Maui County Farm Bureau
Maui County Farm Bureau

Membership has its perks

Apply for membership today.

In order to register for membership you will need to sign up via Hawai‘i Farm Bureau. You will become a member of the County in which your farm operation is based.

There are many great reasons to join the Maui County Farm Bureau. Members receive direct access to locally applied knowledge of the latest research and cooperative marketing information, educational and networking opportunities, financial services and tools, and affiliate benefits.

Our Mission: To represent, protect, and advance the social, economic, and educational interests of the agricultural community of Maui County.

Support Ag.
Support Maui.
Join Maui County Farm Bureau.

Monthly Board Meetings

MCFB’s monthly board meetings are open to members. Monthly board meetings are held the fourth Wednesday of each month from 5-7 pm. We will post Zoom Meeting links on MCFB’s website before each meeting. If you would like information about attending, please use the form below to contact us: Mahalo.

MCFB invites members to participate in our organization by joining committees. They include ByLaws, Government Affairs, and Membership.

Maui County Farm Bureau Membership Benefits

Join Maui County Farm Bureau

Membership Benefits
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Financial Services:
Checking/Savings Accounts
IRA’s
Mortgages
No annual fee credit cards
Money Market Accounts
Commercial Auto Insurance

Medical & Dental Insurance Plans

Supplemental Cancer Insurance

Hawai‘i Farm Bureau Benefits & Newsletter

Free admittance to Hawai‘i State & County Farm Fairs

Scholarship Programs

Workshops and Seminars

Merchant Discounts (Local & National)

Partial participant list:
MARMAC Ace Hardware
GASPRO
Grainger
EKO compost
United Auto parts/NAPA- Kahului
Lawn Equipment Co.
Irrigation Systems Inc.
Dodge Trucks

Please keep in mind that the benefits list is subject to change as we continue to improve it in collaboration with our allies. 

“Our family farm has benefited in so many ways from our MCFB membership,” said Bobbie Patnode, Patnode Family Farm. “We were beneficiaries of two MCFB COVID-19 relief programs and were able to get our produce into Foodland grocery stores on Maui.”

Member of Maui County Farm Bureau

“Farm Bureau membership provides decades of agriculture advocacy at the state, county and federal levels of government. Farm Bureau invests long-hours to make sure policies at every level are beneficial to our members and our industry. We do this so members can focus on their respective farm operations,” said Warren K. Watanabe, executive director, Maui County Farm Bureau. “There are also great vendor benefits to assist with farm operations.”

Annual Membership Awards

Congratulations to the 2020 MCFB Award Recipients!

MCFB 2020 “Member of the Year” Award Alex Franco, Maui Cattle Company

MCFB 2020 “Farm Family of the Year” Award, Goble’s Flower Farm

MCFB 2020 “Friend of Agriculture” Award Nelson Okumura, VIP Foodservice Island Grocery

MCFB 2020 “Mike Lyons Award” David Chun, Legislative Director for Tulsi Gabbard

https://youtu.be/EkyEmhg4bo8
MCFB 2020 “Friend of  Agriculture” Award


Nelson Okumura, president, VIP Foodservice and Island Grocery
Maui is rooted in family-owned businesses, and a Maui favorite is the Okumura family’s VIP Foodservice and Island Grocery. President Nelson Okumura is a second-generation family owner.

Nelson’s support during Covid-19 reminded MCFB that the Okumura family have always been staunch supporters of Maui agriculture. The company was established in 1951 by Roy Okumura with the motto: “We are proud to be a local company, serving our island home of Maui.” From the beginning, they worked one-on-one with Maui farmers and ranchers to sell their products to business and consumers.

In 1963, the company expanded beyond produce and became a broadline foodservice distributor. Today, between the two businesses, 150 team members serve Maui businesses via its VIP Foodservice division and consumers via its Island Grocery Depot Stores in Kahului and Lahaina.

VIP Foodservice serves a diverse base of over 760 operators, including resorts, restaurants, grocery stores, healthcare and schools. The service helps businesses become more cost efficient, connecting them with the ingredients they need so they can focus fully on customer satisfaction. VIP works both with farmers and ranchers to offer local produce and proteins, and with other suppliers to provide trusted national brands.

From the opening of the first store in 1985 until 2014, everyone knew VIP’s grocery division as VIP Cash N’ Carry. In 2014, the store name was updated to Island Grocery Depot. Today, the two stores in Kahului and Lahaina provide hard-to-find local specialties and Maui’s favorite nationally branded products, in both individual and bulk sizes.

The Okumura family have always been unwavering supporters of MCFB. When the Covid-19 crisis hit in March, Nelson stepped up to orchestrate the huge task of moving perishable food from Maui’s farms to the general public pick-up points. Without hesitation, he provided chilled food storage and distributed Grown on Maui produce to the community.

“Without Nelson’s support, MCFB and the County of Maui would not have been able to service the needs of our community in an efficient and organized way,” Rasmussen says. “Over the years, Nelson has always been there ready to help, whether it’s donations for an ag program or a place to host a meeting. He doesn’t seek recognition or ask for anything in return. He merely steps forward and helps get the job done.”

Congratulations to Nelson Okumura and the Okumura family, Maui County Farm Bureau’s 2020 “Friend of Agriculture” Award recipients.

MCFB 2020 “Member of the Year” Award

Alex Franco, president/general manager, Maui Cattle Company
When Maui Cattle Company, LLC was founded 18 years ago, Alex Franco was named president and general manager, and he has held that position until his retirement on June 30, 2020

 Alex Franco, president/general manager, Maui Cattle Company

Back in 2002, six independent family-owned ranches spanning over 60,000 acres of prime grazing land came together to found MCC. With Alex at the helm, their vision remains clear to this day: to reinvigorate an agricultural lifestyle through the establishment of a sustainable ranching industry. The group knew they could achieve this vision if they kept their livestock on island and if they delivered a premium product to local businesses and consumers.

Today, the owner-partners of MCC include Haleakala Ranch, Ulupalakua Ranch, Kaupo Ranch, Nobriga Ranch, Hana Ranch and Mahi Pono.

Known by everyone as a humble, smart, hardworking and honest person, Alex is the kind of guy you want on your side when the going gets tough. He doesn’t give up. In his decades working in the livestock industry, he’s proven his commitment to raising cattle in the islands, and he knows firsthand the work required to bring a quality product to market.

Alex was instrumental in realizing MCC’s vision to provide 100% grass-fed, all-natural beef raised on Maui to restaurants, hotels and consumers. He helped secure a contract in the food service industry to get local beef in the Federal School Lunch Program on Maui. Working closely with Elli Funakoshi, now MCC’s operations manager, he created a value-added beef jerky product and a new custom vacuum-sealed packaging. In 2019, he helped open a new USDA certified slaughterhouse, giving MCC more flexibility on the amount of cattle to slaughter.

Alex has always worked hard to represent Maui’s livestock industry on a statewide level and by serving on the Maui County Farm Bureau board of directors. Throughout multiple droughts and recessions, 9/11, hurricanes, and other natural disasters, Alex has been a steady hand for Maui’s livestock industry, supporting MCFB’s programs along the way and leaving an impressive legacy at Maui Cattle Company.

Congratulations to Alex Franco: Maui County Farm Bureau’s 2020 “Member of the Year”.

MCFB 2020 “Farm Family of the Year” Award

Goble’s Flower Farm
All it took was one field of carnations in Upcountry Maui, and Captain W.C. Goble USMC (retired) was hooked. That was more than 30 years ago, and Woody Goble has been cultivating, producing, arranging and shipping tropical flowers ever since.

Born and raised in New Jersey, Goble graduated from Citadel in South Carolina in 1966 and flew CH46 helicopters in the Vietnam War. In 1970, he met his wife Carmen, who was from Maui but was working as a bank teller at Kaneohe Marine Corps Bank. After visiting an acquaintance’s carnation flower farm on Maui with Carmen, Woody knew he wanted to move to Maui and start his own flower farm.

He and Carmen began by growing carnations, baby’s breath and mums on leased land in Upper Kula. In a second wave of flowers, they grew bird of paradise, eucalyptus and protea. Today, the Gobles own eight beautiful acres on Thompson Road. Woody creates his signature flower bouquets by adding flowers from Hawai‘i Island—like anthurium, heliconia and pink and red ginger to his magnificent Maui-grown flowers.

The Gobles have four grown children—Roberta, Gavin, Morgana and Chip—who live on the mainland and visit often; and eight grandchildren. Woody knows farming can be a tough business, but he still hopes one of his children will carry on the farm operation.

What does Woody love most about being in the flower-growing business? “Selling flowers to people and watching them smile,” he says.

Congratulations to Goble’s Flower Farm on being awarded Maui County Farm Bureau’s 2020 “Farm Family of the Year”.

2020 “Mike Lyons Award” Recipient

David Chun, Legislative Director for Tulsi Gabbard

 David Chun, Legislative Director for Tulsi Gabbard
When David Chun examines ways to help food producers on Maui and statewide, his approach is primarily to view industry stakeholders as businesspeople who happen to be engaged in the livestock, fruit, vegetable, seafood, flower, value-added production, retail/wholesale, and/or supply chain industries.

“It is my belief that the food production system is a key third economic leg to tourism and military,” Dave says. “The system must be resilient enough to withstand global calamities, pandemics, economic recessions, and other storms yet to happen.”

As legislative director for Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard, Dave advocates tirelessly to increase this resiliency for the islands’ agricultural industry. Key projects have included heading up a biocontrol project working group to address the coffee berry borer, as well as creating legislation to address damages in the islands caused by the two-lined spittlebug. In light of the Covid-19 economic disruption, Dave crafted a letter to House leadership and appropriators urging support for Hawai‘i food producers.

A graduate of Kamehameha Schools, Dave earned his B.A. in Political Sciences and Urban Studies from California State College in Sonoma. He went on to gain an appreciation of cultures and diversity through living and working in Europe, Nepal, India, Morocco, Greece, Israel, Palestine, Sinai Desert, the U.S. West/East Coasts, and Appalachian regions.

Dave was last year’s recipient of the Ka Lei Hano Heritage Award. This award is the highest tribute given by the University of Hawai‘i College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources (CTAHR) to those who have enhanced the College’s efforts to support a diverse economy, healthy environment, and strong communities.

On Maui, the MCFB Mike Lyons Award exemplifies the dedication to community for which the late Mike Lyons was known. A vice president for Bank of Hawai‘i, Mike helped many nonprofits on the Valley Isle during his 40-plus years of service. He was a founder of MEDB and served as a community leader and volunteer board member for numerous groups.

“We are pleased to recognize Dave Chun as the Mike Lyons awardee,” Rasmussen says. “Dave carries out his commitment to community in the work he does on behalf of farmers every day.”

Although Dave doesn’t have many spare moments in his busy schedule, his favorite pastimes include hanging out with the lambs and kids at his Maryland farm and watching YouTube clips on the history and cultivation of crops. Agriculture is never far from his mind.

Congratulations to David Chun on being named Maui County Farm Bureau’s 2020 “Mike Lyons Award” recipient.

Maui County Farm Bureau

Maui County Farm Bureau
P.O. Box 148, Kula, HI 96790
info[at]mauicountyfarmbureau.com

County of Maui State of Hawaii
County of Maui Office of Economic Development
Grown on Maui TM