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NBB Wants Tax Incentive Imposed Next Year

Anne Steckel, vice president of federal affairs for the National Biodiesel Board is disappointed that Congress did not act to extend critical tax incentives that are slated to expire on December 31. According to Steckel, – jobs and the economy are supposed to be the top priority in Washington, yet Congress has left thousands of workers in limbo heading into the holidays by failing to extend this tax incentive. She calls it a – missed opportunity, and we are urging Congress to pass an extension immediately next year to limit the economic damage.

The biodiesel industry has seen a remarkable turnaround this year after Congress reinstated its $1-per-gallon tax incentive following a one-year lapse in 2010. When the credit lapsed, dozens of plants shut down, thousands of jobs were lost and 2010 production plummeted to about 315-million gallons, the lowest level since 2006.

Through the end of October of this year, according to the latest EPA figures, the industry had set a new annual production record of more than 802-million gallons and could triple the 2010 production volume by the end of the year.

Tax Packages Waiting for Next Year

Congress has gone home without acting on a tax extenders package or the biodiesel tax credit before both expire on December 31. The American Soybean Association says this is a disappointing end to an otherwise very positive year for the biodiesel industry. The industry set a record for production in 2011, with more than 800-million gallons produced through October. It is possible that the year-end volumes could approach 1-billion gallons.

A draft package of tax extenders, recently circulated by Senate leaders, includes the biodiesel incentive.  Leaders in both parties have indicated a desire to consider a tax extenders package early in 2012. For this reason, the ASA will continue to urge Congress to come together on a bi-partisan basis to extend the biodiesel tax credit early next year.

ASA says, along with the National Biodiesel Board and our biodiesel industry partners, we will continue to stress the positive economic impact the biodiesel tax incentive delivers across the country, and continue to urge policymakers to end the cycle of uncertainty by enacting a longer-term biodiesel tax credit as soon as possible.

 

USDA Reports on Land Use

USDA has released an in-depth analysis of U.S. land use patterns that shows total cropland decreased by 34-million acres from 2002 to 2007, the lowest level since USDA began collecting this data 1945. The USDA report also shows significant increases in forestland, grassland and rangeland during the five-year period. According to the Renewable Fuels Association, the new report is one more addition to the mounting body of evidence that proves increased ethanol production has not resulted in expansion of total U.S. cropland or a decline in grassland and forest.

According to the report’s authors, – Urban land acreage quadrupled from 1945 to 2007, increasing at about twice the rate of population growth over this period. Land in urban areas was estimated at 61-million acres in 2007, up almost 2 percent since 2002 and 17 percent since 1990, In comparison the estimated acreage of grassland pasture and range increased by 27 million acres, almost 5 percent, between 2002 and 2007, while forest-use land increased 20 million acres, or 3 percent, from 2002 to 2007.

RFA President Bob Dinneen points out – it is ironic that the land use debate has fixated on biofuels, when the actual culprit of land conversion has clearly been urban and suburban sprawl. He says – subdivisions full of mini-mansions, big box stores, shopping malls, and parking lots are encroaching on productive farmland across the country.

Saint Joseph Soldier Receives Bronze Star 40 Years Later

 

Brig. Gen. David Irwin pins Bronze Star on Larry Payne

Vietnam veteran Larry Payne of Saint Joseph has received a Bronze Star for meritorius service…more than four decades after his deployment. Payne earned the honor for his work as a reconnaissance team leader with the US Army Special Forces.

Paperwork for Payne’s award and several others was lost in a command change during the war and only recently came to light. Still, Payne says he’s grateful for the honor.

Larry Payne served 37 years in the military, including 31 with the Missouri National Guard.  He retired as a Chief Warrant Officer in 2003 from the 135th Signal Company in Saint Joseph.

Research May Result in Better Cookie Dough

A study conducted by scientists with USDA’s Agricultural Research Service Soft Wheat Quality Research Unit in Wooster, Ohio, may help plant breeders zero in on promising new wheat plants that might be tomorrow’s superstar producers of whole-grain soft wheat flours for cookie doughs. That is to say that, in the future, cookies may be made with a larger proportion of whole-grain flour instead of familiar, highly refined white flour.

Scientists used 14 different commercial varieties of soft wheat for this research. The study showed that breeders and foodmakers can rely on the SRC and a new softness test for early screening. Later, when they want to narrow their focus to only those plants that are uniquely superior sources of whole-grain cookie dough flour, they can invest in the “wire-cut cookie test.”

The sucrose Solvent Retention Capacity test and the milling softness equivalent test-aren’t new. But the Wooster team’s study is perhaps the most thorough examination of the tests’ reliability as an early screen for a new soft-wheat flour’s performance in whole-grain cookie doughs.

RFA Wants Delay in Release of RFS Requirement Explained

The Renewable Fuels Association is seeking from Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson an explanation about the delay in releasing the 2012 Renewable Fuel Standard requirements.  According to statute, volume requirements for the coming compliance year were due by November 30th. The RFA calls the delay – both inexplicable and unacceptable.

In a letter to Jackson, the RFA wrote – the RFS provides critical market certainty for existing ethanol producers, emerging renewable fuel technologies, and motor fuel suppliers that must comply with the RFS. Additionally, the RFS is an important tool in reducing the nation’s dependence on imported oil and creates domestic jobs and economic opportunities that cannot be outsourced.

The association feels that the renewable fuels market is put in jeopardy as long as questions remain about impending RFS requirements and when those requirements will be made final.

Effort Surfaces to Stop DOL Labor Regulations

As the U.S. Department of Labor pushes to restrict the ability of youth to do farm work, those close to the land are beginning to fight back. Historically, family farms have been exempted from such rules, but Representative Tom Latham of Iowa has expressed concerns that a new proposal could be interpreted to exclude operations that are partly owned by extended family members such as grandparents, aunts or uncles.

In response, Latham has authored and introduced bipartisan legislation that expresses the sense of Congress that “the Secretary of Labor should recognize the unique circumstances of family farm youth and multi-generational family partnerships in agricultural operations when drafting regulations under the Fair Labor Standards Act. Oklahoma Representative Dan Boren is co-sponsoring the legislation.

Latham is looking for additional input from farmers and agricultural groups such as FFA and 4-H on the topic and expects to introduce additional legislation after Congress reconvenes next year that will update U.S. code to reflect the realities of modern farming.

Slippin’ & Slidin’ in St Joe


St Joseph police responded to a lot of accidents Wednesday morning as winter weather translated into a slick morning drive.

Captain Kevin Castle says between midnight and 10 a.m. Wednesday, officers responded to 16 accidents. Castle says most of them were at low speeds because of winter driving conditions.

One person was injured in an accident in the 300 block of East Missouri in south St Joe. The victim suffered a laceration to the head.

At about 7:30 a.m., with a half dozen active accident investigations, an officer stopped at a traffic light on Messanie became the subject of such an investigation. Another vehicle slid into the rear of Officer Greg Ogdhal’s patrol vehicle.

Castle says both the officer and the vehicle were quickly returned to service.

Earlier Wednesday, police warned motorists to stay off of the elevated, double-decker portion of I-229 in the downtown area. Very slick driving conditions prompted a special trip by a MoDOT crew to treat the highway. It was reopened by 7 a.m. Wednesday.

Benedictine Athlete Killed In Traffic

RJ Demps

R.J. Demps, a college junior on the basketball team at Benedictine College in Atchison, Kansas, was killed in traffic early Wednesday morning in a one-vehicle accident near Weston.

Director of Communications Steve Johnson says the team and the coaching staff thought very highly of red-shirt sophomore, and he will be missed.

“Somebody like R.J. who was very enthusiastic and humorous, who kind of kept the energy alive with the team,Johnson said. “I think everybody’s going to miss him quite a lot.”

“That’s a real tragedy for a small college like us,” Johnson said.

Johnson says the basketball teams were among the last students still on campus after the end of final exams last week. Demps and teammate Quaran Johnson were on their way to Kansas City International Airport to fly home to be with family for the holidays.

Johnson, nicknamed “Q,” suffered minor injuries, but has since continued on to his home in Philadelphia. Demps hails from Aurora, Colorado. R.J. and Q. were on their way to KCI when their vehicle crashed on Missouri Highway-45 near Weston.

Johnson says if there is a vigil or remembrance, it will be held after students return for the spring semester January 11.

According the Benedictine’s Athletic Department, Demps saw action in 10 games last year, shot 50% from the floor, and averaged 1.2 PPG. He was red-shirted during his freshman year in 2009-2010.

Demps led Denver Regis High School to the large school state championship during the 2008-2009 season.

Shop St Joseph Second-Chance Winning Numbers

In an all new format for the Shop St Joseph program, second-chance winning numbers were announced Tuesday afternoon.

The program gives ticket holders the chance to win merchandise from local businesses.

It’s the first year of the second-chance winnings for a drawling that offers a $10,000 grand-prize.  68 year-old Alma Carpenter was announced as the grand-prize winner Tuesday morning.  (Click the link for more information.)

Click the link below for the second-chance winning numbers.

Second Chance Winners

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