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Recent AgClips

Independent Seed Companies Weigh in on Dicamba Controversy

DTN | Posted onAugust 25, 2018 in Agriculture News

Like most independent seed sellers in the U.S., Sonny Beck sells Xtend soybean seed, designed to be tolerant of over-the-top dicamba applications.


Judge Puts the Squeeze on WOTUS Delay

Growing Produce | Posted onAugust 25, 2018 in Agriculture News

U.S. District Judge David Norton ruled the Trump administration Executive Order did not properly seek public input when it suspended the Waters of the U.S. (WOTUS) RuleThis ruling in the U.S. District Court for the District of South Carolina impacts 26 states, with reviews pending in an additional 24 states.


Health Insurance Premiums Are Stabilizing

Pew Charitable Trust | Posted onAugust 22, 2018 in Rural News

Despite Republican efforts to undermine the Affordable Care Act, insurance premiums will go up only slightly in most states where carriers have submitted proposed prices for next year. And insurance carriers are entering markets rather than fleeing them.


Cannabis Is Creating A Boom For Biological Pesticides

Forbes | Posted onAugust 22, 2018 in Agriculture News

As legal cannabis farms take the spotlight, safer methods of pest control are also taking root in more 'mainstream' agriculture. With more states enacting medicinal and adult recreational cannabis laws each year, health officials have increasingly warned about the potential hazards of products made from crops treated with certain chemicals. In particular, chemical pesticides have been identified as a threat to cannabis consumers' health, with potential risks that can vary depending on whether products are eaten, smoked, vaped, or topically applied.


Canada ag producers concerned about drought conditions

Watt Ag Net | Posted onAugust 22, 2018 in News

The Agriculture Producers Association of Saskatchewan (APAS) has asked Canada’s agriculture minister in a letter to extend the 2018 Livestock Deferral Tax credit because of drought conditions.


A new analysis of New England's shrimp population doesn't bode well for the future of the long-shuttered fishery for the crustaceans

Columbian | Posted onAugust 22, 2018 in Rural News

A new analysis of New England’s shrimp population doesn’t bode well for the future of the long-shuttered fishery for the crustaceans. The Maine-based shrimp fishery has been shut down since 2013 because of concerns such as warming ocean temperatures and poor survival of young. Scientists working with the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission are assessing the shrimp stock, and so far it looks like little has changed.


Virginia offers free on-farm readiness review to determine if produce safety rule applies to you

Virginia Department of Agriculture | Posted onAugust 22, 2018 in Agriculture, SARL Members and Alumni News

Changes are coming in the way farmers grow, pack, hold and distribute ready-to-eat produce, and the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (VDACS) can help by performing a free, on-farm readiness review. Farmers who sell more than $25,000 in applicable produce per year may be subject to the new federal legislation. Regulatory inspections are expected to begin in mid-2019, but farmers can find out now if they are ready for the changes, with time to make any necessary adjustments.


Massive increase in agriculture research funding needed

National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition | Posted onAugust 22, 2018 in Federal News

The United States’ total federal investment in agricultural research has been flat for a long time, a fact that does not bode well for the future of our farm and food system. Not only does the research undertaken today have a profound impact on the what food and agriculture will be like a generation from now, but our chances of successfully tackling major societal challenges related to our current system are being seriously impeded by the lack of sufficient investment.


U.S. drops agriculture demand from NAFTA talks: Mexico farm lobby

Reuters | Posted onAugust 22, 2018 in Federal News

The United States has dropped a contentious demand from the renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement to impose restrictions on Mexican agricultural exports, Mexico’s top farm lobby said.A divisive issue has been a proposal by the Trump administration to put seasonal curbs on some agricultural exports to the United States. But a senior executive at Mexico’s National Agricultural Council (CNA) said that had been dropped.Andrade said the move followed a lobbying effort that sought to show that the “seasonality” demand stood to benefit a small fraction of U.S.


Can egg producers win the food safety race?

Watt Ag Net | Posted onAugust 22, 2018 in Food News

Egg producers need to remember that regulatory compliance is just the first step for a food safety program that pursues continuous improvement. Walmart executive says chicken producers are in a race between their companies’ ability to prevent foodborne illnesses and society’s ability to detect them. Big data tools are making it easier to detect consumer trends. Data from credit/debit card purchases and shopper loyalty programs provide a more accurate history of what consumers really purchased and where they were purchased.


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