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.
"U.S. Drought Deepens in Plains States, Wheat Crop Suffers"
Reuters, 11/09/2012"Hot and dry conditions in parts of middle America deepened an ongoing drought in many states over the last week, according to a climatology report issued Thursday."
California: "Prop. 37: Genetic Food Labels Loses"
San Francisco Chronicle, 11/07/2012"A measure that would require most foods made with genetically engineered ingredients to be labeled in California was significantly behind early Wednesday."
"In Aftermath of Drought, U.S. Corn Movement Turns Upside Down"
Reuters, 10/30/2012"The devastating U.S. drought and ensuing crop disease are upending traditional grain movement patterns, with dozens of trains and barges shipping North Dakota or Mississippi corn into the Corn Belt rather than out to the coasts."
"Runoff From Iowa Farms Growing Concern in Gulf"
Des Moines Register, 10/29/2012"CHAUVIN, La. -- Generations of shrimpers, crabbers and oystermen have set out from this bayou village to net their catch. They share an emotional bond with Iowa's farmers: Both harvest nature's bounty to earn a livelihood. These fishermen depend on the sea, just as the nation's top corn growers rely on the rich Midwest soil."
"Farmers Watching Their Water Use"
Wall St. Journal, 10/29/2012"Growers are reluctantly trying to irrigate less to preserve their threatened underground aquifer."
"Scientists See Double Standard in Critique of Altered Foods"
LA Times, 10/25/2012"Genetic engineering of crops is essentially the same as centuries-old, conventional plant breeding, except more precise, scientists say." As voting time nears on California's Proposition 37, arguments about science, safety, and the public's right to know intensify.
"Wine and Fracking Don't Mix, Say Vineyard Owners"
AP, 10/24/2012"The hillside vineyards of New York's Finger Lakes region make money producing fine Rieslings and inviting tourists to sip white wine by the water's edge. Now winery owners are worried about the prospect of a grittier kind of economic development: gas drilling."
"Pesticides Put Bumblebee Colonies at Risk of Failure"
Reuters, 10/22/2012"Pesticides used in farming are also killing worker bumblebees and damaging their ability to gather food, meaning colonies that are vital for plant pollination are more likely to fail when they are used, a study showed on Sunday."
"U.S. Winter Likely To Continue Hot Weather Trend"
Reuters, 10/19/2012"After a hot spring and a scorching summer, this winter is likely to continue a U.S. warming trend that could make 2012 the hottest year since modern record-keeping began, U.S. weather experts said Thursday."
"Warming Climate Sends US Corn Belt North"
Sydney Morning Herald, 10/17/2012"Joe Waldman is saying goodbye to corn after yet another hot and dry summer convinced the Kansas farmer that rainfall won’t be there when he needs it anymore."
"Oregon Farm Pollution Act Goes Under the Spotlight"
Portland Oregonian, 10/15/2012Even with a non-regulatory approach, getting farmers to participate in water pollution control campaigns in Oregon is proving difficult.
"Farm Bill Failure Gives Democrats Ammunition In Midwest House Races"
Reuters, 10/15/2012"RINGSTED, Iowa -- Democrats fighting an uphill battle to win a majority in the U.S. House of Representatives are trying to use rural angst over the failure of congressional Republicans to pass a farm bill to win some Midwestern seats in the November 6 election."
"Indiana Faces Dilemma Regulating Huge, Industrial CAFO Animal Farms"
Indianapolis Star, 10/15/2012"While backers hail their benefits, the state struggles to regulate operations that put thousands of animals under the same roof."
"Food Sickens Millions as Company-Paid Checks Find It Safe"
Bloomberg Markets, 10/12/2012Food companies are paying inspectors who find fatally contaminated food safe to eat. People are dying as a result. It's perfectly legal.
"Redford Rejects Calls for Public Inquiry Into Tainted Beef"
Calgary Herald, 10/12/2012"CALGARY — [Alberta] Premier Alison Redford shot down calls from opposition parties and the union representing workers at the XL Foods plant for a public inquiry to get to the bottom of the huge beef recall stemming from E. coli tainted product at the Brooks facility."

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