Whatever happened to the veggie truck and the bakery truck? An older relative of mine who used to live in the DC suburbs before the war (WWII that is) remembers being able to buy fresh vegetables from a truck and bakery goods from another truck. I assume such service couldn't withstand the restrictions on driving during WWII and the competition from supermarkets after the war. But maybe not. The milkman continued to deliver in my semi-rural area even into the early '50's, and a Good Humor truck has made occasional appearances in my Reston cul-de-sac within living memory.
I do see the food movement as trying to take us back to the 1920's, the time when farmers grew a variety of crops, there were farmers markets in cities, and nobody was obese (except William Howard Taft, Chief Justice and ex-President). Or maybe it's a matter of the pendulum swinging: from variety to standardization and uniformity and then back again. Certainly technology is enabling a lot of new services: car sharing, room sharing, even toilet sharing (see here). No reason it couldn't be adapted to support delivery routes and other niche marketing devices for farm produce.
Blogging on bureaucracy, organizations, USDA, agriculture programs, American history, the food movement, and other interests. Often contrarian, usually optimistic, sometimes didactic, occasionally funny, rarely wrong, always a nitpicker.
Friday, March 07, 2014
Thursday, March 06, 2014
FSA's Budget
From the budget document
The 2015 Budget proposes a level of $1.45 billion. As part of the 2015 budget, FSA is developing a “Model Service Center” concept that will result in service centers that are better equipped, better staffed, and will provide improved service to customers. Part of the plan is to close or consolidate 250 offices and restructure the workforce to more effectively leverage its human capital. With reduced redundancies, streamlined business processes, and a reduced national footprint, FSA will be able to deliver programs more efficiently. In addition, FSA proposes additional staffing for farm loans in anticipation of increased loan demand. FSA is continuing to modernize its information technology (IT) systems and move away from unreliable, obsolete systems. Billions of dollars of annual farm program payments, conservation payments, and loans to producers have been dependent upon antiquated IT systems. FSA must continue to upgrade its IT infrastructure in order to provide more efficient and reliable services to producers.
FSA’s MIDAS program is a critical part of its IT modernization efforts that supports farm program delivery with streamlined business processes and integrated applications that share information and resources efficiently. MIDAS achieved an initial operating capability release in April 2013 that modernized the storage and retrieval structure of current farm records and integrated this information with land use data, land imagery data and producer information. The system will permit FSA employees to access and better validate program eligibility data and financial services data from a single source and improve customer account management.
Tuesday, March 04, 2014
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
Words of Wisdom From the Eighteenth Century
Boston 1775 is a good blog on everything around the Revolution. Today in discussing the Salem gunpowder incident, he offers some words of wisdom:
"You don’t store gunpowder in a blacksmith’s shop."
"You don’t store gunpowder in a blacksmith’s shop."
Tuesday, February 25, 2014
Pseudo Science and Whole Foods
As a stockholder in Whole Foods (it's done well over the last decade or so) I welcome all positive news for the company. So I shouldn't promote this article (Hat tip-kottke.org) which compares the pseudo-science found in the sales pitch for some WF products to creationism and wonders why crunchies get upset about the latter but not the former.
However, I like the article. It's always good to mock oneself.
However, I like the article. It's always good to mock oneself.
Monday, February 24, 2014
Blast from the Past: ACP
The old Agricultural Conservation program was in operation when I joined ASCS. I can remember a trip by a county executive director (Pitt county, NC maybe?) to a sawmill where people were making woven wood garden baskets. This was fall, I think tobacco harvest was well over, so it was work for after harvest time. Anyhow, the CED was signing up a couple landowners/part-time farmers to ACP practices.
ACP was a cost-sharing program, the farmer paying part of the cost of "approved conservation practices", ASCS paying the other part. It was early in the Nixon administration, which didn't believe in the program (thinking it basically enhanced production so should be entirely paid for by the farmer). They ended up in a battle with Congress over the program, resulting in a number of changes. Over the years it was reformed again and finally moved to SCS (which had always fought with ASCS over it).
Why do I babble on about it? This bit from Farm Policy:
ACP was a cost-sharing program, the farmer paying part of the cost of "approved conservation practices", ASCS paying the other part. It was early in the Nixon administration, which didn't believe in the program (thinking it basically enhanced production so should be entirely paid for by the farmer). They ended up in a battle with Congress over the program, resulting in a number of changes. Over the years it was reformed again and finally moved to SCS (which had always fought with ASCS over it).
Why do I babble on about it? This bit from Farm Policy:
"In other policy related news, Mark Peters reported in today’s Wall Street Journal that, “Kevin Hollinger planted radishes and oats last fall in his corn and soybean fields, but he isn’t planning to harvest them. Instead, he is letting the crops die over the winter to improve the soil and keep fertilizer and other nutrients from running into nearby waterways.Winter cover were one set of the conservation practices covered by ACP. I find my memory is foggy here. I don't know whether they were dropped, like lime was, and later reinstated into EQIP and CSP or whether they have always survived.
“‘I could hardly go to town without someone asking: ‘What’s that in your field?’’ said Mr. Hollinger, a fourth-generation farmer.
“Helping to foot the bill for his experiment is a pilot program set to launch fully next month. Farmers in the Ohio River basin are being paid to make changes—from what they plant to how they handle manure—in an effort to minimize runoff that can cause hypoxia, or low oxygen levels, in waterways.”
Sunday, February 23, 2014
Words of Wisdom From a Teenager
“You can create your own miracle,” Shiffrin said when the gold medal was on a sash draped around her neck. “But you do it by never looking past all the little steps along the way.”
From NYTimes
Saturday, February 22, 2014
Understatement of 2008
"The failure of a major investment bank, the forced merger of another,
the largest thrift and insurer teetering, and the failure of Freddie and
Fannie are likely to have a significant impact on the real economy,"
From 2008 transcript of FED meeting.
From 2008 transcript of FED meeting.
Friday, February 21, 2014
The Persistence of Error
Mark Twain had lots of things to say about lies, including a line about a lie getting being half-way round the world while truth was still getting its boots on.
A corollary to that is that error lasts and lasts, while corrections don't. Matt Yglesias and Kevin Drum note an instance: Netflix House of Cards believes the retirement age for social security is 65.
A corollary to that is that error lasts and lasts, while corrections don't. Matt Yglesias and Kevin Drum note an instance: Netflix House of Cards believes the retirement age for social security is 65.
Thursday, February 20, 2014
Bad Mistake: Gates and SOFAs
Reading Mr. Gates' memoir, Duty. He talks about negotiating a status of forces agreement with Iraq and making a very bad mistake: tell the Iraqis to go talk to the other nations with which the US has status of force agreements.
What could go wrong with that? Surely everyone is happy to have US soldiers on their land, aren't they?
No--everyone the Iraqis talked with complained about the behavior of US troops and the aggravations of theirsofas SOFAs.
Just a reminder of how a smart man, surrounded by smart people, who spent his career trying to understand other nations, could lapse into self-satisfied smugness about American virtue.
What could go wrong with that? Surely everyone is happy to have US soldiers on their land, aren't they?
No--everyone the Iraqis talked with complained about the behavior of US troops and the aggravations of their
Just a reminder of how a smart man, surrounded by smart people, who spent his career trying to understand other nations, could lapse into self-satisfied smugness about American virtue.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)