WACD Reading List
NACD Applauds USDA for Release of First Tranche of IRA Funding to Producers - NACD
NEWS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE February 21, 2025 CONTACT: Candice Abinanti candice-abinanti[at]nacdnet.org NACD Applauds USDA for Release of First Tranche of IRA Funding to Producers Washington, D.C. – The National […]
For some Cheney High School students, agriculture wasn't it. Then they joined the school's floriculture team
A meander through Cheney High School’s halls means passing by dozens of classrooms to entertain the senses: like the dissonance of band class or the squeaking of sneakers on the gym floor. But only one amuses the olfactory system with an enticing aroma of eucalyptus, flowering stock and roses.
Boise River tree project benefits stream bank, trout | Research Center | capitalpress.com
A wider variety of projects can be completed during the winter maintenance season under the district’s stream alteration permit, recently reworked with help from the Idaho Department of Water Resources
Hydroelectric Dams in Oregon That Harm Salmon Could Be Shut Down — ProPublica
The newly signed legislation follows reporting from Oregon Public Broadcasting and ProPublica that underscored the risks and costs associated with a plan to migrate salmon past hydroelectric dams using a giant fish collector and tanker trucks.
Chemicals in sewage sludge fertilizer pose cancer risk, EPA says | AP News
Harmful chemicals in sewage sludge spread on pasture as fertilizer pose a risk to people who regularly consume milk, beef and other products from those farms, in some cases raising cancer risk “several orders of magnitude” above what the Environmental Protection Agency considers acceptable, federal
High levels of ‘forever chemicals’ mainly from drugs may be contaminating drinking water for 23 million Americans | CNN
Wastewater plants are failing to remove a group of potentially toxic chemicals before pumping treated water into rivers and lakes — and climate change may be making the situation even worse, a new report finds.
WSDA: We need help to stop Japanese beetles | Rural Life | capitalpress.com
The Washington State Department of Agriculture hopes more property owners this year will give the department access to spray for Japanese beetles, a pest gaining ground in Eastern Washington. The department will seek consent from more than 17,600 property owners in Benton, Franklin and Yakima counties, about double the number of property owners contacted last year.
Lawmakers, experts tackle rising farmer suicide rates in Washington amid growing pressures | Local | qvpr.com
WENATCHEE — Washington lawmakers and researchers strategize to address mental health challenges among farmers. Farmers are 3.5 more likely to die by suicide than the general population, according to the