Tamar Haspel tweeted a link to this article on using CRISPR in cassava. Part of the key was making cassava flower reliably and early, so regular breeding and cross-matching techniques could be employed down the line. (Cassava feeds a lot of people (is a billion a lot--I think so) but has been hard to improve because it didn't flower regularly.)
The article goes on to comment on the barriers to CRISPR being erected in other areas of the world.
CRISPR is near and dear to my heart, though it's been around for just a few years, because I identified it early as an interesting technique, though just today have I added a label for it (using "genetic modification" before).
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.
Monday, September 10, 2018
Sunday, September 09, 2018
Insubordination in the Past
Been reading a couple of good books: World War II at Sea, and President Carter which remind me of past instances of insubordination in different executive branches. Some instances, not from the books:
- FDR was told by a top naval officer before WWII the military did not have faith in his leadership.
- Churchill's military continually questioned his judgment, with good cause according to most historians.
- Joe Califano resisted Carter's efforts to remove education from his HEW to establish a separate Education Department. Carter ended up firing 3 cabinet officers and almost had his VP resign.
- Much of Lincoln's military, particularly in the early years and especially Gen. McClellan, openly dissed the president.
- Andrew Jackson ended up firing his cabinet to resolve dissension.
- Ronald Reagan--well, I won't start on him.
So our current president's troubles are not entirely unprecedented.
Saturday, September 08, 2018
Blast from the Past: Pogo
We have met the enemy and he is us.
That's a quote from my sister's favorite cartoon of the 1950's, and therefore mine. (She was 5.5 years older, enough that she could act as a guide to the mysterious world of adults. )
Reminded of Pogo by this short piece.
Here's the wikipedia take.
I see googling "pogo" doesn't bring up the cartoon as any of the top results. Sic transit gloria mundi.
That's a quote from my sister's favorite cartoon of the 1950's, and therefore mine. (She was 5.5 years older, enough that she could act as a guide to the mysterious world of adults. )
Reminded of Pogo by this short piece.
Here's the wikipedia take.
I see googling "pogo" doesn't bring up the cartoon as any of the top results. Sic transit gloria mundi.
Friday, September 07, 2018
Once Biten, Twice Shy in Politics
Some days I'm very left in my political opinions; other days I'm more cautious. Today at least the cautious side wins.
I wish President Obama had continued to be quiet, to push participation and policies but not taking on the current incumbent of the Oval Office. I wish the Democrats weren't reaching so hard for ammunition to use against Kavanaugh. He strikes me as about the best we could expect from this President and this party. The current polls look promising in the House, and not too terrible in the Senate, but I'm concerned that the Republicans will be able to use their fatcat money to push the message that Democrats are extreme.
I'm likely thinking with my emotions, not not my brain, but I remember my optimism going into the 2016 elections. And I remember McGovern in 1972 and Dukakis in 1988.
I wish President Obama had continued to be quiet, to push participation and policies but not taking on the current incumbent of the Oval Office. I wish the Democrats weren't reaching so hard for ammunition to use against Kavanaugh. He strikes me as about the best we could expect from this President and this party. The current polls look promising in the House, and not too terrible in the Senate, but I'm concerned that the Republicans will be able to use their fatcat money to push the message that Democrats are extreme.
I'm likely thinking with my emotions, not not my brain, but I remember my optimism going into the 2016 elections. And I remember McGovern in 1972 and Dukakis in 1988.
Thursday, September 06, 2018
A Compliment for Farmers.gov
I've a jaundiced view of initiatives to put government operations on-line, which is a carryover from my experiences when I was at FSA. However, I want to compliment farmers.gov for at least a small attempt at transparency--they're including on the site some promises of additions to the site as well as an early stab at presenting metrics.
I've always believed government websites should publicize their views and usage. I suspect the figures would disappoint people like me who want to push e-government.
I've always believed government websites should publicize their views and usage. I suspect the figures would disappoint people like me who want to push e-government.
Wednesday, September 05, 2018
Those Hard-Working Bureaucrats at FSA
Failed to mention yesterday that the instructions for MFP were issued timely. Signup opened yesterday, and the notice providing the instructions was issued at 1:00 am. Sept. 4.
Never let it be said that FSA bureaucrats were asleep on the job.
Never let it be said that FSA bureaucrats were asleep on the job.
Tuesday, September 04, 2018
CCC-910 for Market Facilitation Program
FSA now has the form approved by OMB and up and operational on its website. (Or, actually on the farmers.gov website.)
Since I've started off nitpicking the program and it's a convenient subject to blog about, some more comments. (And there aren't many people left at FSA from my time there, which is a consideration--don't want to be unfair to friends, but unfair to strangers is another matter.)
I wonder why the producer's certification only notes that failure to certify production accurately will result in loss of benefits. I'm too lazy to check, but didn't FSA used to note penalties for false certification--18 U.S.C. something or other? I also wonder why there's no language either tying the production to the producer's farm(s) or certifying that it is the total production from all farms in which the producer has an interest. Don't know if there's an appendix to this contract. Nor do I know the significance of the "adjusted production" column.
I'm a bit disappointed that FSA asks for a producer's fax number, but not her email address.
I note with some bemusement that the nondiscrimination statement has been modified since my time--I've bolded the changes.
"In accordance with Federal civil rights law and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) civil rights regulations and policies, the USDA, its Agencies, offices, and employees, and institutions participating in or administering USDA programs are prohibited from discriminating based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, gender identity (including gender expression), sexual orientation, disability, age, marital status, family/parental status, income derived from a public assistance program, political beliefs, or reprisal or retaliation for prior civil rights activity, in any program or activity conducted or funded by USDA (not all bases apply to all programs). Remedies and complaint filing deadlines vary by program or incident."
I note the farmers.gov website promises the ability to file electronically. Maybe I've found another area to nitpick.
Since I've started off nitpicking the program and it's a convenient subject to blog about, some more comments. (And there aren't many people left at FSA from my time there, which is a consideration--don't want to be unfair to friends, but unfair to strangers is another matter.)
I wonder why the producer's certification only notes that failure to certify production accurately will result in loss of benefits. I'm too lazy to check, but didn't FSA used to note penalties for false certification--18 U.S.C. something or other? I also wonder why there's no language either tying the production to the producer's farm(s) or certifying that it is the total production from all farms in which the producer has an interest. Don't know if there's an appendix to this contract. Nor do I know the significance of the "adjusted production" column.
I'm a bit disappointed that FSA asks for a producer's fax number, but not her email address.
I note with some bemusement that the nondiscrimination statement has been modified since my time--I've bolded the changes.
"In accordance with Federal civil rights law and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) civil rights regulations and policies, the USDA, its Agencies, offices, and employees, and institutions participating in or administering USDA programs are prohibited from discriminating based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, gender identity (including gender expression), sexual orientation, disability, age, marital status, family/parental status, income derived from a public assistance program, political beliefs, or reprisal or retaliation for prior civil rights activity, in any program or activity conducted or funded by USDA (not all bases apply to all programs). Remedies and complaint filing deadlines vary by program or incident."
I note the farmers.gov website promises the ability to file electronically. Maybe I've found another area to nitpick.
Monday, September 03, 2018
Alex Haley and Cornell
It turns out that Alex Haley, the author of "Roots" was born in Ithaca, NY, while his father Simon was getting his Masters in agriculture at Cornell.
Over the first hundred years of Cornell's existence it educated some African-Americans, though a man from Haiti was the first student of African descent in 1869.
IMO because of its different colleges, partly due to its land-grant status, Cornell had an easier time with diversity than did its competitors over that period. For blacks the record was tokenism, a few students every year at best. Cornell did better with Asian students, enrolling its first in 1870 along with its first woman. But notoriously, when the civil rights movement started impacting colleges in the 1960's, it didn't do any better than other schools.
Over the first hundred years of Cornell's existence it educated some African-Americans, though a man from Haiti was the first student of African descent in 1869.
IMO because of its different colleges, partly due to its land-grant status, Cornell had an easier time with diversity than did its competitors over that period. For blacks the record was tokenism, a few students every year at best. Cornell did better with Asian students, enrolling its first in 1870 along with its first woman. But notoriously, when the civil rights movement started impacting colleges in the 1960's, it didn't do any better than other schools.
Sunday, September 02, 2018
Canada and Supply Management for Dairy
One of the biggest issues in the renegotiation of NAFTA with Canada is their desire to maintain their system of supply management for dairy. Here's a site with statistical data on the industry. The two big provinces are Ontario and Quebec. As one can see from this chart there's little variation in cow numbers over the last 15 years (2004-2018). But if you look at the number of farms, there has been roughly 1/3 reduction in farm numbers over the same period (17,000 to 11,000).
From ERS (the copy and paste process loses the formating. I've bolded the two big points): Midpoints increased for each commodity over 1987-2012, but the rate of increase varies widely, with dramatic long-term changes in egg, hog, and dairy production (table 9). The midpoint flock size in egg layers increased to 925,975 birds in 2012 from 117,839 in 1987 (and just over 62,000 in 1982); the midpoint for hog removals rose to 40,000 in 2012 from 1,200 in 1987; and the midpoint dairy cow herd rose to 900 cows in 2012 from 80 in 1987. The broiler and fed cattle industries show continued consolidation, with 2012 midpoints a bit more than double their values in 1987. However, each underwent striking changes in organization and technology well before the series starts in 1987 (MacDonald and McBride, 2009). Table 9 Consolidation in livestock sectors, 1987-2012 Commodity 1987 1997 2007 2012 Change (percent) 1987-2012 2007-2012 Sales midpoint: Number of head sold or removed Broilers 300,000 480,000 681,600 680,000 127 -0.1 Fed cattle 17,532 38,000 35,000 38,369 119 10 Hogs and pigs 1,200 11,000 30,000 40,000 3,233 33 Turkeys 120,000 137,246 157,000 160,000 33 2 Inventory midpoint: Number of head in herd/flock Beef cows 89 100 110 110 24 0 Egg layers 117,839 300,000 872,500 925,975 686 6 Milk cows 80 140 570 900 1,025 58 Source: USDA, Economic Research Service, compiled from census of agriculture data.
Bottom line: while Canadian dairy farms have declined in number, the rate of decline in the US is higher.
I'm reminded of the supply management system the US used to have for tobacco, now ended. It had a similar effect: slowing the transformation of the industry.
From ERS (the copy and paste process loses the formating. I've bolded the two big points): Midpoints increased for each commodity over 1987-2012, but the rate of increase varies widely, with dramatic long-term changes in egg, hog, and dairy production (table 9). The midpoint flock size in egg layers increased to 925,975 birds in 2012 from 117,839 in 1987 (and just over 62,000 in 1982); the midpoint for hog removals rose to 40,000 in 2012 from 1,200 in 1987; and the midpoint dairy cow herd rose to 900 cows in 2012 from 80 in 1987. The broiler and fed cattle industries show continued consolidation, with 2012 midpoints a bit more than double their values in 1987. However, each underwent striking changes in organization and technology well before the series starts in 1987 (MacDonald and McBride, 2009). Table 9 Consolidation in livestock sectors, 1987-2012 Commodity 1987 1997 2007 2012 Change (percent) 1987-2012 2007-2012 Sales midpoint: Number of head sold or removed Broilers 300,000 480,000 681,600 680,000 127 -0.1 Fed cattle 17,532 38,000 35,000 38,369 119 10 Hogs and pigs 1,200 11,000 30,000 40,000 3,233 33 Turkeys 120,000 137,246 157,000 160,000 33 2 Inventory midpoint: Number of head in herd/flock Beef cows 89 100 110 110 24 0 Egg layers 117,839 300,000 872,500 925,975 686 6 Milk cows 80 140 570 900 1,025 58 Source: USDA, Economic Research Service, compiled from census of agriculture data.
Bottom line: while Canadian dairy farms have declined in number, the rate of decline in the US is higher.
I'm reminded of the supply management system the US used to have for tobacco, now ended. It had a similar effect: slowing the transformation of the industry.
Friday, August 31, 2018
No Instructions or Form for MFP
At least, I can't find any at the appropriate places on the fsa.usda website or on the farmers.gov website. That site provides links to the other forms which are required or may be used.
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