Skip to content Skip to navigation

AgClips

Recent AgClips

Confession of an Anti-GMO Activist

The Wall Street Journal-subscription may be required | Posted onJune 28, 2018 in News

Genetically modified crops have been vilified and banned, but the science is clear: They’re perfectly safe. And what’s more, the world desperately needs them.  “The anti-GMO campaign has deprived much of the world of a crucial, life-improving technology—and has shown the readiness of many environmentalists to ignore science when it contradicts their prejudices. That’s not the example we need just now as the planet faces the very real threat of climate change.


House Proposes Cuts to School Safety, Behavioral Health, Security for Lawmakers Exceeds That For Schools

Roll Call | Posted onJune 28, 2018 in Rural News

The House is proposing to cut funding for school safety programs, even as Congress continually increases spending on its own security. Some lawmakers and education advocates question the logic of this amid a nationwide conversation on school security, gun violence and self-harm.


House approves massive bill to fight opioid addiction

Washington Examiner | Posted onJune 28, 2018 in Rural News

The House overwhelmingly passed legislation Friday that would give several federal agencies more tools to fight opioid addiction and death in the U.S., and open the door to more treatment and prevention for the public. The SUPPORT for Patients and Communities Act passed in an easy 396-14 vote following months of hearings and debate. The legislation helps to direct some of the $4 billion in funding for the crisis that Congress approved as part of a long-term spending deal this year.


California to see ballot initiative for cage free pigs and chickens

The Sacramento Bee | Posted onJune 28, 2018 in Agriculture, SARL Members and Alumni News

he ballot measure builds on the passage of Proposition 2 — a 2008 initiative that prohibited California farmers from housing pregnant pigs, calves raised for veal and egg-laying hens in cages or crates that don't allow them to turn around freely. The new initiative offers greater specificity by setting explicit standards for animal confinement. By 2022, egg-laying hens would need to be placed in cage-free housing. Breeding pigs and calves raised for veal would also be required to have at least 24 and 43 square feet of floor space, respectively.


Interest Rates in 30-Year Perspective: The Case of U.S. 10-Year Treasury Rates

Farm Doc Daily | Posted onJune 28, 2018 in News

On Wednesday, June 13, 2018, the Federal Reserve increased the Federal funds rate for the 2nd time in 2018 and 7th time since December 2015.  It also signaled that 2 more hikes were likely this year.  The specter of increasing interest rates has caused concern about its impact on farm income via higher borrowing costs for production inputs and on the value of land.  While the Federal Reserve has control over the Federal funds rate, it can only influence other interest rates.  To obtain perspective on these other interest rates, this article reviews the last 30 years of U.S.


From boat makers to farmers, US-led tariff war inflicts pain

AP | Posted onJune 28, 2018 in Federal News

A Florida boat builder absorbs $4 million in lost business and expects more pain. An Ohio pork producer is losing access to a vital export market and fears the damage will last years. A motorcycle shop near Cologne, Germany, wonders if it even has a future. A brawl that the United States provoked with its closest trading partners is starting to draw blood. On Friday, the European Union began imposing tariffs on $3.4 billion in American goods — from whiskey and motorcycles to peanuts and cranberries — to retaliate for President Donald Trump’s own tariffs on imported steel and aluminum.


Dicamba injured crops increasing

Brownfield Ag News | Posted onJune 28, 2018 in Agriculture News

The University of Missouri Weed Science Department has compiled dicamba soybean injury reports this season from university weed scientists and acreage is higher than what state ag departments are reporting.


Why Breed-specific Legislation Is not the Answer

AVMA | Posted onJune 28, 2018 in SARL Members and Alumni News

Breed-specific legislation (BSL) targets specific breeds of dogs that are wrongly thought to all be dangerous – most frequently "pit bull types" – and places stricter regulations on these dogs or even makes ownership of them illegal. Several cities, towns and states across the United States and Canada have adopted breed-specific measures in an attempt to prevent dog bites in their communities. However, while BSL may look good on the surface, it is not a reliable or effective solution for dog bite prevention.


U.S.–China Trade Dispute and Potential Impacts on Agriculture

Choices magazine | Posted onJune 28, 2018 in Agriculture News

This trade dispute is important to U.S. agriculture, because China has been the United States’ top agricultural export market outside of North America since 2009 with an annual sale of nearly $20 billion in 2017. In 2017, top U.S. agricultural exports to China included soybeans, cotton, hides and skins for leather products, fish, dairy, sorghum, wheat, nuts and pork.


Fear grows of long-lasting damage from Mexican ag tariffs

Agri-Pulse | Posted onJune 28, 2018 in Agriculture, Federal News

U.S. farmers are already hurting, thanks to Mexico’s retaliatory tariffs for U.S. import taxes on steel and aluminum, but the pain is expected to increase sharply in the weeks and months to come. U.S. exporters have become accustomed to the zero duties under the North American Free Trade Agreement, but the new tariffs are still equal to or below what Mexico charges most other major suppliers. That means the U.S. can still compete thanks to the closeness of the two countries, both geographically and in shared supply channels.“Trade is not going to stop right away,” said one U.S.


Pages