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Healthy Lunchtime Challenge and Kids' State Dinner

April 15, 2015 Elizabeth Rahavi, Outreach and Social Media, Center for Nutrition Policy and Promotion

Calling all budding chefs! Do you like to cook and make healthy food for your friends and family? If so, you might be able to show off your skills and creativity to the First Lady of the United States and your peers from across the country. Learn more about how you can represent your state at the...

Food and Nutrition Initiatives

EFNEP: Delivering Nutrition Education to Limited-Resource Families

April 10, 2015 Scott Elliott, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Educators from all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and five U.S. territories recently met in Arlington, Virginia to discuss local implementation of the Expanded Food and Nutrition Education Program (EFNEP), one of the nation’s largest nutrition education programs. Through nutrition education...

Initiatives Food and Nutrition

Latino Youth Conservation Leaders, Forest Service Leaders Share Blissful Experience of Transformational Conservation Successes

April 06, 2015 Jane Knowlton, U.S. Forest Service

(Editor’s note: Luis Cruz is a youth conservation leader with Latino Legacy and PLT GreenSchools!, part of the Houston East End Greenbelt project. These projects are part of an eight-year partnership with the U.S. Forest Service Friends of the National Forests and Grasslands of Texas-Latino Legacy...

Forestry

Telling the Story of #womeninag Through Pictures and Numbers

March 24, 2015 Agriculture Deputy Secretary Krysta Harden

A woman, proudly on horseback, rides through a cattle herd. Another woman in a cowboy hat and boots, surveys a pasture. A third hauls freshly picked produce from the field. These are some images of women who are working America’s farms and ranches. Women have always been an integral part of our...

Conservation Initiatives

New Film to be Shown at USDA: Restoring the South's Brook Trout--Raise a Glass of Water to the Return of a Regional Icon

March 18, 2015 Nat Gillespie, Fisheries Program, U.S. Forest Service

For a community of brook trout in the southern Appalachian mountains, there are signs that the good times are coming back. To some, these native inhabitants might even appear to be waving a welcome home sign. Their numbers almost vanquished, they are as much a cultural emblem of these rugged and...

Forestry

USDA Staff Meets with Producers, Partners on Ways to Store Carbon

March 17, 2015 Kari Cohen, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Staff from USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) from Washington, D.C. and Portland, Oregon visited California recently to meet with state officials and farmers and ranchers to discuss how farms and ranches can store carbon, reduce greenhouse gas emissions and potentially benefit...

Conservation

A Student's View: Alliance for a Healthier Generation Youth Ambassador Speaks Up for Youth in Washington, D.C.

March 12, 2015 Brooke Hardison, USDA Office of Communications

The following guest blog is from a high school student from Yankton, South Dakota that was invited to discuss the implementation of USDA’s Smart Snacks in Schools rule at a meeting hosted by the Pew Charitable trusts last fall. The blog is part of our Cafeteria Stories series, highlighting healthy...

Food and Nutrition

Want to Know about Soil Moisture on your Farm? Soon, There May be an App for That

March 02, 2015 Wayne Maloney, USDA Office of Communications

“Probably it is one of the most innovative interagency tools on the planet.” So said Dr. Roger Pulwarty, Director of the National Integrated Drought Information System (of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, located in Boulder, CO), in describing the development of a coordinated...

Conservation

At the Agricultural Outlook Forum, Prognosticators Peer Ahead to 2060

February 25, 2015 Wayne Maloney, Office of Communications

No one can say with certainty what the American climate will be like 45 years from now, but looking at climate models discussed at the Agricultural Outlook Forum last week in suburban Washington, D.C., the best prediction is that the American southwest will be drier, the northwest may get more rain...

Conservation

One Year Later - USDA in the Brave New World of Open Data

February 04, 2015 Joyce Hunter, Deputy CIO, Policy and Planning, U.S. Department of Agriculture

It’s hard to believe that it has been a year since USDA embarked on its push to make its data available to you. As you know, open data is free, public data that can be used to: launch commercial and nonprofit ventures; conduct research; make data-driven decisions; and help solve complex problems. It...

Conservation Technology
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