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Tuesday, March 18, 2025

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Putin Agrees to Limits on Energy Targets but Not Full Ukraine Cease-Fire; Indiana students fight bill blocking college IDs at polls; Consumer protection agency cuts put Coloradans at risk for predatory big banks; Iowa farmers push back on agriculture checkoff cuts.

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The Palestinian Ambassador calls on U.N. to stop Israeli attacks. Impacts continue from agency funding cuts, and state bills mirror federal pushback on DEI programs.

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Farmers worry promised federal reimbursements aren't coming while fears mount that the Trump administration's efforts to raise cash means the sale of public lands, and rural America's shortage of doctors has many physicians skipping retirement.

FL advocates push back against corporate dominance in agriculture

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Friday, March 7, 2025   

Advocates for small independent farmers and ranchers in Florida are sounding the alarm about the effects of corporate agriculture on their land and local communities.

Four mega-corporations now control the majority of livestock production in the U.S.: American companies Tyson and Cargill, Brazilian-owned JBS, and Chinese-owned WH Group Limited.

Justin Perkins, publisher of Barn Raiser, a nonprofit newsroom covering rural America, said the effect on smaller farming operations has been devastating.

"These corporate monopolies are structured across all across the agriculture industry, and this has made the livelihood of small- and even medium-sized farmers nearly untenable," Perkins contended.

Big agricultural firms argued they have made the food system more efficient and profitable, while keeping consumer prices low. But Florida farm advocates countered waste from huge hog, cattle and dairy farms known as concentrated animal feeding operations pollute communities' air and water. Florida regulates the large operations under its National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System program.

Sonja Trom Eayrs and her family have been farming in Minnesota for generations and fighting concentrated animal feeding operations for decades. In her book, "Dodge County, Incorporated," she described the corporate system as a pyramid with big ag at the top, with integrators in the middle who own the supply chain and provide feed and veterinary services to farmers called contract growers at the base.

"The multinationals reorganized the marketplace, created a closed system where all the profits flow to the top of this pyramid," Trom Eayrs explained. "They can control the pricing that flows all the way down to the contract farmer and that contract grower down at the bottom."

Joe Maxwell, cofounder of the nonprofit Farm Action, said vertical integration has created regional monopolies among meat packers and has driven tens of thousands of independent hog farmers out of business over the past few decades.

"These meat packers, they own the system," Maxwell outlined. "They own the baby pig. They own the feed. They price gouge the consumer at the grocery store. They pollute the land, to destroy the natural resources. They are extracting the wealth from rural America."

Maxwell encouraged people to take a stand with their local, state and federal elected representatives in order to counter the influence of lobbyists for big agriculture.


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