Skip to content Skip to navigation

AgClips

Recent AgClips

Harsh Words In Harrisburg Over PA Governor’s Farm Show Deal

WSKG | Posted onMarch 21, 2018 in SARL Members and Alumni News

Republican state lawmakers wrapped up three weeks of annual budget hearings by tearing into Governor Tom Wolf’s administration for several hours straight. The crime, as they see it? Making what the GOP alleges is an unconstitutional deal to close this fiscal year’s budget deficit. When they ended a long, bitter budget standoff in October, lawmakers left a $300 million hole in their revenue plan for Wolf to fill with money from the state’s special funds. GOP lawmakers had pushed hard to tap the funds in lieu of new spending, and expected Wolf to reroute existing money.


New pasteurization plant coming to northwest Ohio

Farm and Dairy | Posted onMarch 21, 2018 in News

Hydrofresh HPP, an affiliate of Keller Logistics Group, is constructing a $10 million pasteurization plant slated for opening in April in Delphos, that uses innovative high-pressure processing technology.


New Mexico governor vetoes pet food fee increase

Pet Food Industry | Posted onMarch 21, 2018 in SARL Members and Alumni News

New Mexico’s governor vetoed a bill that would have increased the registration fee pet food manufacturers pay to the state. The vetoed House Bill 64 would have raised the fee from US$2 to US$100 for each pet food product sold in New Mexico. The revenues from the higher fees would be used to fund dog and cat sterilization programs for low-income residents of the state.


Iowa's new secretary of agriculture is Mike Naig

The Messenger | Posted onMarch 21, 2018 in SARL Members and Alumni News

Gov. Kim Reynolds appointed Mike Naig, who had served as Northey’s deputy at IDALS since 2013, to lead the department. The new Iowa secretary of agriculture brings a lifetime of relevant experience to the department’s top job. Naig grew up on a family farm near Cylinder. He helped his father and uncle run their crop and livestock farm and still has involvement in that enterprise.


Poultry growers, integrators score victory in Kansas

Meatingplace (free registration required) | Posted onMarch 21, 2018 in News

The Kansas State House of Representatives voted 84-37 Monday afternoon to pass a bill that would allow companies to build large-volume poultry feeding operations in the state. Senate Bill 405 would be expected to make it easier for companies to build large operations such as the one that Tyson Foods proposed near Tonganoxie last year.That proposal ultimately stirred too much protest among existing Tonganoxie residents, and Tyson instead decided to build in Tennessee. Still, Tyson reportedly is continuing to look for a place to build in Kansas, as well.


States vow to fight offshore drilling by any means at their disposal

Politico | Posted onMarch 21, 2018 in Energy News

The move has drawn opposition from both Democratic and Republican leaders in nearly every affected state and mobilized the environmental community. From California to New York, lawmakers are considering ways to block the proposal, which would open vast new stretches of federal waters in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, as well as in the Arctic and eastern Gulf of Mexico, to oil and gas exploration and extraction. They are considering laws to block the construction of pipelines or infrastructure in state-controlled waters that are needed to support drilling projects.


Court: EPA broke law with smog rule delay

The Hill | Posted onMarch 21, 2018 in Energy News

The Trump administration broke the law when it missed a deadline last year in implementing the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) ozone pollution rule, a federal court ruled. EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt was supposed to announce by Oct. 1 which areas of the country were in compliance with the 2015 Obama administration rule.Pruitt later announced findings for areas that comply, but not for areas that do not. Judge Haywood Stirling Gilliam Jr.


Can This Group of Farmers Finally Defeat Keystone XL?

Outside | Posted onMarch 21, 2018 in Agriculture, Energy News

But for pipeline opponents in the Cornhusker State, the view from the ground is far from hopeless. Last November, in a perplexing three-to-two vote, the Nebraska Public Service Commission (NPSC) rejected TransCanada’s preferred route. Instead the commission okayed the company’s alternate choice, a path that differs from the original 63 miles in northeast Nebraska. Those 63 miles could make all the difference: a new route means new easements and likely a host of pricey new lawsuits. The decision was such a blow that the company requested the NPSC modify the wording of its decision.


Dairy targeted in February, fish in March - meat may be next

Meatingplace (free registration required) | Posted onMarch 21, 2018 in Agriculture News

As if our country’s dairy producers don’t have enough stress with the current economic situation of the industry, they also had to deal with being the primary target of extreme animal rights activist groups throughout the month of February. Now is the time for the meat industry to review the tactics used against dairy and prepare for its turn in the crosshairs. The primary group declaring war on dairy in February was Direct Action Everywhere.


Hours of Service waiver for ag haulers

Brownfield Ag News | Posted onMarch 21, 2018 in Agriculture News

An hours-of-service waiver has been put in place for agriculture haulers for 90-days. The waiver, issued by U.S. Transportation Department’s Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, gives that agency more time to release guidance on regulations related to agriculture.


Pages