort to safeguard American agriculture and maintain transparency, the USDA maintains a close working relationship with BAHA keeping them informed of USDA plant and animal import requirements and regulation changes.
Over the years, the USDA has provided equipment and supplies, diagnostic services in their laboratories in the U.S. and has provided several of our Belizean veterinarians with hands on training at the USDA high security laboratory in Plum Island, New York. Similarly, the USDA has provided quarantine assistance for plant diseases. For example, the USDA was the leading organization that assisted when the Pink Hibiscus Mealybug was first introduced in Belize.
Contact Information:
USDA/APHIS/IS Office Belize
contact: Crispin Blanco, USDA Officer
tel: (501) 822-4011