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State offices have been seeing a surge in calls leading up to food benefits lapsing on Nov. 1.
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More than five million low-income Californians are expected to lose their CalFresh food assistance benefits starting Saturday. States are suing the Trump administration to reinstate aid.
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During spring’s prime calving season, lots of newborn calves have been dying from the cold.
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Legal marijuana growers along the West Coast are struggling with oversupply, low prices and limited outlets for selling their product.
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Itty Bitty Acres Farm near Central Point doesn't have a lot of room to work with, but its operators have a big-time dedication to growing healthy and nutritious vegetables and more. Will Smith, explores IBAF in this month's edition of Savor. Erica and Ryan Idso-Weisz are the proprietors.
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Master gardener Lynn Kuntsman on why soil temperature is the most important guide to spring planting.
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Winemakers may soon be able to raise a toast, even after a growing season marked by wildfire smoke.
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After weeks of rain, the long-dry Tulare Lake is rising from the San Joaquin Valley floor, endangering farms, towns, livelihoods. Now record snow on the Sierra Nevada is melting. Will the Central Valley be ready?
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Farmers are two to three times more likely to die by suicide than the general public. Oregon lawmakers are considering a bill that would provide state money to support a suicide helpline for people who work the land.
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The Rogue Valley Food System Network has long been dedicated to get people who eat (so, all of us) connected to healthy, locally produced foods. Alison Henley Sexauer is the Executive Director of RVFSN.
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A federal regulatory group voted Thursday to officially close king salmon fishing season along much of the West Coast after near-record low numbers of the fish, also known as Chinook, returned to California’s rivers last year.
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CalFresh issued its last round of pandemic-era extra payments in March. The state has launched a new program aimed at making fresh fruit and vegetables more accessible and affordable to those receiving assistance.
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Belgian company called BeeOdiversity uses bees to assist in collecting information from the landscape, by collecting pollen from the bees when they return to the hive. A recent project focused on the Klamath Basin. We get details on the information it yielded from Lorena Corzatt, who heads the Klamath Basin Beekeepers Association, and David Strelneck, who heads the company Nourish(n).
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Community Food Council for Del Norte and Tribal Lands encourage friends and neighbors to grow their own food. Food Forest Manager Angela Gray and fellow organizer David Salmon.