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Recent AgClips

Ag Outlook Highlights Challenges to Rural Broadband, Ag Transportation

DTN | Posted onMarch 7, 2019 in Agriculture News

In with the new, onward with the old -- that is the unique challenge facing rural America's infrastructure needs. On the one hand, rural citizens and agricultural communities are suffering for lack of reliable, high-speed internet that they need to compete and survive economically.


Michigan awards grants for rural development, infrastructure projects

Iron Mountain Daily News | Posted onMarch 7, 2019 in SARL Members and Alumni News

The Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development has awarded 16 Rural Development Fund Grants. Eligible counties include those with a population no greater than 60,000 residents or micropolitan statistical areas.The department received 66 proposals with requests totaling nearly $5.1 million.


Iowa: 'An attack on public land'

Des Moines Register | Posted onMarch 7, 2019 in SARL Members and Alumni News

Iowans flooded the Capitol Monday to oppose a pair of bills aimed at limiting the ability of governments and private organizations to purchase new land for conservation and public use.


Experts say Kentucky bill to block open records access 'really scary'

Courier Journal | Posted onMarch 7, 2019 in SARL Members and Alumni News

Legislation that proposes new restrictions to the commonwealth's open records law would make Kentucky one of only a handful of states that prevents nonresidents from obtaining public documents there, according to national experts.


South Dakota addressing shortage of large animal vets

AgWeek | Posted onMarch 7, 2019 in Rural, SARL Members and Alumni News

South Dakota is following the national trend when it comes to the shortage of large animal veterinarians. However, the state is also trying to be proactive in addressing the problem and that was a part of the focus of the recent James Bailey Herd Health Conference in Brookings.Farquer said he believes vet schools need to get back to finding people that grew up in rural areas and want to return there.


General Mills to advance regenerative agriculture practices on 1 million acres of farmland by 2030

High Plains Journal | Posted onMarch 7, 2019 in Agriculture News

General Mills on March 4 announced its commitment to advance regenerative agriculture practices on one million acres of farmland by 2030. The company will partner with organic and conventional farmers, suppliers and trusted farm advisors in key growing regions to drive the adoption of regenerative agriculture practices. A contributor to climate change, it is estimated that the global food system accounts for roughly one-third of greenhouse gas emissions and 70 percent of water consumption.


Nursing Homes Are Closing Across Rural America, Scattering Residents

The New York Times | Posted onMarch 7, 2019 in Rural News

Harold Labrensz spent much of his 89-year life farming and ranching the rolling Dakota plains along the Missouri River. His family figured he would die there, too. But late last year, the nursing home in Mobridge, S.D., that cared for Mr. Labrensz announced that it was shutting down after a rocky history of corporate buyouts, unpaid bills and financial ruin. It had become one of the many nursing homes across the country that have gone out of business in recent years as beds go empty, money troubles mount and more Americans seek to age in their own homes.For Mr.


Financial hardships force growing number of farmers to give up family business

NBC News | Posted onMarch 7, 2019 in News

Roughly half of Wisconsin’s dairy farmers have left the business in the last fifteen years, with high production costs and lower demand to blame. “We did everything we could to survive,” one family tells NBC’s Kevin Tibbles after they were forced to sell their cows.


Art Cullen is Bringing Rural Farm Politics to the National Stage

Civil Eats | Posted onMarch 7, 2019 in Rural News

When Art Cullen won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing in 2017, it marked an important change for the small-town newspaper editor. Cullen and his brother John run the Storm Lake Times, a twice-a-week paper staffed mainly by family members that seeks not only to knit together a strong community in the diverse, 10,000-person town of Storm Lake, Iowa, but also to keep a record of—and engage in an active conversation about—the way agriculture there has changed.


Oregon renewable energy siting bill worries farmland advocates

Capital Press | Posted onMarch 7, 2019 in Energy, SARL Members and Alumni News

Increasing demand for renewable energy in Oregon has spurred a proposal to exempt most such projects from compulsory review by a statewide siting panel.


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