So far it seems that the elderly and impaired in residential/nursing homes and workers in meatpacking plants are especially susceptible to the novel coronavirus and at least the former are more likely to die.
The unseen portion of our population is the category which is now proving vulnerable in Singapore, migrant workers, those living in group quarters.
There may also be vulnerability among the Haredim, the ultra Orthodox Jews.
All of these groups are outside the what I'd call the "core" population of our society, they're marginal-they aren't who we think of when talking about American workers.
Unfortunately for meat eaters, the packinghouse workers are essential.
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, April 24, 2020
Thursday, April 23, 2020
Do We Get More Innovation With Federalism?
There have been some stories during the pandemic focusing on local and private efforts to innovate in response. I don't remember them all, but there have been stories on individuals sewing face masks or setting up organizations to provide help and companies changing over to produce ventilators, face mask, personal protection equipment, coronavirus tests, etc. Nasal swabs is the most recent one I've noticed; in this case people are using 3-D printers to produce them.
As an aside, I was surprised by a mention in the article of how well-established 3-D printing had become.
Back to innovation: I wonder whether such stories could be found in any society, the desire to help and the spirit of innovation being innate in humans? Or does the relatively decentralized nature of American society and the federalism of our government create a favorable atmosphere for such innovation which can't be matched by most other societies? Or is the key how advanced the economy and technology of the society?
As an aside, I was surprised by a mention in the article of how well-established 3-D printing had become.
Back to innovation: I wonder whether such stories could be found in any society, the desire to help and the spirit of innovation being innate in humans? Or does the relatively decentralized nature of American society and the federalism of our government create a favorable atmosphere for such innovation which can't be matched by most other societies? Or is the key how advanced the economy and technology of the society?
Wednesday, April 22, 2020
On Reopening After the Coronavirus
The Trump administration's task force has outlined a 3 stage process to reopen the economy.The steps make sense to me. There's pressure from various places to go faster in reopening, particularly in southern states.
My own feeling is complicated:
My own feeling is complicated:
- there's likely some, perhaps many, things which could be reopened with minimal additional risk to propagating the virus. I' ve tweeted the suggestion that libraries could be reopened, at least to the extent that you can put a hold on a book or DVD online, then pick it up from the library. That process could track closely to carryout orders from restaurants.
- the problem is the trade-off between having a strong simple rule which establishes a red line and more complicated rules which are harder to understand and enforce, particularly without a bureaucracy geared to that enforcement. Using uniformed police isn't the answer.
Bottom line: as usual the US will muddle through.
Tuesday, April 21, 2020
Metaphors Again
I loved this metaphor in Gerson's column in the Post today.
Trump unfiltered is like a badly polluted canal. The scraps of narcissism, the rotten remnants of conspiracy theories, the offal of sour grievance, the half-eaten bits of resentment flow by. They do not cohere. But they move in the same, insistent current of self, self, self.Read the whole thing.
Monday, April 20, 2020
Close Knit Networks in Cities
"Over time, density became a boon, economically, socially, intellectually. Living in a city became a way to encourage health. People could walk where they needed to go and support one another in tight-knit social networks."That's from a NYTimes article on people leaving big cities.
Back in the day the stereotype was that cities were the places where people were alone and lonely, finding solitude and privacy, enjoying anonymity. At least that was one stereotype. Another was cities were homes to ethnic groups (representing the last gasp of immigration before the restrictions of the 1924? act kicked in). By the 60's the stereotype was of the black inner city ghetto.
Perhaps it's true that for WASP migrants from the rural areas and suburbs the cities represented a freedom from small-minded prejudices and rigid social norms enforced by the community, or at least it was true enough for a sufficient number of writers for them to perpetuate the stereotype.
Anyhow, things change.
Saturday, April 18, 2020
No CFAP for Wool/Mohair or Oysters?
I follow the Foothill Agrarians blog--he raises sheep. Here's his report on the wool/mohair market.
I also follow Tamar Haspel on twitter--she writes on food for the Post and she and her husband have an oyster farm. Oysters are mostly sold through restaurants so it's hit hard.
Apparently as of now there's no help in CFAP for either farmer.
I also follow Tamar Haspel on twitter--she writes on food for the Post and she and her husband have an oyster farm. Oysters are mostly sold through restaurants so it's hit hard.
Apparently as of now there's no help in CFAP for either farmer.
CFAP Parameters
From Sentator Hoeven's website:
"Direct Assistance for Farmers and Ranchers
USDA will provide $16 billion in direct payments to farmers and ranchers including:
- $9.6 billion for the livestock industry
- $5.1 billion for cattle
- $2.9 billion for dairy
- $1.6 billion for hogs
- $3.9 billion for row crop producers
- $2.1 billion for specialty crops producers
- $500 million for others crops
Producers will receive a single payment determined using two calculations:
- Price losses that occurred January 1-April 15, 2020. Producers will be compensated for 85% of price loss during that period.
- Second part of the payment will be expected losses from April 15 through the next two quarters, and will cover 30% of expected losses.
The payment limit is $125,000 per commodity with an overall limit of $250,000 per individual or entity. Qualified commodities must have experienced a 5% price decrease between January and April.
USDA is expediting the rule making process for the direct payment program and expects to begin sign-up for the new program in early May and to get payments out to producers by the end of May or early June. "
Sounds as if this part of the program will be FSA's hot potato.
19 Billion USDA Program for Pandemic Aid
Here's the press release on the USDA program(s) announced yesterday: Highlights:
- "$16 billion in direct support based on actual losses for agricultural producers where prices and market supply chains have been impacted and will assist producers with additional adjustment and marketing costs resulting from lost demand and short-term oversupply for the 2020 marketing year caused by COVID-19."
- $3 billion in direct purchases of meat, milk and produce to be donated to NGO's.
- Using available Section 32 funds ($870+ million) also for direct purchases.
- Administrative support (likely for USDA agencies plus those involved in the distribution)
The first bullet is going to be tough to administer--if you dumped milk there's no evidence now, so it will likely rely on producer certifications for much of the evidence. Of course all farmers are honest, except for a few bad apples.
It's the "Coronavirus Food Assistance Program" or CFAP.
Friday, April 17, 2020
What's the Cost Per Page of a Government Manual
$840. According to this Defenseone article. The 100,000 pages of manuals for Air Force One will cost $84 million.
As someone who spent years of his life writing and editing manuals, I'm interested. A scattershot of points:
As someone who spent years of his life writing and editing manuals, I'm interested. A scattershot of points:
- The $84 figure isn't a bogus accounting trick like the infamous hammer and toilet seat of the past (Reagan admin, maybe?). The contract is for $84 million, so it's actual expense to the taxpayers.
- I've no handle on the reasons for the volume of manuals--it seems like overdoing it, but it's the President's aircraft and the military can over specify things. As I read the article, it's basically taking the existing manuals for the 747 and working in the material for all the customizations and additions being made to the plane to make it ready for the next president.
- I wonder about those manuals--the 747 has been around forever, or at least for 50 years, having first entered service in 1970. Given bureaucracy, there's some likelihood that portions of the manuals were first written 50 years ago. I'd hope that's not the case. But when bureaucracies keep COBOL systems working for 50 years, similar dynamics could have kept manual text and organization the same for 50 years.
- It's probably inevitable that manual writing would be separated from the people who actually know the plane but it's a danger point--raises the possibility of miscommunication between the doer and the writer.
- I wonder about innovations in manual design and delivery. I know some maintenance manuals for some functions in the world, I forget what and where, have been computerized and redesigned to work through visual displays, like the former Google Glasses or virtual reality displays. I believe some apps have been released which allow you to point a phone at a product on store shelves and pull up information on it, like nutrition data, etc. It seems to me logical that manuals could use a similar delivery system. If so, are "pages" the right term, or has terminology changed the definition of a "page"?
Thursday, April 16, 2020
Crops Under Solar?
I'm a bit dubious about this.
Construction is slated to begin this spring on a 1.2-megawatt solar array on the Kominek farm. Some 3,300 solar panels will rest on 6-foot and 8-foot-high stilts, providing shade for crops like tomatoes, peppers, kale, and beans on a five-acre plot. Pasture grasses and beehive boxes are planned for the perimeter.I guess it might work, since the veggies will get early morning sun and late afternoon sun. Production won't nearly match that from acreage dedicated to the crop, with no shading, but there's advantages to two streams of revenue.
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