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“Agriculture and Commerce:” Tennessee Remains Strong in the Changing Face of Agriculture

May 31, 2019 Debra Kenerson, Tennessee State Statistician, National Agricultural Statistics Service

Since 1801, Tennessee’s motto has been “Agriculture and Commerce.” As we see in the latest Census of Agriculture results, our farmers do their part keep our motto alive, with agriculture remaining the number one industry in the state. In 2017, our state’s farmers and ranchers sold more than $3.8...

Research and Science

Highlighting Agriculture in the Grand Canyon State

May 29, 2019 Dave DeWalt, Arizona State Statistician, USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service

USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) recently released the results from the 2017 Census of Agriculture (COA). Unlike the annual estimating program, which estimates acreage, yield, production, price and value on major commodities, the COA takes a look at the people who are our...

Research and Science

USDA Continues to Implement Program Changes to Benefit Farmers

May 17, 2019 Undersecretary Bill Northey, USDA

Earlier this week, I was honored to meet with members of the National Association of Farm Broadcasters here at USDA headquarters. These women and men, many with decades of broadcasting and farm experience, are among the familiar voices, faces and bylines we hear and see each day through radio...

Conservation Farming

Abundant Supplies are Forecast for the Coming Crop Year in the U.S. and Around the World

May 17, 2019 Seth Meyer, Chairman, World Agricultural Outlook Board (WAOB)

It’s a new year at USDA, at least for those of us forecasting agricultural commodity markets. Every May, the World Agricultural Outlook Board (WAOB) in the Office of the Chief Economist releases USDA’s initial projections of the markets for the crops and livestock that will be produced and harvested...

Farming Research and Science

FNS Acts to Remove Fraudulent Retailers from SNAP

May 16, 2019 USDA Food and Nutrition Service

You want to ensure your tax dollars are used properly. So does FNS. That is why we are continually working to improve federal administration and oversight of our programs. We undertake these efforts in order to ensure that resources are spent properly, effectively, efficiently, and as intended. When...

Food and Nutrition

‘Unsung Heroes’ Help Find Infant Left Deep in the Woods

May 15, 2019 Kathryn Sosbe, USDA Forest Service

Forest Service law enforcement officers Nicholas Scholz and Patrick Legg helped find the needle in a 2 million-acre haystack. The needle was a 5-month-old infant, and the haystack is the Lolo National Forest in Montana. Last week, the officers were each honored as an Unsung Hero for their work in...

Forestry

Rebuilding and Repairing a Piece of History

May 15, 2019 Creston Shrum, NRCS

On any sunny day in Faulkner County, Arkansas, you will find people boating, swimming, and camping at Lake Bennett in Wooley Hollow State Park. This 40-acre lake was named after Dr. Hugh Hammond Bennett, the first chief of USDA’s Soil Conservation Service, today known as the Natural Resources...

Conservation

Where Do Americans’ Food Dollars Go?

May 14, 2019 Patrick Canning, Food Economics Division, Economic Research Service (ERS)

In 2017, consumers in the United States spent $1.2 trillion on U.S.-produced food. Nearly all food starts out on a farm, but did you ever wonder how the value added from processing, packaging, transporting, and marketing agricultural food products factors into the costs?

Research and Science

FNS’ Role in Disaster Response

May 10, 2019 USDA Food and Nutrition Service

Ensuring access to nutritious food is critically important when emergencies and disasters happen. USDA’s Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) is prepared to work with states and with other federal agencies to support both immediate response, and longer-term recovery efforts.

Food and Nutrition

How Fire-Adapted Communities are Paying Off

May 09, 2019 Jennifer Croft, Fire Aviation and Management, USDA Forest Service

Fire seasons have lengthened so much that we now use the term fire year, firefighting costs are breaking new records, and loss of life and property are part of an alarming new pattern. The ability to mitigate these impacts with community collaboration is critically important.

Forestry

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