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Government shutdown looms after Trump-backed bill fails; Environmental groups sue CA Air Resources Board over biogas credits; NY elected officials work to electrify municipal buildings; Need a mental health boost? Talking hot dog is here.

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President-elect Trump repeats his threats to jail Jan. 6th committee members, while also putting a stop-gap spending plan in jeopardy. A court removes Fani Willis from Trump's Georgia election interference case. The FAA restricts drones in New Jersey, and a Federal Reserve rate cut shakes markets.

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Rural folks could soon be shut out of loans for natural disasters if Project 2025 has its way, Taos, New Mexico weighs options for its housing shortage, and the top states providing America's Christmas trees revealed.

'Big city' farmers cash in on government aid, drawing fairness questions

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Monday, July 15, 2024   

Minneapolis-St. Paul is in the top five metro areas where investors in farms are receiving large amounts of government subsidies.

Authors of a new report said loopholes in federal programs hurt communities where the actual farm work happens. The Environmental Working Group said between 2019 and 2023, nearly 2,500 people in the Twin Cities received more than $23 million in farm subsidies.

Scott Faber senior vice president of government affairs for the group, said the figure does not include urban farmers setting up community gardens, as the operations typically do not qualify for such aid. Instead, he stressed laws have been watered down to allow people with a loose connection to a faraway farm to cash in on disaster relief and other payments.

"That loophole allows people who live in St. Paul or Minneapolis, or Edina or Woodbury, who may never visit the farm, to somehow receive a payment," Faber explained.

The report showed the loophole helps to fuel corporate consolidation in farming, driving up land prices and squeezing out smaller operations in the process. They pointed out GOP lawmakers are trying to add more loopholes in the next Farm Bill. Lawyers who represent so-called "absentee" farmland owners argued they are simply following the laws Congress has approved.

Faber noted it is not only the investors who benefit, pointing to other changes scaling up the number of recipients.

"The last Farm Bill added new loopholes," Faber emphasized. "The last Farm Bill allowed the cousins, nieces and nephews of a farmer -- again, even if they don't live or work on the farm -- to receive farm subsidies."

Those tracking the payments said they average out to nearly $6,000 dollars a year for each individual, which is more than double the typical benefits people in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program or SNAP would get in a similar payment schedule. But the report added SNAP, also covered by the Farm Bill, is subject to stricter income tests.


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