Low Farm Income ‘Not So Unusual’ – October 23, 2019

Despite trade and weather woes, low farm income ‘not so unusual’

 

An array of factors, from foreign competition to slower economic growth at home and abroad, will constrain U.S. farm income in the near term, but one economist says current income levels are “more normal than we like to think.”

 

FDA warns against CBD products while working on regulations

 

The FDA warned against use of unapproved cannabidiol products at the same time it said on Tuesday that it was exploring ways for CBD products to be marketed lawfully.

TODAY’S QUICK HITS

‘Time is running out’ (Grassley): For the first time, Senate Finance chairman Chuck Grassley said he was worried Congress might not approve the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement this year, telling farm broadcasters, “The clock is ticking, time is running out.”

Inspector general to review USDA and climate change (Politico): The inspector general of the USDA opened a formal inquiry into USDA’s handling of research on climate change and how it communicated the findings to the public following reports that USDA played down adverse research.

 

What to do about PFAS? (E&E News): State and federal policymakers are trying to figure out how to test for and address PFAS, or “forever chemicals,” in the food supply.

 

Gore warns of food losses to climate (Washington Post): Former vice president Al Gore says the impact of climate change on food production has been underestimated for years, and “we may be approaching a threshold beyond which the agriculture that we’ve always known cannot support human civilization as we know it.”

 

Buffalo return to Wind River Reservation (Wyoming Public Media): For the first time in 131 years, buffalo are now roaming the Wind River Reservation in Wyoming; their return was the result of decades of work and advocacy by Northern Arapaho tribal members.

 

News deserts in rural America (Stateline): Of the 1,800 newspapers that have closed or merged in the past 15 years, 500 were in rural communities; nearly half of U.S. counties have only one newspaper and it is often a weekly.

 

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