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AgClips

Recent AgClips

Trade wars, "Meatless Mondays" and BBQ. Texas Agriculture Commissioner candidates square off

Houston Business Journal | Posted onSeptember 26, 2018 in Agriculture, SARL Members and Alumni News

Much of the race for Texas Agriculture Commissioner centers on food — whether immigrants should be able to help harvest it, how crops are traded or what items schools can serve students for lunch. Democrat Kim Olson, a farmer and Air Force veteran, is challenging the incumbent, Republican Sid Miller.  In the latest edition of our Split Decision virtual debate series, watch Olson and Miller discuss these issues, as well as Miller's presence on social media and more.


Cincinnati firm plans robotic indoor farm to supply Whole Foods, Jungle Jim's

Biz Journal | Posted onSeptember 26, 2018 in Food News

80 Acres Farms plans to build a large, fully automated indoor farm in Hamilton, Ohio, which will produce specialty greens to supply Jungle Jim’s International Market and Whole Foods as well as other retailers and foodservice distributors.


County Impact on childrens future earnings

Daily Yonder | Posted onSeptember 26, 2018 in Rural News

Children who grow up in rural areas have a better chance of earning more money later in life. A Penn State study confirms that report and tracks the impact of other factors affecting both urban and rural children.The farther away from a city a person is raised, the more likely they are to climb the economic ladder, according to economists, who also found that community characteristics associated with upward mobility have different effects in rural and urban locations.The researchers looked at intergenerational economic mobility in low-income children at the U.S.


Legal Deserts: a Multi-State Perspective on Rural Access to Justice

SSRN | Posted onSeptember 26, 2018 in Rural, SARL Members and Alumni News

Rural America faces an increasingly dire access to justice crisis, which serves to exacerbate the already disproportionate share of social problems afflicting rural areas. One critical aspect of that crisis is the dearth of information and research regarding the extent of the problem and its impacts. This article begins to address that gap by providing surveys of rural access to justice in six geographically, demographically, and economically varied states: California, Georgia, Maine, Minnesota, South Dakota, and Wisconsin.


Rural Lawyers Alliance FIlls Needs, Creates Opportunities

Daily Yonder | Posted onSeptember 26, 2018 in Rural News

Tthe Alliance for Lawyers and Rural America (AfLARA). Designed as a convening space to be shaped by its membership, AfLARA aims to serve as a means to an end for people and organizations working near the intersection of law and rurality. In other words, AfLARA is the home at which all of us – including you – can gather, learn from one another, and work together to make the most of opportunities that serve to address rural legal needs. Membership is open to lawyers and non-lawyers alike, whether you are rural, urban, or living anywhere in between, and whether your focus is access to justice,


Food and Agriculture Grants Will Boost Businesses in Michigan

Michigan.gov | Posted onSeptember 26, 2018 in Agriculture, SARL Members and Alumni News

During its regularly scheduled meeting, the Michigan Commission of Agriculture and Rural Development voted to approve Food and Agriculture Investment Fund grants for three food and agriculture projects in Michigan. The projects will help grow companies focused on cheese-making, asparagus packing and production, and grain processing as well as support the expansion of consumer-demand driven, value-added Michigan products.


FSMA inspectors want ‘why’ of animal feed safety plan

Watt Ag Net | Posted onSeptember 26, 2018 in Agriculture, Federal News

To satisfy Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) inspectors, feed mill employees should know and be able to explain the reasoning behind all the steps in an animal feed safety plan, said Cassandra Jones, Ph.D., associate professor at Kansas State University, in an interview after her presentation at the Feed and Pet Food Joint Conference, on September 19 in St. Louis. Jones has observed a recurring problem when she helps feed mill facilities preparing for FSMA inspections.


Free-range hens: The future egg safety conundrum?

Watt Ag Net | Posted onSeptember 26, 2018 in Food News

On a recent trip to Europe I had the opportunity to visit some free-range layer houses. The barns look much like the other layer houses that I saw on my visit, they just had the “dog doors” on the side of the house. Just like “pasture-raised” hen farms in the U.S., there are no barriers to exposure to rodents, birds or insects for hens outside the house. I couldn’t help but think of the lengths that U.S. egg producers go to, whether in houses equipped with cages or aviaries, to keep rodents and flies out of their houses.


The Battle Over Arizona’s Clean Energy Mix

Green Tech Media | Posted onSeptember 26, 2018 in Energy News

As debate rages over increasing Arizona’s RPS, the largest utility—and strongest RPS opponent—has announced new clean energy programs and incentives. This column explores the state’s mismatched clean energy outlook. In November, residents will vote on whether or not to enshrine the increase in Arizona’s constitution under Proposition 127. The state’s current RPS is 15 percent by 2025. Arizona Public Service, the state’s largest utility, is strongly opposed to the increase.


Ryan Zinke to the oil and gas industry: “Our government should work for you”

Vox | Posted onSeptember 26, 2018 in Energy News

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke gave the keynote address at the Louisiana Oil and Gas Association’s fall meeting in Lafayette, Louisiana. He told the conference over lunch “our government should work for you." And according to the Louisiana Oil and Gas Association, the industry members in the room were thrilled with the pledge, giving Zinke a standing ovation.


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