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Washington lawmakers torn over beef industry rift

Capital Press | Posted onDecember 15, 2016 in Agriculture News

A Washington lawmaker vetting a proposal to raise the beef checkoff by $1 says he’s not sure what to do about the contentious issue.  Rep. Tom Dent, R-Moses Lake, has been meeting with segments of the beef industry for seven months on whether to hike the per head tax on cattle sales to $2.50 from $1.50.He said Tuesday that the industry remains divided. “I don’t know if I’m taking a position at this time,” Dent said.The beef checkoff emerged as an issue in the 2016 Legislature.


What 'second job' is big business for farmers?

Supermarket Guru | Posted onDecember 14, 2016 in News

So farmers like Mike Wissemann in Sunderland Massachusetts are trying their hand at “second jobs” to bring in the cash. As reported on NPR, Mike’s  8-acre cornfield is now includes picture ready formed replicas of the Mona Lisa, Albert Einstein and Salvador Dali. This part of the farm is called Mike’s Maze and reportedly had almost 25,000 visitors last year at $12 a head (discounts for seniors and kids do apply). That's could amount to an extra $300,000 a year!  And it turns out this is a big business for farmers.  Mike’s daughter-in-law, Jess, has designed the maze for the past two years.


Trump taps former Texas Gov. Rick Perry to head Energy Department he once vowed to abolish

The Washington Post | Posted onDecember 14, 2016 in Energy News

President-elect Donald Trump picked Rick Perry to head the Energy Department on Wednesday, seeking to put the former Texas governor in control of an agency whose name he forgot during a presidential debate even as he vowed to abolish it.  Perry, who ran for president in the past two election cycles, is likely to shift the department away from renewable energy and toward fossil fuels, whose production he championed while serving as governor for 14 years.


Huge new power lines in West get federal OK

The Washington Post | Posted onDecember 14, 2016 in Energy News

Two power line projects that won federal approval Tuesday will give a big capacity boost to the Western energy grid, including power for up to 1 million homes from what’s on track to become the biggest wind farm in the U.S.  The TransWest Express project will help California meet its goal of getting half its electricity from renewable sources by 2030 by carrying up to 3,000 megawatts from the Chokecherry-Sierra Madre wind farm in southern Wyoming. The new power lines would span 728 miles from the wind farm to southern Nevada, crossing northwest Colorado and all of Utah along the way.


ConAgra to pay $11.2M to settle tainted peanut butter case

The Washington Post | Posted onDecember 14, 2016 in Food News

A ConAgra subsidiary pleaded guilty Tuesday and agreed to pay $11.2 million — including the largest criminal fine ever imposed for a foodborne illness in the United States — to resolve a decade-long criminal investigation into a nationwide salmonella outbreak blamed on tainted peanut butter. ConAgra admitted to a single misdemeanor count of shipping adulterated food.


EPA fracking report offers few answers on drinking water

The Washington Post | Posted onDecember 14, 2016 in Energy News

Is hydraulic fracturing — better known as fracking — safe, as the oil and gas industry claims? Or does the controversial drilling technique that has spurred a domestic energy boom contaminate drinking water, as environmental groups and other critics charge? After six years and more than $29 million, the Environmental Protection Agency says it doesn’t know. A new report said fracking poses a risk to drinking water in some circumstances, but a lack of information precludes a definitive statement on how severe the risk is.


Epicentre of learning: the dairy farm teaching scientists how earthquakes form

The Guardian | Posted onDecember 14, 2016 in Agriculture News

When dairy farmers Gray and Vicki Eatwell purchased a block of farming land just outside the tiny west coast village of Whataroa in New Zealand, the real-estate agent gestured vaguely at a cliff of striking, green-tinged rock on the border of their property at Gaunt Creek. “She said: ‘That’s the alpine fault, the meeting of the Australian and Pacific plates’,” says Gray Eatwell. “But we thought no more of it, locals were blasé about it. I had no idea my whole life would become about that rock.” With one quiet pub and only a few hundred residents, Whataroa is an easy place to overlook.


Iowa farmland values tumble for third year in a row

Des Moines Register | Posted onDecember 14, 2016 in Agriculture News

Iowa's average farmland value declined for the third year in a row, down 5.9 percent to $7,183 an acre over the past year. It's the first time since the 1980s farm crisis that land values have fallen three straight years, according to an Iowa State University report. Despite values tumbling, chances are low that Iowa will face a replay of the devastating farm crisis, said Wendong Zhang, an ISU assistant economics professor who leads the university's annual farmland survey. Average Iowa farmland values are now 17.5 percent lower than the historic high set in 2013 at $8,716 an acre.


Teen use of any illicit drug other than marijuana at new low, same true for alcohol

Science Daily | Posted onDecember 14, 2016 in Rural News

Teenagers' use of drugs, alcohol and tobacco declined significantly in 2016 at rates that are at their lowest since the 1990s, a new national study showed.  But University of Michigan researchers cautioned that while these developments are "trending in the right direction," marijuana use still remains high for 12th-graders.The results derive from the annual Monitoring the Future study, now in its 42nd year.


Rural communities see steep increase in babies born with opioid withdrawal

Science Daily | Posted onDecember 14, 2016 in Rural News

The number of babies born with drug withdrawal symptoms from opioids grew substantially faster in rural communities than in cities, a new study suggests. Newborns exposed to opioids in the womb and who experience withdrawal symptoms after birth (known as neonatal abstinence syndrome) are more likely to have seizures, low birthweight, breathing, sleeping and feeding problems.The study, published in JAMA Pediatrics, highlights a dramatic and disproportional rise in opioid-related complications among rural pregnant women and their infants.


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