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In Tulare County, where reservoirs are at capacity and entire communities are underwater, so are agricultural fields. Almond trees have toppled, dairy herds have had to be relocated, and farmers and farmworkers have been displaced.
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With winter storms continuing for the next few days, farmers are hustling to protect their growing fruit.
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For the last two years, San Joaquin Valley growers have received only a fraction of the water promised to them.
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This month, the Environmental Protection Agency proposed strengthening the Agricultural Worker Protection Standard.
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The population of Tulare temporarily doubled last week as visitors from all over gathered for the World Ag Expo. KVPR’s Joshua Yeager went inside and brings us this report.
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USDA grants are available for dairy business development from an initiative at Fresno State.
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Tulare County officials cut the ribbon on a new dairy research facility. It’s run by a company called DairyExperts.
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Farmworkers in the San Joaquin Valley feel effects of California storms.
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There’s no end in sight for California’s prolonged three-year drought. With fewer agricultural jobs available in the San Joaquin Valley, will farmworkers decide to search for new opportunities outside the region?
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The value of all crops and livestock exceeded $8 billion – the highest ever recorded in Fresno County. But Fresno County Farm Bureau CEO Ryan Jacobsen says that number doesn’t paint the whole picture.