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STEEP: Helping Northwest Farmers with Profitable Conservation Technologies 2009
SUMMARY
- STEEP (Solutions to Environmental and Economic Problems), a multi-state research program, has developed and facilitated the adoption of new technologies and management systems that have helped reduce soil erosion in the Palouse region of eastern Washington, northern Idaho and northwest Washington from an average of 20 tons per acre in 1975 to an average of five tons per acre in 2005.
Measuring Progress in Soil Conservation by Satellite 2009
SUMMARY
- Satellite imagery may soon help scientists and farmers monitor how well soil-saving technology is working in the low-rainfall wheat region of eastern Washington where dust storms blow away topsoil and create air quality problems.
Extension Intervention Program Saves Families and Money 2009
SUMMARY
- Washington State University Extension's Strengthening Families Program, a family-based intervention program, reduces substance abuse by improving parenting skills and family communication. The program has served more than 1,800 youth statewide. In dollars alone, according to an independent analysis, the effort is expected to save the state $10.6 million in such areas as arrests, adjudication and victims' costs.
Cattle Could Provide Options for Palouse Grain Growers 2009
SUMMARY
- A two-year on-farm pilot project in Adams County is testing the feasibility and reliability of converting land coming out of the Conservation Reserve Program into a vertically integrated grass-fed beef production system. The pilot -- if successful -- could provide farmers with an alternative to CRP that could not only protect the environment, but also provide them with a source of income.