Free orange juice will stay at Florida welcome centers, despite budget slice

Free orange juice will stay at Florida welcome centers, despite budget slice

TALLAHASSEE  — Free orange juice will continue to flow at Florida interstate welcome centers while state citrus officials adjust to a pending 10% legislative budget cut for promotions.

The Florida Citrus Commission on Thursday will be asked to approve a $225,000 contract with Visit Florida about the welcome-center refreshment, a reduction of $25,000 from the past.

John Fuller, director of global marketing for the Florida Department of Citrus, said the reduction reflects issues, including fewer welcome centers.

“When this was originally set up, there were four official welcome centers,” Fuller said. “So, it just didn’t make sense to keep using that same number.”

Visit Florida, the state’s tourism-marketing agency, has had three highway welcome centers since closing its facility on U.S. Highway 231 in Jackson County in 2019.

Free cups of juice had been a staple of welcome centers since 1949, according to Visit Florida, and an outcry brought back funding for the promotional effort in 2020.

As they ended this year’s legislative session, state lawmakers in March passed a proposed budget for the 2024-2025 fiscal year that includes $9 million for citrus promotions, down from $10 million in the fiscal year that will end June 30.

The budget has not been formally sent to Gov. Ron DeSantis, who can veto individual items.

Even with the pending reduction, Fuller said a focus will continue to be promoting the health benefits of citrus through e-commerce.

“We like to focus on chef influencers, or home cooks or registered dieticians, so we can have a really credible voice out there speaking on health and nutrition benefits,” Fuller said.

The promotional efforts come as the industry continues struggling with issues such as deadly citrus-greening disease and fallout from Hurricane Ian, which plowed through citrus-growing areas in 2022. The industry is on pace to produce just half of what it did in the 2021-2022 growing season before the hurricane.

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