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Thursday, May 15, 2025

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Supreme court to hear arguments in fight over birthright citizenship; Repeal of clean energy incentives would hurt AK economy, families, advocates say; Iowa dairy farm manure spill kills 100,000 fish; Final piece of AL's Sipsey Wilderness protected after 50-year effort.

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House Republicans get closer to enacting billions in Medicaid cuts. The Israeli government says it'll resume humanitarian aid in Gaza, and Montana's governor signs a law tightening the voter registration window.

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Millions of rural Americans would lose programs meant to help them buy a home under the Trump administration's draft 2026 budget, independent medical practices and physicians in rural America are becoming rare, and gravity-fed acequias are a centerpiece of democratic governance in New Mexico.

DOGE cuts funding to seed banks, threatens WY. food security

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Wednesday, April 16, 2025   

Federal scientists at 22 U.S. sites maintain the nation's agricultural seed stores collected since 1898 but the Trump administration's DOGE agency has fired them.

The move creates uncertainty for hundreds of crop species that maintain and protect the country's food system. The U.S. National Plant Germplasm System safeguards the genetic diversity of agriculturally important plants.

Iago Hale, associate professor of specialty crop improvement at the University of New Hampshire, said the potential loss of these "seed bunkers" should alarm every American.

"If you subsist totally on chicken nuggets and KFC, that's fine," Hale explained. "Understand that comes back to plants grown in the field. The breading on your fried chicken, the french fries that you're eating, these are all products of crops and this is how it works."

A court order has temporarily reinstated some of the 300 scientists but it is unclear when their work will resume, putting 600,000 genetic lines of some 200 crop species in jeopardy. The Trump administration has said it is working to downsize federal spending.

Hale pointed out the National Plant Germplasm System is central to the nation's preparedness because the food system is only as safe as its ability to respond to the next plant disease. Unless dormant seeds are continually cared for and periodically replanted, Hale noted the lines will die, along with their evolutionary history. Hale stressed potatoes, the fourth-largest crop, require even more care than wheat or corn.

"They're not maintained as seed, they're maintained as potatoes," Hale pointed out. "It's a clonally propagated crop and there is no long-term storage for those things. So, the nation's entire potato collection has to be grown out every year; has to be regenerated every year, without fail, or it will die. And the potato season has been disrupted."

Hale added apples must be maintained as living plants in the open field and scientists follow strict requirements to sustain genetic purity. In the 1980s, scientists at a gene bank in New York helped identify genetic traits to make apples resistant to several destructive diseases, including deadly fire blight.


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