Farm Subsidy Recipients - Mount Vernon, IA 2003-2005

Rank Name Location Benefits Received or Distributed
Program Years
2003-2005
1 Leonard Broulik & Sons Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 636,296
3 Ray Glenn Stoner ✴✴ Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 303,493
5 David V Stoner ✴✴ Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 293,594
7 Ray G Stoner Farms Inc Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 267,746
9 David V Stoner Farms Inc Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 267,705
11 V G Stoner & Sons Corp Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 259,412
13 Paul G Ciha ✴ Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 244,904
15 Rudolph E Hornacek Trust Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 201,414
17 Greengate Farms Inc Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 191,519
19 Carol Brannaman Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 189,464

✴ Subsidy payments were received directly from USDA and USDA attributed additional subsidy benefits to this person that were passed through one or more subsidized farm business(es).

✴✴ Subsidies benefits were attributed by USDA only as pass-throughs from one or more subsidized farm business(es).
Entities without ✴ or ✴✴ received all of their money directly from USDA.

source: http://farm.ewg.org/sites/farmbill2007/s1614_addrsearch.php?yr=S1614&s=yup&stab=IA&mailfips=19113&city=Mount+Vernon&c=Search&zip=&last=&first=&fullname=

 

Landover Baptist Pastor Preaches to Atheists

source: Landover Baptist Church and

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L-jk3VvjGoE

 

Farm Subsidy Recipients - Mount Vernon, Iowa

From the Environmental Working Group’s Farm Subsidy Database, I bring you the largest welfare recipients in the Mount Vernon, Iowa area:

Subsidy Recipients 1 to 20 of 837 in zipcode 52314
Recipients in this zipcode received $38,527,837 from 1995-2005

Select names below to view details of that farm/farmer. View Complete List here.

Rank Name Location Subsidy Total
1995-2005
1 Leonard Broulik & Sons Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 1,922,179.78
3 Ray G Stoner Farms Inc Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 866,763.57
5 David V Stoner Farms Inc Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 865,740.88
7 Iowa Natural Heritage Foundatton Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 834,263.80
9 Douglas Schrader Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 820,767.30
11 James A Brannaman Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 678,300.93
13 Rudolph E Hornacek Trust Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 644,381.51
15 Interstate Land And Investment Co Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 523,682.82
17 Paul G Ciha Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 501,429.19
19 Roy Johnson Family Partnership Mount Vernon, IA 52314 $ 455,681.32

(Wordpress is mangling this list)Â

source: http://ewg.org/farm/addrsearch.php?s=yup&stab=SC&city=&zip=52314&z=See+Recipients

View The List at the Environmental Working Group

 

Corruption & Pork - Agricultural subsidy recipients

us pork

Gregor Rothfuss mentions on his blog that he has used a new feature of Google maps to map the Top 10 USDA farm subsidy recipients in the US

He provides links in the map images to the Environmental Working Group’s Database http://www.ewg.org/farm/ that gathered the data from the USDA.

The EWG writes about their history including:

March, 1995: EWG produces our first report from the database, City Slickers, which traces hundreds of millions of dollars of farm subsidy payments to recipients in America’s biggest cities and wealthiest zip codes - like 90210 - most of whom had no real day to day involvement with the farms that qualified for the aid. The report makes front-page news nationwide.

My thought:

  • People work for a living and earn income.
  • Goverments take part of the money people earn in the form of taxes.
  • Through American infatuation with the ideal of the ‘family farm’, agri-business maintains a lucrative hand-out payoff system with the federal government, and working people must give their $$ to agri-business.

Really interesting stuff!

 

Stifling summers forecast by Nasa for US east coast

Stifling summers forecast by Nasa for US east coast
By David Usborne in New York
Published: 11 May 2007

Researchers at Nasa have warned that unless growth in greenhouse gas emissions can be successfully curbed, large areas of the eastern United States, from Washington DC to Florida, can expect to suffer through catastrophically hotter summers within just a couple of generations.

A study released by Nasa’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies at Columbia University finds that by 2080 average summer high temperatures in parts of the east will be about 10F higher than now, pushing them from the low to mid-80s to the low to mid-90s.

A study released by Nasa’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies at Columbia University finds that by 2080 average summer high temperatures in parts of the east will be about 10F higher than now, pushing them from the low to mid-80s to the low to mid-90s.
Read the rest of this entry »

 

Emissions Already Affecting Climate, Report Finds

April 6, 2007
Emissions Already Affecting Climate, Report Finds
By JAMES KANTER and ANDREW C. REVKIN

BRUSSELS, April 6 — Earth’s climate and ecosystems are already being affected, for better and mostly for worse, by the atmospheric buildup of smokestack and tailpipe gases that trap heat, top climate experts said today.

And while curbs in emissions can limit risks, they said, vulnerable regions must adapt to shifting weather patterns and rising seas.

The conclusions came in the latest report from Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which has tracked research on human-caused global warming since being created by the United Nations in 1988. In February, the panel released a report that for the first time concluded with 90-percent certainty that humans were the main cause of warming since 1950. But in this report, focusing on the impact of warming, for the first time the group described how species, water supplies, ice sheets, and regional climate conditions were already responding.

At a news conference capping four days of debate between scientists and representatives from more than 100 governments, Martin Parry, the co-chairman of the team that wrote the new report, said widespread effects were already measurable, with much more to come.

“We’re no longer arm waving with models,” said Dr. Parry, who identified areas most affected as the Arctic, Sub-Saharan Africa, small islands and Asia’s sprawling, crowded, flood-prone river deltas. “This is empirical information on the ground.”

The report said that climate patterns were shifting in ways that would bring benefits in some places — including more rainfall and longer growing seasons in high latitudes, opening Arctic seaways, and reduced deaths from cold — but significant human hardship and ecological losses in others.

Read the rest of this entry »

 

Global Ecological Collapse?

Global Ecological Collapse?

The UN exaggerates problems, but gets solutions right

Ronald Bailey | March 31, 2005

Most ecosystem services that support life and human society are being degraded and used unsustainably, according to the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MA) just released by the United Nations. According to the report, efforts to achieve the UN’s Millennium Development Goals, which include halving the number of people living on less than $1 per day, reducing child and maternal mortality, and establishing universal primary education by 2015, will be significantly impeded if these ecosystem services are allowed to deteriorate further.

One of the chief findings is that “over the past 50 years, humans have changed ecosystems more rapidly and extensively than in any comparable period of time in human history.” And why not? After all, as the report notes, since 1960 human population doubled while the world’s economic output increased six-fold. The report alarmingly asserts that “more land was converted to cropland since 1945 than in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries combined.” This claim evidently depends on the selection of the baseline. If the UN authors had chosen 1961 as the baseline, as U.S. Department of Interior analyst Indur Goklany points out, between 1961 and 1995 cropland increased by only 10 percent (from 1.34 billion hectares to 1.48 billion hectares) and total land area devoted to agriculture also increased only 10 percent (from 4.5 billion hectares to 4.9 billion hectares). That sounds a lot less alarming. In fact, deeper in the report, the UN authors acknowledge, “Most of the increase in food demand of the past 50 years has been met by intensification of crop, livestock, and aquaculture systems rather than expansion of production area.” Land area devoted to cropland is falling in developed countries like the United States and members of the European Union.

Consider the bounty of nature in terms of human services. Ecosystems provide humanity with provisioning services such food, water, timber, and fiber; regulating services that affect climate, floods, disease, wastes, and water supply; cultural services that provide recreational, aesthetic, and spiritual benefits; and supporting services such as soil formation, photosynthesis, and nutrient cycling. The MA, compiled by more than 1300 experts from 95 countries, looked at 24 different ecosystem services and found that 15 of them (see page 41 of the report for a list of some of them) are being degraded or used unsustainably.
Read the rest of this entry »

 

Ecological Collapse defined

Ecological Collapse refers to a situation where an ecosystem suffers a drastic, if not permanent, reduction in carrying capacity for all organisms, often resulting in mass extinction. Usually, an ecological collapse can be precipitated by a disastrous event occurring on a small time scale, such as the Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction event which was an ecological collapse widely believed to be caused by an impact event.

source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecological_collapse

 

Global Warming Makes US Winter Warmer and Drier, Kills Crops

Besides having the warmest winter in recorded history, UN scientists discovered that global warming also destroys crops, producing damages estimated at $5 billion.

According to scientists at NOAA National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, N.C. , the last winter, from December 2006 to February 2007, was the warmest in Earth’s recorded history.

Precipitation in the US was above average in the center, while large sections of the East, Southeast and West were drier than average. The global average temperature was the warmest on record for the December-February period.

The winter temperature for the contiguous United States (based on preliminary data) was 33.6 degrees F (0.9 degrees C). The 20th century average is 33.0 degrees F (0.6 degrees C). Statewide temperatures were warmer than average from Florida to Maine and from Michigan to Montana. Cooler-than-average temperatures occurred in the southern Plains and areas of the Southwest.

The 11th warmest December on record occurred in 2006.

In January, the coldest climate was registered in Southern Plains and in the West, determined by upper-level wind patterns. States like Arizona, Texas and even Southern California experienced snow and ice, with California suffering important losses in orange production.

More typical winter conditions finally arrived in the eastern United States by late January and a period of colder-than-normal temperatures persisted through President’s Day weekend.

February was 1.8 degrees F (0.9 degrees C) below the 20th century average of 34.7 degrees F (1.5 degrees C), placing it in the top third coldest Februarys in the 113-year record for the contiguous U.S. Thirty-six states in the eastern two-thirds of the nation were cooler than average, while Texas and the eleven states of the West were near average to warmer-than-average.

NOAA came up with a positive aspect of global warming: the use of energy in residential areas dropped 3% last winter, compared to average climate conditions for the same period. Had February been warmer, energy consumption would have been even smaller. Overall, February’s Residential Energy Demand Temperature Index (REDTI—an index developed at NOAA to relate energy usage to climate) was approximately six percent higher than what would have occurred under average climate conditions for this interval.
Read the rest of this entry »

 

Scientists have inconvenient news for Gore

Scientists have inconvenient news for Gore

William Broad
March 14, 2007

THE environmental campaigner Al Gore may have won over Hollywood with his documentary An Inconvenient Truth. But the scientific world is proving a much tougher audience for his relentless campaign to raise public awareness of climate change.

There is a rising chorus of concern, extending even to “moderate” scientists with no political axe to grind, over the former US vice-president’s tactics and advocacy.

The nub of their concern is a belief that he has over-egged his case. That, in trying to sell to the public the dangers of complacency in combating global warming, he is guilty of a number of convenient untruths or distortions.

The main charges are that he has skated over the Earth’s history of climate change and that his talk of impending doom ignores that change is a slow-motion process.

Even a top adviser to Mr Gore, the environmental scientist James Hansen, admits the former vice-president’s work may hold “imperfections” and “technical flaws”.
Read the rest of this entry »