For the first time in a century, people born in some communities in the U.S. can expect to live shorter lives than those born a generation before. Most of those places are in rural America.
Farm bill negotiators are still trying to concoct language that would deny subsidies to farmers with large off-farm streams of income. "It is a dicey subject. I believe we can reach an accord," said Chairman Tom Harkin, Iowa Democrat. It's also one of the last issues to be negotiated.
Meanwhile, the White House Monday said President Bush would veto the bill as it currently is written. "I understand members will be meeting about this tomorrow, so things still may be a bit fluid. But, as it stands now, it is not something the president would support," Scott Stanzel wrote in an email, according to The Politico.
Stanzel: "The farm bill proposal currently being discussed by conferees lacks important reforms the president has repeatedly called for. With farm incomes at an all time high, Congress shouldn't be asking taxpayers to pay for even more government subsidies for farmers. The proposal before Congress would dramatically increase spending, in part by masking additional spending in budgetary gimmicks and accounting tricks. Now is the time to modernize our agricultural policies for the future, but Members of Congress have not risen to this challenge."
The Washington Post had a front-page warning Sunday on the "globe's worst food crisis in a generation," but the most interesting story over the weekend was an op-ed piece by Nobel Peace Prize winning agronomist Norman E. Borlaug. Borlaug (above) writes that just as a potentially devastating strain of wheat stem rust disease has appeared, the Bush Administration is cutting funding to wheat rust research.
Borlaug won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1970 for his development of high-yielding strains of wheat. He's described as the father of the Green Revolution. Global wheat production has not kept up with population gains, Borlaug writes, and in 1999 a new strain of stem rust appeared in Africa. Fifty years ago, stem rust destroyed 20 percent of America's wheat, and this strain is more dangerous.
The Bush Administration initially reacted quickly to the stem rust threat. Recently, however, Bush proposed that funds for rust research be cut. Borlaug calls this "shocking short-sightednes."
South Dakota decided last year that any school district that dipped below 100 students would have to merge. The Economist notes that enrollment in the state's schools had declined 94% over the previous ten years. (See chart above.) Ten S.D. districts have already been set for merger.
The magazine reviews the "contentious" history of school consolidation in the U.S. In 1939, there were 117,000 school districts in the country; now there are just over 14,000. School district mergers have been fought all along, recently in North Dakota and today in Maine. Small districts contend they do a better job of educated students than large districts.
"But the debate over rural schools hides a sad irony," the magazine notes. "The better a small town educates its pupils, the more likely they are to seek jobs elsewhere. According to a study by Pennsylvania State University, returns to investment in human capital are much lower in rural areas than in urban ones."