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In Conversation with #WomeninAg: Jennie London

November 24, 2015 Rachael Dubinsky, Office of Communications

As we look towards the Holiday season, here at USDA, we would like to give thanks to all of our farmers and ranchers, men and women alike, who provide us with a safe and affordable food supply. Every month, USDA shares the story of a woman in agriculture who is leading our industry and helping other...

Initiatives

Agriculture Is a New Mission for a U.S. Marine Veteran

November 19, 2015 Tanya Brown, Farm Service Agency, Outreach Marketing Editor

Raising clams was always a part of Michael McCarthy’s life — until Sept. 11, 2001. McCarthy was working with the New York/New Jersey Harbor relay program, purging and harvesting clams, when terrorists crashed two airplanes into the World Trade Center. “You could look across the water and see the...

Conservation

Rural Health Week: How the Affordable Care Act is Helping to Build a Stronger, Healthier Rural America

November 16, 2015 Norah Deluhery, Director, Center for Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships

Keeping our rural communities healthy is key to building a stronger America. That’s why as we kick off this year’s Rural Health Week, I’m proud of the new affordable health insurance options that are available because of the Affordable Care Act, helping to give rural families piece of mind across...

Research and Science

In Conversation with #WomeninAg: Anita Adalja

September 30, 2015 Rachael Dubinsky, Office of Communications

Today in our Women’s Week blog series, we speak with Anita Adalja, the Farm Manager at Arcadia Center for Sustainable Food and Agriculture. A social worker who merged her career with farming, Anita is committed to food access solutions, community building and sustainable land stewardship. Arcadia is...

Conservation Initiatives

Did You Spot the Beetle?

September 21, 2015 Rhonda Santos, APHIS' Public Information Officer for the Asian Longhorned Beetle Eradication Program

…the Volkswagen beetle that is. You might have if you were in Ohio the last few weeks. As part of the efforts to raise awareness about the invasive Asian longhorned beetle (ALB), a non-native insect originating from Asia that is attacking and killing out native U.S. trees, the USDA’s Animal and...

Animals Plants

Secretary Announces New York and Oregon Tall Wood Building Prize Winners

September 17, 2015 Charles Parrott, AMS Specialty Crops Program Deputy Administrator

All around the world, including here in the United States, builders are adopting new, cutting edge technologies to save energy and reduce a structure’s carbon footprint. Now, technological advances are enabling architects and contractors to use one of the most traditional materials, wood, to...

Conservation Technology

Private Lands Conservation Helps Put New England Cottontail on Road to Recovery

September 11, 2015 Jason Weller, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Chief

Wildlife and working lands go hand in hand. Today, thanks to the hard work of private landowners and land managers, the New England cottontail will not need protection under the Endangered Species Act. Widespread habitat loss since the 1960s impacted New England cottontail numbers. But people like...

Conservation

Land-Marking: Returning to 9/11 Living Memorials Projects and to the People who Continue to Shape, Create and Attend to their Meaning

September 11, 2015 Erika S. Svendsen and Lindsay K. Campbell, Northern Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

Living memorials serve as a reminder of fathers and mothers, sons and daughters, brothers and sisters, neighbors and friends—but also of the power of community to reflect, rebuild and renew. Our research suggests that living memorials demonstrate the role of nature in contemporary times not only as...

Forestry

New York State of Mind: Empowering Women and Creating Local Food Opportunities

September 02, 2015 Anne L. Alonzo, Agricultural Marketing Service Administrator

The future of agriculture depends on the next generation of farmers and ranchers. That’s why the Department of Agriculture is committed to creating more opportunities for new and beginning farmers and removing barriers for women and minority farmers. To advance these priorities, I traveled to...

Food and Nutrition Farming Initiatives

Back to School Checklist: Fruits and Veggies

August 28, 2015 Christina Conell and Carolyn Smalkowski, USDA Food and Nutrition Service

Fruits and vegetables are at the top of USDA’s back to school list, and just in time for the new school year, the Pilot Project for Procurement of Unprocessed Fruits and Vegetables is making it easier for schools in eight states to purchase them. The 2014 Farm Bill authorizes the pilot in not more...

Food and Nutrition
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