The Cal-Adapt team
recently released the new Local Climate Change Snapshot
Tool, which allows users to access a suite of basic climate
change variables for a location of interest in a single interface.
This tool is
designed to be widely useful for applications like municipal planning,
grant applications, climate adaptation advocacy, and climate science
education.
For more
information, you can read the release blog post or watch a short demo video. Sign up for Cal-Adapt updates to stay tuned for a forthcoming webinar.
EJ and Natural Disasters Town Hall Meetings and Disaster
Response Training
The Federal Interagency Working
Group on Environmental Justice is hosting a series of virtual Town Hall Meetings on
disaster response. The regional West and Southwest meeting will feature the
impacts of wildfire and COVID19 on environmental justices communities. More
information about the meeting, including time and registration, will be
shared at a later date.
The California Governor’s
Office of Planning and Research (OPR) and the California Strategic Growth
Council (SGC) are
seeking summer interns to work remotely on a variety of projects to advance
the Governor’s policy and planning priorities. Interns will gain skills in
policy research and writing, land use planning, local government outreach,
interagency coordination, legislative analysis, and more.
House Ag Democrats
advance ag stimulus package as GOP attacks minority farmer debt relief 02/10/21 9:39 PM By Philip Brasher https://www.agri-pulse.com/articles/15322-democrats-advance-ag-stimulus-package-as-gop-attack-minority-farmer-debt-relief Democrats forced a $16.1 billion agriculture stimulus
plan through the House Agriculture Committee on Wednesday, brushing aside Republican
assertions that a provision providing debt relief for minority farmers was far
too broad and could face legal challenges. The package, which was approved on a party-line 25-23
vote during a seven-hour virtual meeting with members scattered across the
country, will be folded into a broader $1.9 trillion stimulus bill backed by
President Joe Biden. Democrats defeated almost every GOP attempt to alter
the measure, including two amendments that would have scaled back provisions
that will pay off USDA farm loans held by minority producers. Committee Chairman David Scott, a Georgia Democrat
who is the committee’s first Black Democrat, vigorously defended the debt
relief plan. “There has been no one who has been discriminated in the whole
agriculture industry like African Americans, who deserve some compassion and
understanding,” he said. “We African Americans were the pioneers in
agriculture … We had to do it for no compensation as slaves in this country,
and ever since then we’ve been trying to bring justice to that.” The committee's stimulus provisions also include $4
billion in aid for the food supply chain as well as an extension through the
summer of a temporary 15% increase in Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program
benefits. Republicans repeatedly complained that they were not
allowed to help write the package and said it omitted assistance for key rural
needs such as broadband expansion, but they directed some of their sharpest
criticism at the debt relief plan. Under that provision, which is the result of
discussions that started with the Biden transition team, a farmer who qualifies
as socially disadvantaged, under a definition in the 1990 farm bill, could get
a payment worth 120% of the amount they owe on a USDA direct or guaranteed loan.
The additional 20% is intended to cover the taxes the farmers would owe on the
debt-relief payment. Democratic members of the committee initially
struggled to explain whether white women would qualify for the payments, but a
committee staffer said it would be limited to Blacks, Hispanics, Native
Americans and Asian Americans. But Scott argued that the ultimate goal of the debt
relief was to increase the number of Black farmers, who now represent just 1%
of all producers, he said. Rep. Austin Scott, a Georgia Republican who is white
and of no relation to the chairman, noted USDA had paid out $2.2 billion in
settlements for discrimination against Black farmers starting in 1999. “The idea that the federal government can write a
check for 120% of someone’s outstanding loan balance when we’ve already settled
the cases from 1999 and 2010, I think It’s wrong, and I think it’s
unconstitutional,” said Scott. He noted eligible farmers wouldn’t have to prove
they had been discriminated against. Rep. Randy Feenstra, R-Iowa, argued it would be
unprecedented for the federal government to provide debt relief to a group of
people for more than what they owed. It “would be more clear, fair and
responsible to cap this forgiveness at 100%, just as all our other loans are at
this point,” he said. But committee Democrats defeated his amendment to cap
the payments at 100% of indebtedness as well as a proposal by Vicky Hartzler,
R-Mo., to limit the debt relief to loans that minority farmers had taken out as
a result of the pandemic. Hartzler said her amendment would have kept the bill
focused on coronavirus relief. Republicans highlighted other complaints about the
bill by forcing a series of votes aimed at directing funds to fix what they saw
as shortcomings. One of the amendments was adopted when Iowa Democrat
Cindy Axne crossed party lines to support a proposal by Feenstra to dedicate
some of the bill’s funding to farmers in Iowa that suffered crop damage from
last summer’s derecho. Amendments that Democrats rejected included a
proposal by the committee’s ranking Republican, Rep. Glenn “GT” Thompson of
Pennsylvania, that would have redirected some of the bill’s money to rural
broadband, distance learning, rural hospitals and other needs. Rep. Michelle Fischbach, R-Minn., inadvertently
highlighted deficiencies in rural broadband while trying to defend Thompson’s
amendment. “The digital divide is something that is very, very real in my
district,” she said. Moments later she lost her connection to the hearing. Another defeated amendment, proposed by Rodney Davis,
R-Ill., would have earmarked funding for biofuel producers. “We’re debating
relief and our farmers, and biofuel producers they need relief,” Davis said. But Rep. Angie Craig, D-Minn., suggested the
amendment was proposed in bad faith to divide Democrats. She noted that the
omnibus spending bill enacted in December specifically authorized coronavirus
relief for biofuel plants. Also defeated was a proposal by Feenstra to give
small and medium-size processors priority in commodity purchases that would be
funded by the aid package. For more news, go to www.Agri-Pulse.com. National Latino Farmers & Ranchers Trade
Association 1029 Vermont Avenue, NW, Suite 601 Washington, DC 20005 Office: (202) 628-8833 Fax No.: (202) 393-1816 Email: latinofarmers@live.com Twitter: @NLFRTA Website: www.NLFRTA.org