Keyword: farmers

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • Kulakafornia:Why Aren't Cities Helping Farmers With Appeal to End Court-Ordered Drought?

    03/11/2009 8:32:28 AM PDT · by WayneLusvardi · 17 replies · 858+ views
    Pasadena Sub Rosa ^ | March 11, 2009 | Wayne Lusvardi
    Something like the purges of the Kulaks during the Russian Bolshevik Revolution is about to happen to many of California's Central Valley farmers. Only in a Capitalist society like ours the government just adjudicates the de facto taking of your property only without additionally hanging you like Lenin did the Kulaks. But why are California's coastal cities not joining with agricultural water districts to appeal the court order which has blocked 85% of water deliveries through the California Aqueduct to both farmers and Southern California? Don't they both have something to lose? For those who haven't been following what is...
  • Patrick J. Buchanan: Afghanistan South (Mexico)

    03/06/2009 6:27:54 AM PST · by kellynla · 57 replies · 1,683+ views
    humanevents.com ^ | 03/06/2009 | Patrick J. Buchanan
    Heeding the advice of Gen. David Petraeus, Barack Obama has committed 17,000 more troops to Afghanistan and will keep 50,000 in Iraq after U.S. combat operations end in August 2010. But are U.S. vital interests more threatened by what happens in Anbar or Helmand than in the war raging along our southern border? Prediction: After all U.S. troops in Iraq, Afghanistan and Korea have come home, there will be a U.S. army on the Mexican border. For this is where the fate of our republic will be decided, as the fate of Europe will be decided by the millions streaming...
  • Soldiers, Iraqi Farmers Compare Notes at Market

    02/04/2009 3:34:05 PM PST · by SandRat · 1 replies · 251+ views
    American Forces Press Service ^ | Pfc. Bethany L. Little & Army Spc. Dawn Van Horn, USA
    SELAH, Iraq, Feb. 4, 2009 – A meeting of U.S. soldiers, provincial reconstruction team members and local farmers recently helped to outline the way ahead for the Central Euphrates Farmers Market here. Ismaee Abdul Kareem, a fish keeper in Khdir, Iraq, shows one of many fish that will be harvested and sold at a farmer's market. U.S. Army photo by Pfc. Bethany L. Little  (Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available. The PRT members and soldiers participated in the first board meeting held at the farmer’s market. Previous meetings were held at Forward Operating Base Kalsu. The Central Euphrates Farmers...
  • Caption Photo Of Mexican Farmers Blocking Bridge

    01/31/2009 5:28:11 AM PST · by raybbr · 25 replies · 927+ views
    El Diario ^ | 1/30/2009 | Staff
    Campesinos tomaron el puente internacional Córdoba de las Américas en demanda de la reducción de costos de diesel y alimentos. El bloqueo que por espacio de dos horas realizaron agricultores a las líneas comerciales de importación del puente, ocasionó que unos 150 camiones con carga y vacíos tuvieran que ser desviados al puente internacional de Zaragoza, el cual se congestionó rápidamente. Manuel Sotelo, líder de la Asociación de Transportistas informó que lo anterior provocó pérdidas de tiempo y retrasos a la industria maquiladora que se tendrán que reponer con horas extras que cuestan, además de gastar más diesel.
  • Face of Defense: Soldier Teaches Techniques to Iraqi Farmers

    01/08/2009 3:43:00 PM PST · by SandRat · 5 replies · 380+ views
    Face of Defence ^ | Staff Sgt. Jody Metzger, USA
    CAMP LIBERTY, Iraq, Jan. 8, 2009 – Iraqi farmers, still struggling from two decades of neglect under the oil-focused regime of Sadaam Hussein, are finding a friend in Army Capt. Suzanne Todd. Army Capt. Suzanne Todd serves as agriculture and veterinarian advisor with 425th Civil Affairs Battalion, attached to 4th Infantry Division, Multinational Division Baghdad, in division headquarters on Camp Liberty, Dec. 30, 2008. U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Jody Metzger  (Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available. Todd, of Jacksonville, Fla., is the agriculture and veterinary advisor for the 4th Infantry Division, Multinational Division Baghdad. Her appointment is...
  • Farm Bureau says Trans-Texas Corridor I-69 fails to meet environmental standards

    01/03/2009 7:42:53 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 10 replies · 819+ views
    The Bandera County Courier ^ | December 31, 2008 | Contributed
    Bandera local farmers and rancher charge that the I-69 Trans-Texas Corridor Tier One Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) has failed to meet important environmental standards. Barbara Mazurek, Bandera County Farm Bureau President says that these failures are indicative of the problems that exist with the entire Tran-Texas Corridor (TTC). “Because these environmental standards have not been met, the Texas Department of Transportation should seriously consider alternatives to its current model,” Mazurek said. According to Mazurek, there are three main reasons that the DEIS is flawed. • It limits its analysis to alternatives that fit the TTC “vision” of a multimodal...
  • Farmers Panic About a ‘Cow Tax’ [greenhouse gas regulation......]

    12/01/2008 11:21:21 AM PST · by Sub-Driver · 54 replies · 4,020+ views
    Farmers Panic About a ‘Cow Tax’ By Kate Galbraith Should their greenhouse gases be taxed? (Photo: Steve Ruark for The New York Times) The comment period for the Environmental Protection Agency’s exploration of greenhouse gas regulation ended last Friday, with farmers lobbying furiously against the notion of a “cow tax” on methane, a potent greenhouse gas emitted by livestock. The New York Farm Bureau issued a statement last week (PDF) saying it feared that a tax could reach $175 per cow, $87.50 per head of beef cattle and upward of $20 for each hog. Such a tax would represent a...
  • Lakeview man gets 10 years for almost 7,500 pot plants

    12/16/2008 10:36:28 PM PST · by MovementConservative · 40 replies · 3,049+ views
    The Oregonian ^ | Tuesday December 16, 2008, 4:43 PM | by Lynne Terry
    A jury sentenced a Lakeview man to 10 years in prison for growing nearly 7,500 marijuana plants. Andrew Stever, 40, was sentenced on Monday after a three-day trial in the Federal District Court in Medford.Ten years is the mandatory minimum sentence for anyone convicted of growing 1,000 or more pot plants. In July 2007, officers from several local, state and federal agencies found 7,459 plants growing on Stever's Lakeview property, which bordered Forest Service land. Two men fled the scene, leaving behind personal property and three firearms, according to the U.S. attorney's office in Portland. Physical evidence and testimony linked...
  • Wasit Farmers’ Union Provides Sheep to Iraqi Families

    12/10/2008 3:53:04 PM PST · by SandRat · 4 replies · 288+ views
    A man leaves with his sheep on the outskirts of al Kut, Dec. 8, 2008. Photo by Sgt. Daniel West, Multi-National Division - Center. FOB DELTA — The Wasit Farmers’ Union provided sheep to 205 families in and around al Kut Dec. 8 to help compensate for a lack of meat in their diets. The Farmers’ Union procured the sheep and designated the families needing them most. The purchase was facilitated by U.S. forces, said Capt. John Manion, a Civil Affairs officer with the Wasit Provincial Reconstruction Team.“The goal was to give indigent people in Wasit a sheep to add...
  • Farmers Market Construction Proceeds Ahead of Schedule

    11/25/2008 3:23:19 PM PST · by SandRat · 1 replies · 152+ views
    American Forces Press Service ^ | Sgt. 1st Class Tami Hillis, USA
    FORWARD OPERATING BASE KALSU, Iraq, Nov. 25, 2008 – Construction of the Central Euphrates Farmers Market, scheduled to open in Iraq’s Babil province by the end of the year, is proceeding ahead of schedule, officials said. The $3.2 million market, funded through the Commander’s Emergency Response Program, will provide a central location for farmers in the northern part of the province to sell their produce. The complex will include the main market building, which will house 31 vendor stalls and a rest area. Compressors and thermostats will maintain a proper temperature in cold-storage units being built from bricks, reinforced...
  • 40,000 flock to fields for farmers' leftovers

    11/24/2008 7:21:54 AM PST · by mlocher · 31 replies · 1,591+ views
    Columbus Dispatch ^ | November 24, 2008 | AP
    <p>PLATTEVILLE, Colo. (AP) -- A farm couple got a huge surprise when they opened their fields to anyone who wanted to pick up free vegetables left over after the harvest -- 40,000 people showed up.</p> <p>Joe and Chris Miller's fields were picked so clean Saturday that a second day of gleaning -- the ancient practice of picking up leftover food in farm fields -- was canceled yesterday.</p>
  • ‘Guard Farmers’ Join Counterinsurgency Fight in Afghanistan

    11/21/2008 3:33:42 PM PST · by SandRat · 6 replies · 421+ views
    WASHINGTON, Nov. 21, 2008 – The National Guard is taking a biblical verse to heart: “They will beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks.” Commanders in Afghanistan are looking forward to the deployment of two agri-business development teams next year. The teams – one from Indiana and one from Tennessee – are made up of National Guardsmen with farming backgrounds. They will serve a year in Afghanistan advising local governments and people on agricultural practices. An agri-business development team from Texas already is working in Afghanistan’s Ghazni province. “The focus of all we do is the...
  • Al Baraka Operative Farmers Association Opens Doors

    09/08/2008 4:46:39 PM PDT · by SandRat · 1 replies · 79+ views
    Multi-National Force - Iraq ^ | Sgt. 1st Class Tami Hillis, USA
    FOB KALSU — Farmers in the Lutifiyah area of Iraq came together recently to celebrate the opening of the al Baraka Operative Farmers Association. “Lutifiyah is a big part of Iraq … it connects the Tigris with the Euphrates rivers, and we are very proud of it,” said Ali, a retired Iraqi Army lieutenant colonel and a member of the new association. “We will work together for the sake of the people, and we thank everybody who contributed to making Lutifiyah a safer place.” Ali said the association is opening its doors because of the improved security in the area...
  • Farmers' Almanac says cold winter ahead

    08/20/2008 9:49:08 PM PDT · by lainie · 52 replies · 723+ views
    ap ^ | 8-20-2008
    Households worried about the high cost of keeping warm this winter will draw little comfort from the Farmers' Almanac, which predicts below-average temperatures for most of the U.S. "Numb's the word," says the 192-year-old publication, which claims an accuracy rate of 80 to 85 percent for its forecasts that are prepared two years in advance. The almanac's 2009 edition, which goes on sale Tuesday, says at least two-thirds of the country can expect colder than average temperatures, with only the Far West and Southeast in line for near-normal readings. "This is going to be catastrophic for millions of people," said...
  • ‘Ketchup’ protest stains highway

    08/18/2008 6:31:21 AM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 17 replies · 136+ views
    The Telegraph (Calcutta) ^ | August 18, 2008 | The Telegraph
    The national highway passing Kolar, 70km from Bangalore, has seen a lot of red on its surface for years now. The colour-coated stretch is the result of tomatoes dumped by farmers protesting a price crash. This week, too, the disgruntled lot threw their crop on the highway after the prices fell from Rs 80 per kilogram to Rs 15-25 a kg. An appeal had earlier been made to the government to pay a compensation of Rs 50,000 per acre to tomato growers. The farmers’ action blocked the highway for hours this week. After their unique protest ended, the crushed tomatoes...
  • Special Report: Pot Farmers Ravage Bay Area Parks (Many Pot Farms Located On Public Land)

    08/05/2008 1:04:02 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 24 replies · 460+ views
    NBC11 ^ | August 5, 2008
    It used to be that marijuana came to the Bay Area from the legendary back country of Humboldt County or the desert fields beyond Tijuana. Now the fields are in the Bay Area, and everywhere else in the state. Marijuana is one of the top cash crops in California, NBC Bay Area's Mike Luery reported. Many of the fields are located next to popular trails and in the middle of state parks. A fierce battle is being waged in our own back yard to remove the pot groves. They are hidden in brush so thick that specially trained officers must...
  • Two Tons of Seed Delivered to Farmers

    07/20/2008 2:41:23 PM PDT · by SandRat · 5 replies · 70+ views
    Multi-National Force - Iraq ^ | Pfc. Lyndsey Dransfield, USA
    Daniel Skotnick agriculture advisor, and Abdullah Al Asoum, economic bi-lingual, bi-cultural advisor with embedded Provincial Reconstruction Team Baghdad-5, speak with a farmer in Abernisha Village, northwest of Baghdad, July 13. Two tons of hybrid maize seed were donated to help rebuild Iraq’s agriculture and infrastructure. Photo by Pfc. Lyndsey Dransfield. CAMP TAJI — The Fertile Crescent portion of Iraq is notorious for its strong agricultural heritage throughout history. It has long blessed residents and their livestock with a plethora food.Unfortunately, in recent history investments and resources were diverted away from farming and food production, leaving Iraq's agricultural resources in utter...
  • Veterinarians Assist Fetoah Farmers

    07/18/2008 5:08:01 PM PDT · by SandRat · 3 replies · 87+ views
    Multi-National Force - Iraq ^ | Staff Sgt. Amber Emery, USA
    Major Freddie Zink, 445th Civil Affairs Battalion and Multi-National Division - Center veterinarian, prepares a dose of de-wormer with assistance from the son of Hadi Sloobi Muthawer, a local farmer, during a Veterinarian Civil Action Program conducted in the Fetoah area. Photo by Staff Sgt. Amber Emery. CAMP VICTORY — Iraqi Army Soldiers and Coalition forces conducted a veterinarian medical event in the Fetoah area, July 14.Iraqi Soldiers from 4th Company, 2nd Battalion, 23rd Brigade, 17th Iraqi Army Division assisted Soldiers from Company B, 1st Battalion, 35th Armored Division (attached), 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) during...
  • Viking Farms Tell Cautionary Climate Tale

    06/17/2008 1:43:08 PM PDT · by blam · 28 replies · 643+ views
    NPR ^ | 6-16-2008 | Richard Harris
    Viking Farms Tell Cautionary Climate Tale Boundary walls built by Iceland's Viking farmers run through Unnsteinn Ingason's land. At some point, farmers stopped repairing the walls, and a climate change may help explain why. Ingason's land had been farmed for hundreds of years prior to his family's ownership. Here, ruins of a stone farm house with a turf roof on a hill behind Ingason's home. Archaeologist Adolf Fridriksson stands near the ruins of an early Viking farm. The farm was long ago abandoned, and its soil heavily eroded. Icelandic farmers bring their sheep down from the hills for the winter....
  • First Farmers Made 'Lucky Beads'

    06/16/2008 7:54:59 PM PDT · by blam · 4 replies · 81+ views
    BBC ^ | 6-16-2008
    First farmers made 'lucky beads'The green beads were prized by early agriculturalists Some of the first farmers in the Near East probably used green beads as amulets to protect themselves and their crops, a study suggests. The authors of the research suggest that early agriculturalists attached special importance to this colour. Beads they recovered from dig sites in Israel had been made from a variety of green minerals and the farmers went to great efforts to obtain them. Details appear in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal. Daniella Bar-Yosef Mayer, from Israel's University of Haifa, and Naomi Porat,...
  • Feds must green-light changes in I-69 route plan

    06/12/2008 6:19:43 AM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 14 replies · 146+ views
    The Houston Chronicle ^ | June 12, 2008 | Rad Sallee
    State highway officials said Wednesday that the first step in carrying out their decision to build a controversial toll road along the present U.S. 59, and not through farm and ranch land, is to get federal approval. Although no federal funding has been sought for the Interstate 69/Trans-Texas Corridor, the Texas Department of Transportation is bound by federal environmental law. The project has generated thick volumes about its likely impact on the natural environment and the communities in its path. The Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) is expected to undergo public review late this year and then get sent to...
  • Latin Amer. leaders discuss labor plan with Calif. farmers

    06/07/2008 6:37:32 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 1 replies · 178+ views
    Honduran president Jose Manuel Zelaya Rosales and representatives from El Salvador and Guatemala met with California farmers Saturday to hash out a plan that will train laborers from those countries to work in the Western U.S. The plan is set to start with about 300 workers from Mexico and Central America. It will operate under existing U.S. guest worker laws and take at least a year to implement, said Manuel Cunha Jr., president of the Nisei Farmers League, a group that represents hundreds of agriculture businesses in California, Washington, Oregon and Arizona. Growers plan to work with Latin American countries...
  • Date palm trees sprayed (Agri-Business)

    05/25/2008 1:42:12 PM PDT · by SandRat · 3 replies · 52+ views
    Multi-National Force - Iraq ^ | Sgt. Kevin Stabinsky, USA
    FORWARD OPERATING BASE KALSU, Iraq – One May 22, an aggressive aerial campaign in Sayafiyah and Arab Jabour targeted pests which had caused countless dollars in damage to palm trees over the past year. Left unchecked, the dubas beetle, which bores into the tree and kills it, can seriously disrupt the production of dates in the area, said Mike Stevens, Baghdad-7 embedded Provincial Reconstruction Team agriculture adviser. Behind oil, dates were once the main export of Iraq, said Stevens, a native of Alexandria, Minn. Because of dates’ importance to the economy, pesticides were distributed via two helicopters over orchards in...
  • Don't Count on Prop. 99

    05/19/2008 11:03:57 AM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 11 replies · 243+ views
    The Cato Institute ^ | May 19, 2008 | Ilya Somin
    The U.S. Supreme Court created a huge political backlash when it ruled that local governments could use eminent domain to seize private property and transfer it to other private owners for "economic development." Since the Kelo ruling in 2005, 42 states have enacted limitations on eminent domain — not always effective ones. But like lawmakers in many other states, some California officials are trying to block real eminent domain reform. On June 3, Californians will vote on Proposition 99, a ballot initiative sponsored by groups representing cities, counties, redevelopment agencies and other pro-condemnation interests. It purports to protect property rights...
  • Column - John Kanelis: State faces many rural roadblocks

    05/11/2008 2:38:48 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 7 replies · 299+ views
    Amarillo Globe-News ^ | May 11, 2008 | John Kanelis
    Texas Gov. Rick Perry wants to build a big highway through the Lone Star State. No, make that a really big highway, as in a monstrously big highway. The exact route hasn't been determined. The mega-highway would run roughly from Laredo on the Rio Grande River through the Hill Country and the Piney Woods and then through Texarkana in that tiny portion of the state that borders Arkansas. Imagine for a moment if that thoroughfare would be pointed in the other direction - from the Valley, through the South Plains and then through the heart of the Panhandle, right past...
  • High demand, price of rice good news to US farmers

    05/11/2008 1:38:10 PM PDT · by BenLurkin · 7 replies · 91+ views
    Associated Press ^ | Sunday May 11, 2:58 pm ET | Juliana Barbassa,
    WILLIAMS, Calif. (AP) -- Dipping its left wing, a canary-yellow biplane makes a sharp turn and dives over a flooded field, showering rice on the shallow water 15 feet below. It's aerial seeding season for rice farmers in California, which produces about 20 percent of the crop grown in the U.S. With the price of rice surging internationally, much of the medium-grain rice being planted between the Sutter Butte mountains and California's Coastal Range has already being sold, even though harvest still is months away. "It's nuts," said Pat Daddow, head of the California Rice Exchange, a platform where processors...
  • Advertisement Anti-corridor rally timed for graduation day

    05/10/2008 6:36:55 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 2 replies · 394+ views
    The Daily Sentinel ^ | May 10, 2008 | Michael Rodden
    While Gov. Rick Perry was in Johnson Coliseum addressing SFA graduates, on the other side of campus a group of citizens were not so happy about his appearance in Nacogdoches. In the free-speech area of campus, near North Street and Vista Drive, many farmers, property owners and concerned citizens gathered for a Citizens Against the Trans-Texas Corridor Rally. Holding protest signs and using a tractor as a symbol of the farming community, those who gathered wanted to make their cause heard by the governor, as well as the community. Many vehicles traveling on North Street honked in support of the...
  • White Zimbabweans bring change to Nigeria

    05/06/2008 6:04:19 PM PDT · by Dawnsblood · 29 replies · 230+ views
    The Christian Science Monitor ^ | 5/2/08 | Sarah Simpson
    Musa Mogadi says he is better off since "the whites" came. He's got a new job, learned new farming skills, and he can chat on a mobile phone while zipping around the countryside on a motorbike. Three years ago, Mr. Mogadi got by as a subsistence farmer. But he now earns a regular wage as a supervisor on one of this town's new commercial farms. He's applied skills he learned from some of the two dozen white Zimbabwean farmers who moved to Nigeria in 2005, after being kicked off their land by President Robert Mugabe and later attracted by large...
  • Trans-Texas Corridor

    04/29/2008 5:29:55 AM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 16 replies · 305+ views
    Quarter Horse News ^ | April 29, 2008 | Sonny Williams
    Each day, I make the dreaded drive down Interstate 35 to go to work in Fort Worth. Each day, I slug through the snarl and sludge of ceaseless traffic, which intensifies my growing desire to commit hari-kari, or at least incites a vehement curse of the highway gods. Certainly, we in Texas need more lanes, more roads, more rails, more something to deal with the ever-expanding urban population and growing international commerce. Yet how do we solve our transportation needs without carving up the countryside like some congratulatory cake? Or should the construction of a superhighway-rail-utility corridor even concern us?...
  • Rural residents feel the push from Trans-Texas Corridor

    04/28/2008 5:31:20 AM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 8 replies · 421+ views
    The Houston Chronicle ^ | April 27, 2008 | Rad Sallee
    Minutes south of Interstate 10 and Sealy, the pastures along FM 1458 are their own silent world in the morning. Mists lift to reveal black cattle, brown and spotted horses, snow-white egrets underfoot in lush green grass. Then a concrete mixer comes churning down the blacktop. Just up the road is a small subdivision. More are sure to come as city dwellers, including weekenders and retirees, move out in search of a quieter, simpler life — and relief from city traffic. Although the gradual influx may bring greater changes in the long run, what disturbs residents most is the planned...
  • Mugabe militants target whites farmers (forcing about a dozen ranchers and farmers off their land)

    04/07/2008 2:59:49 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 15 replies · 108+ views
    AP on Yahoo ^ | 4/7/08 | Angus Shaw - ap
    HARARE, Zimbabwe - Militant supporters of President Robert Mugabe targeted whites Monday, forcing about a dozen ranchers and farmers off their land as Zimbabwe's longtime ruler fanned racial tensions amid fears he will turn to violence to hold on to power. Mugabe's opponents pressed a lawsuit seeking to compel the publication of results of the March 29 presidential election that they say Morgan Tsvangirai won. The opposition leader urged the international community to persuade Mugabe to step down. "Major powers here, such as South Africa, the U.S. and Britain, must act to remove the white-knuckle grip of Mugabe's suicidal reign...
  • Land ownership in South Africa

    03/24/2008 6:00:19 PM PDT · by MinorityRepublican · 14 replies · 421+ views
    Radio Netherlands ^ | Eric Beauchemin
    South Africa's pre-Mandela regime brought about one of the most racially skewed land distributions in the world. Since the collapse of apartheid in 1994, the black majority government has been trying to implement land reform, but are new injustices being created by righting past wrongs? In South Africa, one of the most intractable legacies of white-minority rule is the right to land. After the first Dutch settlers arrived in the Cape in the 1600s, they started taking over native peoples' lands. Whites gradually expropriated more and more land, and by the early 20th century, blacks had been squeezed into reservations...
  • Robert Mugabe Turns The Screw On Zimbabwe's Dwindling White Farmers

    03/21/2008 7:18:28 PM PDT · by blam · 52 replies · 1,564+ views
    The Telegraph (UK) ^ | 3-22-2008 | Peta Thornycroft
    Robert Mugabe turns the screw on Zimbabwe's dwindling white farmers By Peta Thornycroft in Chinhoyi Last Updated: 1:56am GMT 22/03/2008 President Robert Mugabe's regime is stepping up its intimidation of Zimbabwe's white farmers as he seeks a sixth term in office. A few hundred landowners managed to stay put on small portions of their original properties despite Mr Mugabe's land seizures, which began in 2000 and destroyed commercial agriculture, the backbone of the economy. But the president's re-election campaign ahead of next weekend's election is driven by the notion that the country's independence is under threat. He has long presented...
  • Texas Farm Bureau: “TxDOT’s Draft Environmental Impact Study will not withstand judicial scrutiny”

    03/19/2008 6:06:53 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 4 replies · 392+ views
    Southwest Farm Press ^ | March 19, 2008 | Southwest Farm Press
    In comments filed with the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) and the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), the Texas Farm Bureau said the Draft Environmental Impact Study (DEIS) for the proposed I-69 corridor “would not withstand judicial scrutiny.” Under the terms of the National Environmental Policy Act, these detailed environmental studies are conducted under rules developed by the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ). According to the farm organization’s comments, the failure of the DEIS to consider the environmental impact of using existing rights-of-way–rather than a single minded focus on building a completely new route–means the study could not hold up in...
  • Anti-corridor groups apprise locals of ways to 'just say no to TTC'

    03/17/2008 5:19:26 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 3 replies · 441+ views
    The Lufkin Daily News ^ | March 17, 2008 | Steven Alford
    Plots by Communists to infiltrate America. The disintegration of borders and rural areas. Citizens mobilizing and rising up against government agencies and big business. It all sounds like the plot for a summer blockbuster, but it's something that could be happening in your own backyard. These were just a few of the topics addressed in the "How to fight the TTC" workshop, held Monday at the Pitser Garrison Civic Center in Lufkin. The conference served as an informational meeting aimed at informing citizens and local government officials how they can unite in trying to stop the proposed Trans-Texas Corridor project....
  • Anti-corridor groups plan Monday workshop at civic center

    03/16/2008 3:04:05 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 10 replies · 1,170+ views
    The Lufkin Daily News ^ | March 16, 2008 | Steven Alford
    There's been a lot of talk about the new Trans-Texas Corridor — the next-generation "super-highway" — and opinions are varying. Now the debate is coming to Lufkin's doorstep. On Monday, the American Land Foundation, Stewards of the Range and TURF will hold a workshop at Lufkin's Pitser Garrison Civic Center on how to stop the Trans-Texas Corridor 69. The event runs from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. A portion of Texas citizens have voiced their opposition to the TTC-69 in public meetings held by the Texas Department of Transportation, but believing they are not being heard, four cities and their...
  • Trans-Texas Corridor

    03/09/2008 1:08:26 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 21 replies · 1,095+ views
    Nolan Chart ^ | March 8, 2008 | Adam Rink
    Topic: Globalism The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) is planning on building a new super highway system called the Trans-Texas Corridor (TTC). The Trans-Texas Corridor will not be just another interstate and will it will be used by more than just automobiles. It will include 10 lanes for traffic, two high speed rail tracks, four standard rail tracks, utility lines, oil pipelines, and gas pipelines. The Trans-Texas Corridor will consist of many corridors segments that are 1,200 feet wide, with each mile consuming 146 acres of land. This land is currently ranch and farm land that is being taken by...
  • McReynolds: Expect legislative fireworks over I-69/TTC

    03/08/2008 8:50:35 AM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 12 replies · 334+ views
    The Lufkin Daily News ^ | March 7, 2008 | Nick Wade
    State Representative Jim McReynolds previewed the 2009 legislative session at Friday's First Friday Chamber luncheon, with the hot topics going into the biennial madhouse listed as the I-69/Trans-Texas Corridor, the growing issue of water supply, and the battle over the top 10 percent rule that allows Texas high school students to be admitted to any state college if they graduate in the top 10 percent of their class. According to McReynolds, the legislators are "not too happy" with the Texas Department of Transportation, which has been under fire for its proposed I-69/TTC plans. "This (the I-69/TTC) is something we never...
  • TxDOT accused of breaking federal law

    03/06/2008 1:18:28 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 9 replies · 264+ views
    The Navasota Examiner & Grimes County Review ^ | March 6, 2008 | Rosemary Smith
    Texas spirit was alive and well at the Navasota DEIS public hearing on Feb. 28. Opposition groups, such as the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, came from as far as Washington, D.C. to give recorded testimony, and get a first hand look at TxDOT process procedures. Assistant Director of Communications, Leigh Strope, who attended the meeting on behalf of the 34,000 Texas Teamsters Union members, says, “Teamsters want to stop the dangerous trend of selling our roads and bridges to foreign investors so they can slap tolls on the driving public. We are also concerned because the Trans-Texas Corridor would form...
  • Dairy farmers unhappy with immigration raids[Wisconsin]

    03/05/2008 7:57:45 AM PST · by BGHater · 35 replies · 590+ views
    Wisconsin Public Radio ^ | 04 Mar 2008 | Gil Halsted
    Agents from the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency have been stepping up the number of arrests of undocumented immigrants in Wisconsin recently. It’s a trend that’s beginning to worry some Wisconsin dairy farmers who employ immigrant milkers from Mexico. A new study of employment patterns on 600 farms in four Wisconsin counties found that 90 percent of the milkers on those farms were Mexican immigrants. It’s a trend that ballooned between 1998 and 2000, soon after the North American Free Trade Act went into affect. Study author Brent Valentine of the University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Rural Sociology says...
  • Texans ponder where superhighway might take them

    03/04/2008 1:28:23 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 12 replies · 305+ views
    The Boston Globe ^ | March 4, 2008 | Peter Canellos
    REFUGIO, Texas - With an abandoned Wild West-vintage town of storefronts slumbering just a block from old US 77, tiny Refugio is a place where myth and reality coexist in a ghostly silence. more stories like this Obama faces heat over aide's NAFTA remarks to Canadians Texas, Ohio could decide Dem nomination Canada says didn't misrepresent Obama over NAFTA McCain tags Dems on trade treaty NAFTA seen differently in Ohio, Texas And now this South Texas outpost is swept up in one of the more intriguing tests of myth vs. reality in today's political life: the battle over the so-called...
  • Provincial Reconstruction Team Helps Farmers’ Union Grow

    03/03/2008 4:37:13 PM PST · by SandRat · 1 replies · 40+ views
    FOB KALSU — Sixteen prominent Sayifiyah landowners gathered with members of the Baghdad-7 embedded Provincial Reconstruction Team (ePRT) at Patrol Base Whitehouse in Sayifiyah, Feb. 28, for a farmers’ union meeting. As security returns to the region, Coalition forces are focusing on restoring the agriculturally-based economy in Sayifiyah. Efforts include reviving the poultry and beekeeping industries, increasing the productivity of vegetable farms and creating new industries like fish farming and chicken processing plants. All of these efforts were discussed at the meeting, the union’s third gathering. "We're here to restore the area to the farming community it once was," said...
  • Katy, Rosenberg Host Trans-Texas Corridor Meetings

    02/28/2008 5:21:13 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 8 replies · 278+ views
    Fort Bend Now ^ | February 28, 2008 | John Pape
    The proposed Trans Texas Corridor did not find any fans, or any support, in Fort Bend County this week. At public meetings hosted by the Texas Department of Transportation in both Katy and Rosenberg, speaker after speaker, many in emotional tones, voiced their opposition to the proposed transportation corridor. No one spoke up in support of the proposal at either meeting. The Tuesday night session took place at Katy High School’s Performing Arts Center with over 200 residents in attendance. The evening before at the Rosenberg Civic and Convention Center, a similar crowd showed up to voice their opinions. In...
  • Trans-Texas corridor stirs controversy

    02/26/2008 2:28:30 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 9 replies · 382+ views
    One News Now ^ | February 26, 2008 | Jim Brown
    The debate in Texas over a proposed 4,000-mile network of toll roads that will parallel the state's existing highway system is heating up More than 10,000 people have attended public hearings across Texas to discuss the proposed Trans-Texas Corridor, which has also been dubbed the "NAFTA superhighway." It is a project that is expected to cost an estimated $183 billion over 50 years. (hear audio report) Terry Hall with the group Texans Uniting for Reform and Freedom warns the project will create widespread eminent domain abuse and involve foreign control of public infrastructure. "They're taking huge swaths of land, up...
  • Road block: Why the rage against the Trans-Texas Corridor?

    02/23/2008 7:17:59 AM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 29 replies · 197+ views
    KHOU.com ^ | February 23, 2006 | Lee McGuire
    HEMPSTEAD -- The Trans Texas Corridor may be the most controversial highway ever built in Texas. That is, if it ever gets built. All month, there have been public hearings throughout the area where people have been showing up in droves to oppose it. People don’t drive very fast on Odis Styers’ family ranch near Hempstead, but TxDOT wants that to change. “It’s quiet, it’s peaceful,” Styers said. “It’s a shame a road is gonna mess it up.” The road is the Trans Texas Corridor. The plans call for it to come through here, and with it: separate lanes for...
  • NY Dairy Farmers Allege 4th Amendment Search Warrant Violations by Ag & Markets

    02/20/2008 8:02:03 PM PST · by davidgumpert · 3 replies · 254+ views
    The Complete Patient ^ | Feb. 20, 2008 | David E. Gumpert
    The search warrant used by NY's Department of Agriculture and Markets to go after raw-milk producers Barb and Steve Smith in December had more holes than Swiss cheese. Gary Cox of the Farm-to-Consumer Legal Defense Fund has put together a motion that might best be termed “Search Warrants 101.” He argues that the December search warrant the Smiths supposedly defied in December “is facially defective…and must be quashed.”
  • Afghan, Coalition Forces Help Farmers Endure Harsh Winter

    02/19/2008 3:46:46 PM PST · by SandRat · 3 replies · 23+ views
    FARAH PROVINCE, Afghanistan, Feb. 19, 2008 – Afghan and coalition forces are working with national government officials to help farmers endure the harsh winter in this western Afghanistan province bordering Iran. A village elder puts his allotment of veterinary medicines in his shawl to carry back to his village from the Shib Koh district center in Farah province, Afghanistan, Feb. 5, 2008. Photo by Staff Sgt. Marie Schult, USA  (Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available. The winter has been especially harsh. Severe snow and ice storms have made it nearly impossible for villagers to travel to nearby cities to...
  • Trans-Texas Corridor debated in East Texas

    02/19/2008 1:37:06 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 48 replies · 320+ views
    KETKNBC.com ^ | February 18, 2008 | Gloria Gallardo
    TYLER - Heated debates are cropping up in rural East Texas communities as the Texas Department of Transportation hold hearings on the proposed the Trans-Texas Corridor. It's the first construction project of it's kind in the country. The Texas Department of Transportation says they want it to make room for a growing state. "A thousand people a day move to texas," says spokesman Larry Krantz,"where are these people going to drive? The population in Texas is going to explode by 60% in the year 2030." Their plans involve moving commercial trucks off existing interstate highways and onto one of two...
  • TxDOT traveling bumpy road

    02/18/2008 1:33:51 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 14 replies · 296+ views
    Lubbock Avalanche-Journal (Lubbock Online) ^ | February 18, 2008 | Enrique Rangel
    AUSTIN - When it comes to road improvement and maintenance, by most accounts, the South Plains and Panhandle are fortunate. Despite a $1.1 billion accounting error, the Texas Department of Transportation recently reported no projects in the region have been canceled or delayed while cities like Dallas, Houston and Laredo had at least a half dozen highway projects delayed. But the $1.1 billion-error, which occurred because TxDOT inadvertently counted some bond money twice and consequently allocated more funding than it had, is just the latest problem plaguing the beleaguered agency. For months, TxDOT executive director Amadeo Saenz and other transportation...
  • Hundreds in Nacogdoches speak out against TTC-69

    02/15/2008 4:53:51 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 12 replies · 727+ views
    Lufkin Daily News ^ | February 15, 2008 | Matthew Stoff (The Daily Sentinel)
    NACOGDOCHES — The rows of extra chairs brought into the The Fredonia's biggest meeting room Thursday night were not enough to accommodate more than 750 people who attended an open house and public hearing on the proposed TTC-69 highway. Texas Department of Transportation officials heard hours of public testimony that continued late into the night overwhelmingly opposed to the construction of new roadways through East Texas. Applause throughout the hours-long meeting never swelled as loudly as it did when the first speaker of the night, state Rep. Wayne Christian, told TxDOT representatives emphatically that "our answer is 'no' on the...