11/25: Southern farmers see crops get washed out
New York Times: Southern farmers' hopes for bumper crops get dashed
In August, Southern farmers thought they'd have a bumper crop -- the best in years. But then the rains came in September, and it continued raining through October, a usually dry month. Soybeans shriveled on the vine, cotton hardened, sweet potatoes rotted underground. And, once combines could take to the fields, they scarred them with deep ruts that will make next year's planting more expensive.
The rain has affected farmers in Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, eastern Arkansas and parts of Louisiana. Mississippi and Georgia have requested disaster declarations from the USDA, and Alabama is likely to follow suit. But help from Washington, in the form of low-interest loans, often takes a year or more to reach the farmers who need it.
Also in the South:
ALABAMA: State gambling dispute heads for 'showdown'
ARKANSAS: Farmers detail crop losses from flooding
FLORIDA: Sen. LeMieux comments on 'culture of corruption' in South Florida
GEORGIA: State's 'food insecurity' among worst in nation
KENTUCKY: Gov. Beshear named chairman of the Southern Growth Policies Board
LOUISIANA: Farm runoff from 41 watersheds in 12 states hits Mississippi River
MISSISSIPPI: Two Mississippi Senators introduce crop disaster bill
NORTH CAROLINA: Poverty rates in state considered 'staggering'
SOUTH CAROLINA: School exit exam scores drop in state
TENNESSEE: 'Food insecurity' in Tennessee ranks 40th in nation
VIRGINIA: Gov. Kaine urges nonviolent offenders to seek rights restoration
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Labels: Beshear, civil rights, crop, exam, insecurity, poverty, runoff

