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Trump officials deny U.S. citizen children were 'deported' to Honduras; Arkansas League of Women Voters sues over ballot initiative restriction; Florida PTA fights charter school expansion, cuts to mental health funding; U. of Northern Iowa launches international student exchange.

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A judge blocks use of a wartime law for deportations, ICE is criticized for deporting U.S. citizen children, Arkansas faces a federal lawsuit over ballot initiative restrictions, schools nationwide prepare for possible Medicaid cuts, and President Trump's approval rating is down at the 100-day mark.

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Migration to rural America increased for the fourth year, technological gaps handicap rural hospitals and erode patient care, and doctors are needed to keep the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians healthy and align with spiritual principles.

Montana feels effects of California 'price gouging'

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Thursday, June 27, 2024   

California joined a dozen other states across the U.S. either banning or regulating the use of gestation crates to raise livestock and a ballot proposition in California is having a ripple effect on livestock and poultry prices across the country, including Montana.

California's Proposition 12 bans the use of gestation crates to raise hogs but some producers blame the new mandate for rising prices. Montana is not among the states to ban crates but food prices are still on the rise. A report from the advocacy group Farm Action shows corporate producers believe pandemic-era supply chain disruptions are driving up prices.

Joe Maxwell, chief strategy officer for Farm Action, called it price-gouging, and offered as evidence an unjustified 20% hike in California pork prices.

"It's just a part of their doing business now," Maxwell asserted. "They find excuses in the markets to gouge that consumer. And one thing we want to be very clear on is that the consumer knows it's not the farmer. The farmer's getting squeezed just as much as is the consumer."

Large-scale agricultural companies said there are other factors at play, such as consumer demand and animal illness forcing prices up. Montana, which has been criticized for its lack of oversight and regulation, continues to raise livestock in large confinements to keep up with growing demand but those facilities are known to pollute nearby ground and surface water with manure runoff.

Farm Action is the same group that asked the Federal Trade Commission to investigate egg prices, which had tripled in some cases, not long after the official end of the pandemic. The group researched U.S. Department of Agriculture data and found the numbers did not support the need for sharp egg price increases.

Maxwell pointed out corporate food producers face limited competition and have monopolized the market.

"They've got that control over the farmer, not unlike oil companies have over oil fields," Maxwell observed. "They now have that control because there are very few buyers of farmers' commodities, so they have that control over the farmer, the producer."

Montana did address the rules governing confinement operations earlier this year, including how and when pollutants are discharged from the facilities.


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