Agriculture
			Agriculture				
			
		KMVT Idaho Interviews Steven Greenhut on the West’s “Mega-Drought”
			Much of the western United States is running out of water with much of Southern Idaho in the abnormally dry or moderate drought categories. Nearly 80% of the American West is in a drought and now is the time to think about the future of Idaho water. With much of ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Steven Greenhut		
				
																						
			April 16, 2021		
				
					
			Agriculture				
			
		Facing Down Fear of a Mega-Drought
			Four years ago, then-Gov. Jerry Brown announced the end of California’s historically severe drought by lifting various emergency restrictions. “This drought emergency is over, but the next drought could be around the corner,” the governor intoned. “Conservation must remain a way of life.” Brown was right about the next drought now ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Steven Greenhut		
				
																						
			April 16, 2021		
				
					
			Agriculture				
			
		What Secretary Yellen and Chairman Powell’s Congressional Testimony Mean
			There’s a great parable relayed in the movie Charlie Wilson’s War between Rep. Charles Wilson and CIA agent Gust Avrakotos, played by Tom Hanks and Phillip Seymour Hoffman.  It’s about a Zen master and a boy. The Zen master repeats the phrase, “we’ll see,” while others in the fable quickly ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Evan Harris		
				
																						
			March 31, 2021		
				
					
			Agriculture				
			
		Winners and Losers – March 26
			Tim Anaya – Senior Director of Communications and PRI’s Sacramento Office Winners:  Californians Who Are 16+ – The wait is finally over. Californians who are 50 years of age or older will be eligible to receive the Covid-19 vaccine starting on April 1, and Californians who are 16 years of ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Pacific Research Institute		
				
																						
			March 26, 2021		
				
					
			Agriculture				
			
		Legislative Staff Right To Unionize: What Could Go Wrong?
			After handing unions a brightly wrapped gift in 2019 with Assembly Bill 5, Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez is putting the bow on another present, Assembly Bill 314, which would allow legislative staffers to organize. Had she first asked a legendary labor leader what he thought about it, she would have likely ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Kerry Jackson		
				
																						
			March 19, 2021		
				
					
			Agriculture				
			
		Suppressing Progress
			By Henry Miller, M.S., M.D. and John Cohrssen Over the weekend, the FDA issued an emergency-use authorization for Johnson & Johnson’s Covid-19 vaccine, clearing the path to market for the third coronavirus vaccine. The FDA had previously approved the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna Covid vaccines in record time—mere weeks after their ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Pacific Research Institute		
				
																						
			March 4, 2021		
				
					
			Agriculture				
			
		Dr. Henry Miller Talks Agriculture Protections, Biden’s EPA Nomination
			Dr. Henry Miller, M.S., M.D. talks about how the Biden administrations nomination for secretary of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will be a detriment to helping agriculture survive extreme weather events. Miller talks about how the EPA stopped researchers from mitigating frost damage to crops by using a special kind ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Henry Miller, M.S., M.D.		
				
																						
			February 25, 2021		
				
					
			Agriculture				
			
		California must change course to avoid water shortages
			Californians have recently endured increasingly aggressive wildfires, rolling power outages, and smoke-filled air for days.  Unless the state government changes course, we can add water shortages to this list. According to the U.S. Geological Survey, California has already suffered three droughts during this century – 2001-2002, 2007-2009, and 2012-2016.  To ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Daniel Kolkey		
				
																						
			January 26, 2021		
				
					
			Agriculture				
			
		‘Agroecology’: A pest to California farmers
			The COVID-19 pandemic continues to ravage our lives through diminished social contact, disrupted commerce and illness and death. One unobvious example has been interruptions in food supply chains, from farmers’ markets to large food manufacturers. To respond to crises, agriculture must be as efficient, innovative and resilient as possible. Even ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Henry Miller, M.S., M.D.		
				
																						
			January 19, 2021		
				
					
			Agriculture				
			
		Preparing for Another Drought
			California’s historically severe drought, which ended in March 2019, had dominated Capitol discussions during its eight-year run, yet had not led to any dramatic changes in the way the state manages its water resources. This seems hard to fathom, given that state officials continue to warn about the impact of climate ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Steven Greenhut		
				
																						
			December 24, 2020		
				
					KMVT Idaho Interviews Steven Greenhut on the West’s “Mega-Drought”
			Much of the western United States is running out of water with much of Southern Idaho in the abnormally dry or moderate drought categories. Nearly 80% of the American West is in a drought and now is the time to think about the future of Idaho water. With much of ...		
					Facing Down Fear of a Mega-Drought
			Four years ago, then-Gov. Jerry Brown announced the end of California’s historically severe drought by lifting various emergency restrictions. “This drought emergency is over, but the next drought could be around the corner,” the governor intoned. “Conservation must remain a way of life.” Brown was right about the next drought now ...		
					What Secretary Yellen and Chairman Powell’s Congressional Testimony Mean
			There’s a great parable relayed in the movie Charlie Wilson’s War between Rep. Charles Wilson and CIA agent Gust Avrakotos, played by Tom Hanks and Phillip Seymour Hoffman.  It’s about a Zen master and a boy. The Zen master repeats the phrase, “we’ll see,” while others in the fable quickly ...		
					Winners and Losers – March 26
			Tim Anaya – Senior Director of Communications and PRI’s Sacramento Office Winners:  Californians Who Are 16+ – The wait is finally over. Californians who are 50 years of age or older will be eligible to receive the Covid-19 vaccine starting on April 1, and Californians who are 16 years of ...		
					Legislative Staff Right To Unionize: What Could Go Wrong?
			After handing unions a brightly wrapped gift in 2019 with Assembly Bill 5, Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez is putting the bow on another present, Assembly Bill 314, which would allow legislative staffers to organize. Had she first asked a legendary labor leader what he thought about it, she would have likely ...		
					Suppressing Progress
			By Henry Miller, M.S., M.D. and John Cohrssen Over the weekend, the FDA issued an emergency-use authorization for Johnson & Johnson’s Covid-19 vaccine, clearing the path to market for the third coronavirus vaccine. The FDA had previously approved the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna Covid vaccines in record time—mere weeks after their ...		
					Dr. Henry Miller Talks Agriculture Protections, Biden’s EPA Nomination
			Dr. Henry Miller, M.S., M.D. talks about how the Biden administrations nomination for secretary of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will be a detriment to helping agriculture survive extreme weather events. Miller talks about how the EPA stopped researchers from mitigating frost damage to crops by using a special kind ...		
					California must change course to avoid water shortages
			Californians have recently endured increasingly aggressive wildfires, rolling power outages, and smoke-filled air for days.  Unless the state government changes course, we can add water shortages to this list. According to the U.S. Geological Survey, California has already suffered three droughts during this century – 2001-2002, 2007-2009, and 2012-2016.  To ...		
					‘Agroecology’: A pest to California farmers
			The COVID-19 pandemic continues to ravage our lives through diminished social contact, disrupted commerce and illness and death. One unobvious example has been interruptions in food supply chains, from farmers’ markets to large food manufacturers. To respond to crises, agriculture must be as efficient, innovative and resilient as possible. Even ...		
					Preparing for Another Drought
			California’s historically severe drought, which ended in March 2019, had dominated Capitol discussions during its eight-year run, yet had not led to any dramatic changes in the way the state manages its water resources. This seems hard to fathom, given that state officials continue to warn about the impact of climate ...		
					