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Recent AgClips

Multi-state Salmonella Heidelberg outbreak linked to dairy bull calves

Meatingplace (registration required) | Posted onDecember 1, 2016 in Food News

Epidemiologic, traceback and laboratory findings have identified dairy bull calves from livestock markets in Wisconsin as the likely source of infections in a multi-state outbreak of multidrug-resistant Salmonella Heidelberg infections.   The CDC is working with Wisconsin health, agriculture and laboratory agencies, several other states, and USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service to investigate an outbreak that has infected 21 people from eight states.


Cuomo announces Taste NY sales

Governor.ny.gov | Posted onDecember 1, 2016 in Food News

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo announced the Taste NY initiative has surpassed his goal of doubling gross sales of participating businesses in 2016. In less than one year, total gross sales of New York products from Taste NY stores, concessions and events have jumped from approximately $4.5 million in 2015 to more than $10.5 million to date in 2016. The increase in sales reflects the growing consumer demand for local products, which supports New York’s agriculture industry and small businesses.


Faster growing broilers can still have good welfare

Watt Ag Net | Posted onDecember 1, 2016 in Agriculture News

If the market for slow growing or heritage broiler breeds becomes something more than just a niche market, this would be a major step backwards for the poultry industry. The broiler industry has become a model of efficiency for animal agriculture and a large portion of the credit goes to poultry breeders who have provided producers with birds that grow faster using less feed for each successive generation.


Can you hear the corn grow? Yes

EurekAlert | Posted onDecember 1, 2016 in Agriculture News

There's an old farmer's tale that says, "On a quiet night you can hear the corn grow." It may seem funny, but Douglas Cook at New York University and colleagues Roger Elmore and Justin McMechan, at the University of Nebraska, were able to use contact microphones to directly record the sounds of corn growing. Corn is the leading grain crop in the U.S. with more than 350 million metric tons harvested yearly. But a lack of understanding about the mechanics involved in wind-induced corn stalk failure has hindered further improvements in corn production.


Sen. Johnson is a maverick with a mission

Des Moines Register | Posted onDecember 1, 2016 in SARL Members and Alumni News

State Sen. David Johnson will return to the Iowa Legislature in January, not as the pivotal, powerful wild card that some anticipated, but nevertheless as a public servant determined to play his own hand.  He’s the first independent to serve in the Iowa Legislature in generations.


1,200 cattle destroyed in Canadian tuberculosis outbreak

Great Falls Tribune | Posted onDecember 1, 2016 in News

Canadian ranchers are seeking government relief following an outbreak of bovine tuberculosis that has already led to the destruction of more than 1,200 head of cattle and the mandatory quarantine of 22,000 more from 36 cattle ranches in southern Alberta and Saskatchewan.


States face decision as FSMA comes into implementation

CSG Midwest | Posted onDecember 1, 2016 in Agriculture News

The law’s goal is to reduce the prevalence of foodborne illnesses by focusing more on prevention, rather than responding to outbreaks once they occur. (According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, close to 48 million Americans get sick every year from pathogens transmitted through food; nearly 128,000 people are hospitalized and more than 3,000 die.) To meet this objective, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s authority to regulate fruit and vegetable production has been greatly expanded.


Japan culls most poultry since 2011 as bird flu confirmed

Farm Futures | Posted onDecember 1, 2016 in Federal News

Japan ordered the culling of 326,500 poultry after confirming bird flu in two northern Japanese farms, marking the worst outbreak of the disease since 2011, according to the Agriculture Ministry.


North Carolina Court orders special legislative election in 2017 with redrawn districts

The News & Observer | Posted onDecember 1, 2016 in SARL Members and Alumni News

A federal court on Tuesday ordered North Carolina to hold a special legislative election next year after 28 state House and Senate districts are redrawn to comply with a gerrymandering ruling.  U.S. District Court judges earlier this year threw out the current legislative district map, ruling that 28 of them were unconstitutional racial gerrymanders. They allowed the 2016 election to continue under the old maps, but ordered legislators to draw new districts in 2017.


Ohio leads nation in overdose deaths

The Columbus Dispatch | Posted onDecember 1, 2016 in Rural News

n a grim statistic that surprises no one close to the problem, Ohio leads the nation in opioid overdose deaths, a new report shows. Along with the overall category, Ohio also had the country's most deaths related to heroin: One in 9 heroin deaths across the U.S. happened in Ohio. The Buckeye State also recorded the most deaths from synthetic opioids: About 1 in 14 U.S. deaths. In all the categories, Ohio easily surpassed states with larger populations.


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