NCSFR Partnerships

NCSFR operates through a network of partnerships with universities, industry organizations, and federal agencies across the Pacific Northwest small fruits, grapes, and speciality crops sector.

No single institution can address the full complexity of small fruits, grapes, and speciality crops research. NCSFR works with partners across the region to make the research system work better.

NCSFR's institutional partnerships span land-grant universities in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho, industry associations representing growers and processors, USDA NIFA, and state departments of agriculture. These relationships shape research priorities, enable funding, and support communication of research outcomes across the region.

How NCSFR Partnerships Work

01

University Research Partners

Land-grant universities in the region — including WSU, OSU, and University of Idaho — provide the research capacity that NCSFR funding supports.

02

Industry Associations

Grower and processor associations contribute to priority-setting and help ensure research addresses the challenges that matter most to the industry.

03

Federal Partners

USDA NIFA supports NCSFR's mission through structural and funding connections that link regional research to the national agricultural research system.

Who Shapes the Research

NCSFR's research priorities are shaped by a Stakeholder Council that brings together named representatives from grower organizations, research institutions, and commodity groups across Oregon, Washington, and Idaho.

At each annual conference, new Vice-chairs are elected and current Vice-chairs are promoted, rotating between members of the industry and research community — keeping priorities connected to the people closest to the crop.

Priority Area Leadership

Blueberry, Cranberry & Strawberry

Chair: Dave Bryla
Vice-chair: Jayson Hoffman

Grape Viticulture, Wine & Juice and Table

Chair: Devin Rippner
Vice-chair: Karl Mohr

Raspberry, Blackberry & Specialty Crop

Chair: Chakradar Mattupalli
Vice-chair: Riley Spears

Wine Processing

Chair: Thomas Henick-Kling
Vice-chair: Gina Hennen

Why This Collaboration Matters

NCSFR's partnership structure ensures research priorities are not developed in isolation. Through coordinated input from industry, universities, and federal agencies, the system connects regional needs with research planning and outcomes.

01

Clearer Priorities

Industry partners help identify and review the research priorities that guide NCSFR-supported work, keeping funded projects grounded in real production challenges.

02

Stronger Representation

Growers, processors, researchers, and federal partners all have a voice in shaping the direction of small fruits, grapes, and speciality crops research in the region.

03

Research That Reaches the Field

By connecting priorities, funding, conference input, and research communication, NCSFR's partnerships support a visible pathway from research question to practical outcome.