
Peggy Lowe returns to the Midwest after 22 years as a journalist in Denver and Southern California. Most recently she was at The Orange County Register, where she was a multimedia producer and writer. In Denver she worked for The Associated Press, The Denver Post and the late, great Rocky Mountain News. She was on the Denver Post team that won the Pulitzer Prize for breaking news coverage of Columbine. Lowe was a Knight-Wallace Fellow at the University of Michigan in 2008-2009. She is from O'Neill, the Irish Capital of Nebraska, and now lives in Kansas City.
The U.S. Labor Department backed off a controversial change to child labor laws after an outcry from farm country, softening its stance on barring kids from working certain jobs on family farms. The proposal will be rewritten to include a broader definition of the parental exemption to the rules.
Rural communities often struggle to attract and retain talented doctors. In rural Ashland, Kan., they're rebuilding a rural hospital by appealing to community service-oriented doctors, administrators and nurses.
I was working a Sunday shift at a wire service outpost in Denver during the 1990s when I got one of those soft assignments most hard news reporters hate: go out and cover that Earth Day rally in the park.
I groaned, I griped, and then I gave up after my editor dug in his heels. So I went, with enough eye-rolling to beat any sulky teenager, and wrote, well, something, I think, that might have mentioned some folky band. It was awful.
The reason I remember this story is this: my editor asked me why I was fighting this assignment. I told him what I felt at the time, that this Earth Day thing was just a fad and would go the way of the term “ecology” that I had heard as a kid. Who cares, I said.
Turns out, a lot of people do and I was terribly wrong in my projections.
Free land!
That’s a term we can’t possibly understand today, unless, of course, we might have been born into the lucky gene pool and occupy some space in the 1 percent, like a couple cable guys.
The promise of free land, under the Homestead Act of 1862, is credited with some grandiose accomplishments, like populating the Great Plains and allowing the U.S. to become an agricultural superpower. And moving more to the 99 percentile side, the Homestead Act has been named one of the best gifts Congress ever gave to the middle class.
How do I know all this? Well, I’m just back from a trip to the Homestead National Monument of America, just outside Beatrice, Nebr.
We’ve heard from many of you this spring, and we love the pictures you’ve sent us for our Tumblr blog, reporting on this unseasonably warm spring.
From seeding the wheat fields of North Dakota…to cleaning out irrigation ditches in drought-ravaged southern Colorado…to showcasing big bushes of already-green oregano in Topeka, Kan., we’ve been shown how busy our readers are out there.
It’s hard to choose a favorite, but I love this photo sent in by Ryan Goodman of Knoxville, Tenn. -- a cattle pasture so Technicolor green it looks like a scene straight outta “The Quiet Man.”
And who can resist the photo (left) of a new spring lamb sent in by Rhonda McClure of Wahoo, Neb.? Rhonda and her husband, Don, have started a second career on a 22.2-acre farm and are chronicling it on her blog Ewe and Us.
It’s the new mantra in agriculture: tell your own story.
I hear it all the time – from advocates like the American Farm Bureau to popular farm bloggers to the wired folks at Agchat.
Farmers and ranchers are being told to take their respective cases to the American people to educate folks on food.
“We need to get the message out, so kids know there’s more to food than going out and buying it in the stores,” U.S. Sen. Mike Johanns, R-Neb., told the American Agri-Women Conference in Nebraska City, Neb., last week, according to the Syracuse (Neb.) Journal-Democrat.
Johanns, a former Ag Secretary in the George W. Bush administration, encouraged the women to talk to school kids and host farm tours so the public can learn that farmers and ranchers take good care of their animals and their land.
Here’s an easy way to do that: sign up for the Harvest Network.
It’s been a busy few months here at Harvest HQ. In between producing our talk show, covering the ongoing beef trimmings-pink slime controversy and getting photo reports on this spring, we’ve been working on a new project.
An outgrowth of an idea by Harvest’s Nebraska reporter, Clay Masters, we’ve asked folks in our Harvest Network about the farmer of the future. Clay has been busy reporting on the Hispanic influence in his state and you will soon see his documentary – either here on our site or on a local PBS station. Here’s a short clip of Clay speaking with Ag Secretary Tom Vilsack about the issue.
Clay offered us a nice slice from his work recently – a piece on a Kansas farmer who has taken on an apprentice.
My piece of the project is about the rise in corporate farming. The numbers tell the story -- the U.S. has seen intense concentration of farm ownership and production. Some 2.5 percent of farms accounted for 59 percent of farm income in 2007, according to the USDA. And who produces all that meat and produce? Companies like Tyson, Cargill, Smithfield Foods and ADM.