National Partnership Working to Combat Farmer Stress

handsA national poll conducted in April found that 48% of rural adults are experiencing more mental health challenges than a year ago.

Based on those findings, the American Farm Bureau Federation is partnering with Farm Credit and the National Farmers Union to help combat farm stress with a training program that will offer online and in-person training for individuals working with farmers.

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U.S.-Japan Trade Agreement Will Enhance Agricultural Market Access

32a11-shipJapan is prepared to eliminate or reduce tariffs on U.S. food and agricultural products in 2020, as part of a U.S.-Japan Trade Agreement.

President Trump’s trade deal will provide U.S. farmers and agribusinesses with competitive access to the nation’s third-largest agricultural export market. That access will enable American producers to better compete with countries that currently have preferential tariffs in the Japanese market. The tariff cuts will match what Japan provides to countries in the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership.

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Spanberger Chairs Hearing on Expanding Access to Federal Conservation Programs, Hears from Louisa County Cattleman

IW SpannyRepresentative Abigail Spanberger—Chair of the U.S. House Agriculture Committee’s Conservation and Forestry Subcommittee— led a hearing focused on expanding Historically Underserved farmers and ranchers’ access to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA’s) conservation programs this week.

During the Subcommittee hearing, Spanberger heard from Irvin White—a first-generation farmer and consultant with a business based in Louisa County. For more than two decades, White has helped area farmers work in tandem with the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) to implement voluntary conservation practices. To date, his business has installed hundreds of miles of stream fencing and alternative watering systems throughout Central Virginia—including in Culpeper, Orange, Louisa, and Spotsylvania Counties.

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Virginia Farmer Smashes World Record for Corn Yield

DAvid Hula

From On the Farm Radio

This year, corn growers hit new highs in the National Corn Growers Association 2019 National Corn Yield Contest with David Hula of Charles City, Va. setting the highest yield on record at 616.1953 bushels per acre. Despite adverse growing conditions that impacted most farmers, improved seed varieties, advanced production techniques, and innovative growing practices allowed corn growers to achieve many impressive yields across all categories again this year.

The National Corn Yield Contest is now in its 55th year and remains NCGA’s most popular program for members.

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New Leadership in General Assembly Announced

CapitolIn a few short weeks, we will not only ring in a new year but dive into a new General Assembly Session. The results of the 2019 elections place new leadership in both chambers which means a new Speaker of the House, new Majority and Minority Leaders in both bodies, as well as all-new committee chairman in both chambers of the legislature.

With this new era in Virginia’s General Assembly and a more urban profile of the leadership, it becomes even more important to communicate our message on how policy impacts the industries of agriculture and forestry. Our members and staff have always worked to educate policymakers in all positions, we will continue to work to represent Farm Bureau policy in the most effective way possible.

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Organization Believes Historic Tobacco Barns Worth Saving

tobacco barnSouthside Virginia tobacco barns have been disappearing, but a group is working to reverse that trend.

Preservation Virginia, a privately funded statewide organization founded more than 100 years ago, has been working since 2009 to preserve historic tobacco barns and educate the public about their significance to Southside history.

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Farm Bureau urging Congress to Ratify Trade Agreement

Capitol buildingAfter more than a year of negotiations, a revised version of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement is awaiting congressional ratification.

“We urge members of Congress to swiftly approve the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement,” American Farm Bureau Federation President Zippy Duvall said after the revised version of the agreement was signed Dec. 10. “Agriculture is at a critical crossroads with the downturn in commodity prices, losses from natural disasters and the trade war. This is an opportunity for Congress not only to help U.S. farmers and ranchers turn the corner on trade, but also show that Washington can still get things done on a bipartisan basis.”

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Hemp Regulations Released, Public Can Comment until Dec. 30

hemp2The fog of regulatory ambiguity is fading with the rollout of official guidelines for industrial hemp growers in the U.S.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture has outlined provisions to approve domestic hemp production, and sets requirements for its producers. Those requirements include licensing, maintaining information on the land where hemp is grown, complying with procedures and provisions, testing updated THC amounts, and handling policy violations.

The 2018 U.S. Farm Bill directed the USDA to establish a national regulatory framework for domestic hemp production. The commodity is used in fabric, paper, construction materials, food products, cosmetics and the production of cannabidiol or CBD. Prices for hemp, driven primarily by demand for use in CBD production, have motivated increased planting. Industrial hemp is already produced in Virginia, with 1,142 registered growers and 2,244 acres planted, according to Tony Banks, senior assistant director of agriculture, development and innovation for Virginia Farm Bureau Federation.

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Virginia Farmer Goes Three Rounds With NRCS Before Agency Abides by Judge’s Decision

Before Virginia farmer Charles Hood bought 30 acres of land close to where he grew peanuts, corn, cotton and soybeans, he brought a retired Natural Resources Conservation Service soil scientist out to walk the property. With a thumbs-up from the soil scientist, Hood bought the property and consulted with NRCS to make sure the changes he was planning to make to the land, which had previously been harvested for timber and had ditches on three sides, were okay.

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