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The Power of Possibility: Why Farm Aid Remains Vital 35 Years In
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The Power of Possibility: Why Farm Aid Remains Vital 35 Years In
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North Dakota swine barn developers back at it after Supreme Court win
Daniel Julson, one of the partners in Grand Prairie Agriculture, says plans for a sow barn in Ramsey County, N.D., are back on after the North Dakota Supreme Court ruled in their favor in a lawsuit with Pelican Township over permitting and zoning. 5:30 am, Mar. 8, 2021 ×
Partner Taylor Aasmundstad of Devils Lake, N.D., shows plans for the Grand Prairie Gestation Farm. The farm was denied a permit by Pelican Township, but the North Dakota Supreme Court said that decision was incorrect. Photo taken July 26, 2017, at Devils Lake, N.D. (Mikkel Pates / Agweek)
As Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack was sworn into office Wednesday, one of his first actions allows for an extension of the Coronavirus Food Assistance Program sign up as well as a promise to quickly review how CFAP was administered under the last administration.
During a press call with media Thursday morning, Vilsack says Coronavirus Food Assistance Program-Additional Assistance as one of the top concerns in his recent discussions with members on Capitol Hill prior to his Senate confirmation on Tuesday. Concerns include a focus on equity of distribution as well as an inspector general report presented before the House agricultural appropriations subcommittee that revealed concerns about payments made under previous CFAP signups that didn’t meet the standards required.
Jessica Shoemaker is Professor of Law at the University of Nebraska College of Law. She has been recognized both nationally and internationally for her work on adaptive change in pluralistic land-tenure systems, as well as property law’s power to shape the contours of human communities and natural environments. Her work focuses specifically on issues of racial justice and agricultural sustainability in the American countryside and on systems of Indigenous land tenure and land governance in the United States and Canada. Her most recent law-review articles, including Fee Simple Failures: Rural Landscapes and Race and Transforming Property: Reclaiming Modern Indigenous Land Tenures, have been placed in top journals, including the Michigan Law Review and the California Law Review. Her work has been reviewed twice in JOTWELL, an online journal that highlights important and notable recent legal scholarship, and she is cited widely by interdisciplinary and international scholars. From 201
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