
Virginia farmers will be part of a June 10 celebration marking Chesapeake Bay Awareness Week.
Back to the Bay will run from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Mason Neck Start Park in Fairfax County. The event will focus on bay restoration efforts and will feature family activities, educational displays, live music and local food and beverages.
Visitors will be able to sample Virginia oysters on the half shell; take to the water by canoe, kayak or paddleboard; view underwater grasses in Belmont Bay; and join forestry experts on a walk through park forestland at the water’s edge. At an exhibit sponsored by Virginia Farm Bureau Federation and the Virginia Agribusiness Council they’ll be able to meet and talk with farmers who are working to protect the bay and its tributaries. They’ll also be able to win prizes by correctly answering questions about conservation practices and Virginia farms.
In 2016 the Virginia General Assembly passed a resolution designating the second week in June as Chesapeake Bay Awareness Week. Similar legislation has been enacted in Maryland and Pennsylvania.
For Back to the Bay details, visit cnva.org/back-to-the-bay.
Assessments of the state’s current wheat crop left participants in the second annual Virginia Wheat Tour optimistic last week.
Virginia farmers have an incentive to donate excess product to nonprofit food banks thanks to the Food Crop Donation Tax Credit. Approved by the Virginia General Assembly during the 2016 Session, farmers who donate edible food crops to a nonprofit food bank can receive up to a 30 percent tax credit for their donation.
From Herman Ellison, State Statistician, National Agricultural Statistics Service:
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is proposing to limit the content of N-Nitrosonornicotine (NNN) in finished smokeless tobacco products (STP) in order to reduce the risk of cancer associated with STP use. The proposed standard would limit NNN levels to 1.0 mg/g (1 ppm) or less in moist smokeless tobacco, chewing tobacco, dry snuff and other STP throughout the finished product’s labeled expiration date. According to FDA and other data most STP sold in the U.S. do not meet this standard.
Lindsay P. Reames has been appointed to the position of Assistant Secretary of Agriculture and Forestry. Lindsay most recently served as Manager of Animal Care & Sustainability for Maryland & Virginia Milk Producers Cooperative Association, leading their animal care and sustainability initiatives. Previously she served as Assistant Director of Governmental Relations for Virginia Farm Bureau Federation. Lindsay earned her Master of Public Administration and her Bachelor of Science in Agricultural and Applied Economics from Virginia Tech. Lindsay and her family operate their Amelia County farm, which raises beef cattle, corn, soybeans and hay.
Mark Campbell: Bedford County Farm Bureau and the Young Farmers hosted a “Meet Virginia Agriculture” event on May 13th. The event was originally initiated by an idea from Delegate Scott Garrett for legislators to learn first-hand about farms and the business of farming along with challenges and opportunities.
From American Farm Bureau President Zippy Duvall:
All Americans—farmers, the public, state and local officials, environmentalists—should be able to count on a regulatory system that is fair and transparent. Earlier this year, the House of Representatives passed a regulatory reform bill. Now the Senate needs to act.