Latest U.S. Department of Agriculture News

Sweaty corn is making it even more humid

Aug. 28, 2024 10:33 AM EDT

Barb Boustead remembers learning about corn sweat when she moved to Nebraska about 20 years ago to work for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and found herself plunked down in an ocean of corn. The term for the late-summer spike in humidity from corn plants cooling themselves was...

Senators demand the USDA fix its backlog of food distribution to Native American tribes

Aug. 23, 2024 14:27 PM EDT

A bipartisan group of senators is demanding immediate action from USDA Secretary Thomas Vilsack after several tribal nations reported that a federal food distribution program they rely on has not fulfilled orders for months, and in some cases has delivered expired food. Last spring,...

Black and other minority farmers are getting $2 billion from USDA after years of discrimination

Jul. 31, 2024 19:16 PM EDT

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — The Biden administration has doled out more than $2 billion in direct payments for Black and other minority farmers discriminated against by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the president announced Wednesday. More than 23,000 farmers were approved for...

Hawaii DOE Still Doesn’t Have A Plan For How To Spend Farm-To-School Funds

Jul. 16, 2024 13:14 PM EDT

More than a year after the Hawaii Department of Education sparked ire by instructing schools not to apply for funding from a $650,000 federal food grant it had helped secure, the agency has yet to produce a clear plan for how it will use the grant before it expires. The U.S....

North Dakota tribe goes back to its roots with a massive greenhouse operation

Jul. 06, 2024 00:20 AM EDT

BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — A Native American tribe in North Dakota will soon grow lettuce in a giant greenhouse complex that when fully completed will be among the country's largest, enabling the tribe to grow much of its own food decades after a federal dam flooded the land where they had cultivated...

US will gradually resume avocado inspections in conflictive Mexican state, ambassador says

Jun. 21, 2024 21:17 PM EDT

MEXICO CITY (AP) — U.S. government inspections of avocados and mangoes in the Mexican state of Michoacan will gradually resume, U.S. Ambassador Ken Salazar announced Friday, a week after they were suspended over an assault on inspectors. The U.S. Agriculture Department inspectors...