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Lawmakers Consider Smaller House, Shorter Work Week


The Missouri House is considering a shorter work week to save some money. Meanwhile, the Missouri Senate may consider an effort to cut the membership of the Missouri House.

Skipping a formal Thursday floor session would spare the state from paying legislators their daily expense allotment.

Missouri lawmakers generally hold floor sessions Monday through Thursday. But this week, Republican House leaders may wrap up the work week on Wednesday.

The annual legislative session started about three weeks ago, so most of the work on bills is being completed by committees rather than the full chamber.

Missouri Senator Jim Lembke of St Louis is behind an effort to cut the Missouri House from 163 members to 101. Lembke says he knows a smaller House of Representatives would mean more work for each representative. But he says it would be manageable.

Lobbyist and former state representative Todd Smith thinks that’s a false economy. Smith says the proposal won’t save any money and will cause problems for the remaining members. Smith also feels it would lessen lawmakers’ contact with votes.

XL Pipeline Has a Future

The fate of the 17-hundred-mile Keystone XL pipeline was not decided last week when President Obama rejected a permit for its construction. Instead, proponents have declared, the fight has just begun. The war of words surrounding the pipeline is continuing on the campaign trail and some House Republicans have vowed to seek new legislation to clear the path for the controversial pipeline.  Environmentalists say they will fight not only new Keystone proposals but also other major oil pipelines that would carry crude from Canada’s oil sands region.

In the meantime, TransCanada, which proposed the pipeline, said it will consider a truncated system within U.S. borders. That system would not need State Department approval. The pipeline could serve the growing output from the Bakken shale oil fields in Montana, ease the bottleneck of crude oil at the major terminal in Cushing, Oklahoma, and later hook up with cross-border lines.

Alberta Premier Alison Redford points out – there is a regulatory process in place, and we have to respect that process. The good news is that the President said he wasn’t making a decision on the merits of the project. It does allow for reapplication. TransCanada spokesman Terry Cunha says – at the end of the day, we’re interested in building a pipeline that will move additional crude oil into the U.S. Gulf Coast.

Courtesy: NAFB News

USDA Changing Poultry Inspections

In a shift that will save money for businesses and taxpayers while improving food safety, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service is proposing a modernization of young chicken and turkey slaughter inspection in the United States. This new approach will focus FSIS inspection resources on the areas of the poultry production system that pose the greatest risk to food safety.

Currently, some FSIS employees in poultry establishments perform several activities which are unrelated to food safety, such as identifying visual defects like bruising, while others conduct the critical inspection activities. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack says -by revising current procedures and removing outdated regulatory requirements that do not help combat foodborne illness, the result will be a more efficient and effective use of taxpayer dollars.

Under the proposed plan, all FSIS inspection activities will focus on critical food safety tasks to ensure that agency resources are tied directly to protecting public health and reducing foodborne illnesses. Additionally, some outdated regulatory requirements are being removed and replaced with more flexible and effective testing and process control requirements. Finally, all poultry establishments will now have to ensure that their procedures prevent contamination in the production process and provide supporting data to FSIS personnel.

Courtesy: NAFB News

Sign-Up Begins for DCP and ACRE

Enrollment for the 2012 Direct and Counter-Cyclical Program and the Average Crop Revenue Election Program begin today. USDA urges producers to make use of the electronic DCP automated website to sign up, or producers can visit any USDA Service Center to complete their 2012 DCP or ACRE contract. According to Farm Service Agency Administrator Bruce Nelson, – eDCP saves time, reduces paperwork and speeds up contract processing at USDA Service Centers. The sign-up deadline is June 1, 2012.

eDCP is available to all producers who are eligible to participate in the programs and can be accessed at www.fsa.usda.gov/dcp. To access the service, producers must have an active USDA eAuthentication Level 2 account, which requires filling out an online registration form atwww.eauth.egov.usda.gov followed by a visit to the local USDA Service Center for identity verification.

For 2012, advance direct payments are not authorized and Counter-Cyclical payment rates vary depending on market prices. Counter-cyclical payments are issued only when the effective price for a commodity is below its target price. The ACRE Program provides a safety net based on state revenue losses. When the ACRE option is chosen, it acts in place of the price-based safety net of counter-cyclical payments under DCP.

Courtesy: NAFB News

MSHP Investigating St Joseph Death; Woman Found At I-29/Pickett Road


State troopers are investigating the death of a local woman found along I-29 in St Joseph Saturday night.

Sgt Sheldon Lyon of the Missouri State Highway Patrol says Kecia King, 46, of St Joseph, was discovered badly injured Saturday night on the northbound side of I-29 just south of the Pickett Road overpass.

She died Sunday.

An autopsy is pending as the investigation continues.

Investigators are also hopeful someone might have seen something along the highway Saturday night, or saw the victim earlier that evening.

Kecia King

King is described as a black woman, five feet four inches tall, weighing 110 pounds. She was wearing a white coat and tan pants when she was discovered around 11:15 Saturday night.

If you have information that could help investigators, contact Sgt David Merrill at (816) 387-2345.

AATTC Hosts “Eyes To The Future”


The Advanced Airlift Tactics Training Center is hosting its 30th Tactics and Intelligence Symposium this week at the Rosecrans Air National Guard Base.

The theme is “EYES to the Future”, with presentations focusing on improving mobility tactics, defensive systems, and intelligence integration in the combat environment.

As in the past, this event promotes finding solutions to today’s tactical challenges by providing participants the opportunity to learn from subject matter experts, view innovative products from vendors, and network with fellow mobility professionals.

Approximately 300 participants are anticipated. Historically, most military personnel have come from the C-130 and C-17 communities; however, recent attendance has dramatically increased from the C-5, C-26, KC-10, and KC-135 communities.

Unique to this year’s event will be an emphasis on information sharing with coalition partners Australia, New Zealand Canada, and United Kingdom.

The Symposium concludes Thursday, January 26.

Habitat “CANstruction” Raises Nearly $10K (Photo Gallery)

Nine teams competed in the annual “CANstruct” promotion at the East Hills Mall, building “habitats” out of non-perishable food items.

Participants raised nearly ten thousand dollars for community food pantries and St Joseph Habitat for Humanity.

Spectators voted for their favorite “CANstruction” by placing money into their team’s voting bucket.

Sara Lee won the People’s Choice award this year, raising $2,125.

Competitors included Eagle Radio, the Eastside Rotary Club, Heartland Health, Sara Lee, Grace Evangelical Church, St. Joseph Metro Chamber Diplomats Club, Sam’s Club, Wal-Mart North and Wal-Mart South.

Recommendation Offered for Flood Restoration

A University of Illinois expert is making recommendations for restoring production in the 133-thousand acres of Missouri farmland damaged by last summer’s frontline and fuse plug flooding at Birds Point, Missouri. Kenneth Olson, of the Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences Department at the University, says the damage will be – long-lasting, if not permanent. Olson says – some of this lost cropland, adjacent to the patched levees, could be restored as wetlands and wildlife habitat.

In reclaiming the fields, Olson believes – the soils are likely to have lower productivity. The resulting land surface will have less soil aggregation, less organic carbon, and be more sloping, making it difficult to farm the land. Olson has recommended several actions, including: creating temporary water storage structures, changing crop rotation in the upland to include more forages rather than row crops, converting more of the agricultural land to timberland or grassland that can use or store more water, and building higher and stronger levees that are located farther from the riverbanks to widen the river flow channel.

Olson and his colleagues Mike Reed and Lois Wright Morton contend that strategically placed wetlands, settling basins, nutrient filtering, and levees are effective management for internal control of water and sediment.

Courtesy: NAFB News

FFA Submits Ideas for Farm Bill

Answering a challenge made earlier by Ag Secretary Tom Vilsack, The National FFA Officer team has shared their recommendation for the new farm bill. Their recommendations fell under four main categories. Those are: Getting started in production agriculture; creating vibrant rural communities; who should care about agriculture and why; and planning for the future.

The challenge the Secretary presented to the FFA was to, work with fellow students and the adult leadership of the organization to develop a series of recommendations around the upcoming Farm Bill that will encourage more young people to pursue careers in farming. National FFA President Riley Pagett, says – never before had we been invited to submit direct input that could enhance the ability of agricultural education and FFA to help students succeed and strengthen American agriculture.

Items that were recommended were as follows: USDA and other agencies should encourage and assist beginning farmers to start or continue in production agriculture; USDA should help transition farms from older related and non-related farmers to younger of beginner farmers who may not come from a farm; USDA should help keep young people in rural communities and make rural communities an even more important part of our nation’s economy and society; USDA should support efforts to increase the public’s knowledge of agricultural literacy; USDA should strengthen the capacity of agricultural education to produce more students that pursue production agriculture and other agriculturally related careers and the USDA should provide authority, responsibility and support for school-based agricultural education and FFA.

Courtesy: NAFB News

Girl Scout Troop Leader Charged With Stealing Cookie Proceeds


A St Joseph Girl Scout troop leader is charged with stealing more than $3,500 in proceeds from cookie sales.

A single count of felony stealing was filed against 23-year-old Stephanie Morris.

Arraignment is scheduled next week. Morris is free on $10,000 bond.

Investigators say they discovered the bank account for Troop 8705 had been emptied sometime in November or December of 2011. Court documents reveal Morris admitted taking the money.

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