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Hurricane Helene strengthens into a Category 4 storm, bringing warnings of heavy rain and dangerous winds to southeastern U.S., while New York City Mayor Eric Adams faces wire fraud and bribery charges, Indiana emerges as a clean energy leader, and Kentucky kinship families report needing more support.

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New York City Mayor Eric Adams faces federal bribery and wire fraud charges, new federal legislation aims to limit open-carry firearms at polling places, and Utah Republicans fail to give the legislature control over citizen ballot initiatives.

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The presidential election is imminent and young rural voters say they still feel ignored, it's leaf peeping season in New England but some fear climate change could mute fall colors, and Minnesota's mental health advocates want more options for troubled youth.

Development Claims Ag Land At Record Rates in CA, and Nationwide

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Monday, June 7, 2010   

LOS ANGELES - What was once farmland is now suburbia. It's a growing trend, documented in the National Resource Inventory from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). According to this new USDA report, farms are being displaced and replaced by development at an accelerated pace nationwide, and California is one of the biggest losers. Since 1982, more than 1 million acres of California farmland, ranches and pastures have disappeared - most of it developed, although some is no longer in production due to erosion.

Nationwide, more than 41 million acres of farms, ranches and pastures have gone out of production within the last three decades. Jennifer Morrill with the American Farmland Trust puts this in perspective.

"We are losing just under 1 million acres of land a year now - that's almost two acres per minute."

For consumers interested in helping slow this pace, Morrill has this advice: "One thing you can do is support your farmers' markets. Shop at your farm stands, so you help keep those farms and ranches viable."

While loss of food production is a top concern, Morrill points out that farmland supplies much more than dinner for the table. Well-managed farmland shelters wildlife, supplies open space and helps filter impurities from the air and water, she says.

The full report is available on the front page of the American Farmland Trust website, www.farmland.org.



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