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School Garden Turns into Living Learning Laboratory for Nevada Fifth Graders

December 21, 2012 Mark Williams, Nevada USDA Rural Development Energy Coordinator

“Can a School Garden Supplement a Community’s Food Supply in a Sustainable Way?” That was the question asked by Bob Gardner’s fifth grade class at Dayton, Nevada, Elementary School on Tuesday as students presented their science projects to classmates and adult guests.

Initiatives Energy Rural

The Smart Grid and Smart Growth

December 14, 2012 USDA Acting Rural Utilities Service Administrator John Padalino, USDA Rural Development

Two new smart grid projects in North Dakota and South Dakota will help improve electric service for consumers at Northern Electric Cooperative and West Central Electric Cooperative, Inc. by implementing advancements in communications technology. A smarter electric grid can help improve service by...

Energy Rural

What’s Next for Agriculture? Secretary Vilsack Wants to Hear from You!

December 13, 2012 Amanda Eamich, Director of Web Communications

Last week we asked why young Americans should care about the Farm Bill by inviting you to use social media to help tell the story about what is at stake in your lives and communities. The response has been overwhelming! We read tweets from aspiring young scientists about the importance of the Farm...

Conservation Energy Rural Research and Science

Rescue Dogs Sniff for Salamanders to Save Rare Species and Help People

December 12, 2012 Bruce Hill, Santa Fe National Forest and Ellita Willis, Office of Communication, US Forest Service

Shelter dogs that are often rejected are getting a new lease on life. Plus they’re helping wildlife and people! These conservation canines climbed the Jemez Mountains, clambering over rocks, running from smell to smell, to track where rare Jemez salamanders, a species found nowhere else in the world...

Forestry Animals Plants

A Green Menace Threatens a Mohawk Community

December 04, 2012 Thomas Colarusso, APHIS Plant Health Safeguarding Specialist and Dwight Cunningham, APHIS Public Affairs, Riverdale, MD

For centuries, the Mohawk community of the Akwesasne (pronounced AHG - weh - SAUCE – knee) have created traditional basketry from the abundance of ash trees found along the St. Lawrence Seaway and the Thousand Islands area in New York. But for the last three years, the trees and the matchless...

Animals Plants

Energy Advisor Says a Host of Factors Affect Food Prices

November 30, 2012 Sarah Bittleman, senior energy advisor to Secretary Vilsack

Rob Green’s recent Wall Street Journal op-ed “The cause of higher grocery bills isn’t the drought. It’s the failed federal ethanol policy” fails to take into consideration a host of factors, other than demand for corn, that affect food prices. In the domestic and global markets commodity, labor...

Energy

USDA's 2013 Agricultural Outlook Forum - Feb. 21-22, 2013

November 29, 2012 Brenda Chapin, Information Officer, Office of the Chief Economist

USDA’s 2013 Agricultural Outlook Forum, “Managing Risk in the 21st Century,” will be held at the Crystal Gateway Marriott Hotel in Arlington, Virginia, on Feb. 21-23. Speakers will include USDA policymakers and 85 distinguished experts in the fields of international trade, insurance, forestry...

Conservation Energy Food and Nutrition Health and Safety Forestry Trade

In Sandy's Wake, Partners Work to Save Pets

November 27, 2012 Dwight Cunningham, APHIS Public Affairs, Riverdale, MD

Hurricane Sandy brought together an un-tested coalition of animal welfare groups, local governments and federal agencies focusing on one primary goal: Using already established human assistance networks to help states feed pets impacted by the massive storm. A team of animal care experts from the U...

Animals Plants

Jamaica and the United States Team Up to Keep Out Invasive Pests

November 26, 2012 Eduardo Varona, APHIS State Operations Support Officer, Miami, FL

The “Don’t Pack a Pest” campaign went international last month as Jamaica enthusiastically kicked off its own version of the outreach initiative in Montego Bay and Kingston. The Florida-based program warns the public about the risks of bringing undeclared agricultural products—and hitchhiking...

Animals Plants

APHIS Helps Fight Pet Overpopulation on Tribal Lands

November 19, 2012 Dwight Cunningham, APHIS Public Affairs, Riverdale, MD

Years passed, but no one was able to get near the stray dog roaming the 90 acres of the Ely Shoshone Tribal District in Nevada. Tribal members had tried many times to corral her, to no avail. Then, in 2011, the stray became pregnant, giving birth to a litter under a walkway at the tribe’s clinic...

Animals Plants