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Recent AgClips

Mobile Telehospitals get care where it is needed the most

Daily Yonder | Posted onMarch 8, 2018 in Rural News

Two companies joined forces to put a new twist on the old idea of a MASH unit. MASH is more than the name of a long-running television sitcom. It’s a military acronym that means Mobile Army Surgical Hospital. MASH units were comprised of prefab tents, surgeons, nurses, and a truckload of medical supplies. They were designed to get experienced medical personnel closer to the frontlines so the wounded could be treated sooner and with greater success. Today, add telemedicine and community broadband support, and what you have is MAST.


Minnesota settlement with 3M may fix drinking water but not the environment

Minnesota Star Tribune | Posted onMarch 8, 2018 in Rural News

For the foreseeable future, the indestructible chemicals that 3M made and dumped for years at four sites between Woodbury and Grey Cloud Island will continue to move through groundwater into streams and lakes.The $850 million court settlement between Minnesota and 3M that ended a decadelong fight over contaminated groundwater in the east metro will go a long way toward making drinking water safe for some 150,000 residents of Washington County.


Two clean energy bills in Md.; one clear choice

The Baltimore Sun | Posted onMarch 8, 2018 in Energy, SARL Members and Alumni News

The Maryland General Assemblywill evaluate two very different proposals for the future of energy and climate policy in our state. One, The 100% Clean Renewable Energy and Equity Act, will fundamentally change the trajectory for wind and solar development, strengthen our economy and build a solid pathway to using only clean renewable electricity by 2035. The other, The Clean Energy and Jobs Act (CEJA), will accelerate the current Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS) mechanisms to reach a target of 50 percent renewable electricity by 2030.


Alaska state veterinarian warns of emerging disease

Veterinary Practice News | Posted onMarch 8, 2018 in Agriculture News

Diseases that afflict livestock and wildlife are increasingly emerging in Alaska, said Bob Gerlach, DVM, state veterinarian.  Other diseases are increasing in northern-tier states and Canada due to climate change, increase in human population, and worldwide movement of agricultural products. Alaska’s cool climate and isolation has for millennia helped protect wildlife and the people who subsist on it from many of the diseases that thrive in warmer, lower latitudes, according to Dr. Gerlach. But that’s changing, as Alaska is no longer isolated from what’s happening globally, he said.


Silicon Valley wants to give us eggs without chickens, and meat without animals. Do we want that?

The New Food Economy | Posted onMarch 8, 2018 in Food News

Just is at the forefront of an industry-wide arms race to reinvent the future of protein as we know it—a push toward products we’ll readily accept as meat, but that don’t require animals to be sacrificed on the altar of our hunger. These “alternative” proteins are about to hit the American market in two varieties, both of which manage to sidestep the messier realities of the farm and slaughterhouse. First, there are “plant-based” proteins, vegetable-derived simulacra that convincingly mimic the taste and texture of animal flesh.


Widespread drought across U.S. stokes fears about a repeat of 2012’s wrath

NPR | Posted onMarch 8, 2018 in Agriculture News

Western Illinois might be close to the Mississippi and Illinois rivers, but it's the driest part of the state this year. "We really haven't really had any measurable rain since the middle of October," says Ken Schafer, who farms winter wheat, corn and soybeans in Jerseyville. "I dug some post-holes this winter, and it's just dust."  His farm is in an area that the U.S. Drought Monitor considers "severe." Some of the nation's worst areas of drought are in southwest Kansas, much of Oklahoma and a slice of Missouri.


Worried about a trade war over steel tariffs? Farmers are

News Tribune | Posted onMarch 8, 2018 in News

What happens if the U.S. enters a trade war over proposed steel and aluminum tariffs?  Our farmers are in no hurry to find out. There is a very high likelihood that Canada, China and the European Union might impose tariffs on U.S. exports in retaliation. In such a scenario, U.S. exports to foreign countries such as beef, corn, pork, cars and motorcycles are going to be adversely impacted. The tariffs imposed by the Trump administration would cause the U.S.


Wanted: Rural health care providers, but few answer the call

Daily Yonder | Posted onMarch 8, 2018 in Rural News

Several legislative committees have been examining the problem of health care provider shortages in rural North Carolina. And the answers they're getting point to complicated - and potentially expensive - answers.


Trial in lawsuit over Kansas voting law enters second day

WTOP | Posted onMarch 8, 2018 in SARL Members and Alumni News

The former co-president of The League of Women Voters of Kansas says a state law requiring prospective voters to prove they are U.S. citizens devastated the organization’s registration efforts. Margaret Ahrens of Topeka testified in the second day of a lawsuit over whether Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach has the authority to implement the law’s requirements. She said the League stopped taking voter registrations immediately after the law took effect in 2013 because it didn’t want liability for handling voters’ personal information, such as birth certificates and passports.


Canada pipeline waiting on New Hampshire

Utility Dive | Posted onMarch 8, 2018 in Energy, SARL Members and Alumni News

Canada's National Energy Board has approved Hydro-Quebec's application to construct an international transmission line to New Hampshire as part of the disputed Northern Pass transmission project. In January, Massachusetts selected Northern Pass to help the state meet its clean energy goals, but the project was rejected unanimously by the New Hampshire Site Evaluation Committee the following month.


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