EJToday is SEJ's selection of new and outstanding stories on environmental topics in print and on the air, updated every weekday. SEJ also offers a free e-mailed digest of the day's EJToday postings, called SEJ-beat. SEJ members are subscribed automatically, but may opt out here. Non-members may subscribe here. EJToday is also available via RSS feed. Please see Editorial Guidelines for EJToday content.
"Tests on Treasured Maize Ignite Fears in Mexico"
AFP, 10/30/2009"As scientists race the clock to increase food production worldwide, new trials to plant genetically-modified maize have stoked anger in Mexico, the cradle of corn."
"Back Where Virus Started, New Scrutiny of Pig Farming"
Wash Post, 10/26/2009"Many experts think pig farming presents a serious and overlooked risk to public health. Proof of that assertion -- indirect but indisputable, in the opinion of virologists -- is the 2009 H1N1 pandemic influenza."
"Prairie Pioneer Seeks To Reinvent The Way We Farm"
NPR, 10/22/2009"In the prairies of Kansas lives Wes Jackson, a man who has spent his long and rich career trying to invent a new kind of agriculture -- one that will last indefinitely."
"Agriculture Critic's Appearance Angers University Alumni"
LA Times, 10/15/2009A big-money rancher alumnus caused Cal Poly San Luis Obispo to change a scheduled lecture by best-selling sustainable food writer Michael Pollan -- raising questions about academic freedom.
"Where They Grow Our Junk Food"
Toronto Star, 10/12/2009To get to the root of the obesity epidemic, one Canadian reporter went in search of a junk food farm. There were no fields of Dorito bags waving in the breeze. "What you do see are vast operations growing the raw materials for junk food: soybeans and corn."
Keeping The Breadbasket From Drying Up
Environment Report, 09/18/2009Right now, America's Bread Basket relies on an aquifer that's nearly drained. And, many say, it will dry up if farmers keep pumping water from it at the current rate. The Environment Report's Devin Browne reports the government plans to pay farmers as one way to get them to cut water use.
"Tomato Blight Spreading"
Environment Report, 08/27/2009"If you've been waiting all season for that quintessential taste of summer -- a juicy, ripe tomato from the garden -- you might be disappointed. This year a tomato blight has swept across the Northeast and is moving into Midwestern gardens and farms."
"Farm to Hub to Table: New Nonprofit Feeds Appetite For Local Food"
Wash Post, 08/27/2009The Local Food Hub in the Charlottesville, Va., area is an example of a new trend: nonprofit distribution enterprises that aggregate food produced by small-scale local farmers and move it quickly to local customers such as restaurants, schools, and retirement homes.
"The Dark Side of Dairies"
High Country News, 08/25/2009"Milk may have a wholesome commercial image, but the dairies that produce most of the nation's supply aren't always healthy places to work. Dairy workers are injured at a much higher rate than other workers in the U.S." Most of the West's 50,000 dairy workers are immigrants with families to feed, many undocumented. Government rules to protect them are as weak as skim milk.
"A Battle Over The Treatment Of Livestock"
Environment Report, 08/11/2009"Recently, six states have changed their laws to require better conditions for farm animals. But there’s a battle brewing in one state that’s putting a new spin on the debate."
"Farm Workers’ Union Sues California Agency Over Rules on Heat Safety"
NYTimes, 07/31/2009"The United Farm Workers union sued California’s occupational health and safety agency on Thursday, accusing it of doing too little to prevent farm laborers’ deaths from heat illness."
"Organic Movement Sprouts New Crop of Farmers"
Fresno Bee, 07/27/2009"A growing interest in sustainable food is luring children back to their parents' farms."
"Quick, Quiet Genetic Corn Approval Questioned"
Canwest, 07/27/2009"The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has quietly approved a new genetically engineered corn with eight different insect- and weed-fighting traits, but farmer and environmental groups in Canada say the approval was rushed and environmental risks ignored."
"Illegal Marijuana Farms Scar Sierra Landscape"
Fresno Bee, 07/23/2009A massive sweep by drug enforcement agents in Fresno County offered new evidence of how illegal marijuana plantations on public lands are scarring the Sierra landscape.
"Warming Climate Threatens California Fruit And Nut Production"
LA Times, 07/22/2009"Fruit and nut orchards in the Central Valley rely on winter chilling hours, but those are in decline, according to a UC Davis study."

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