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The Agriculture Department received backlash from Democratic senators regarding the decision to decentralize and relocate Washington-based employees.
Deputy Agriculture Secretary Stephen Vaden took questions from the Senate Agriculture Committee on Wednesday after the agency ...
Get ready for a milestone moment in West Africa's agrifood evolution, the Africa Food Show (AFS) Côte d'Ivoire 2025 is set ...
Opened in 2021 as a collaboration between WFIRM and the nonprofit RegenMed Development Organization (ReMDO), the test bed is ...
North Carolina’s capital is one of five U.S. cities that will gain hubs as the USDA downsizes and shifts staff from its ...
The USDA plans to relocate thousands of D.C.-based employees to five regional hubs including Fort Collins in Colorado.
A restructuring plan released last week by U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins will halve the number of regional ...
Saudi Arabia is setting the foundation for a sovereign and integrated space economy, according to Martjin Blanken, CEO of Neo ...
The U.S. Forest Service will abandon its nine regional offices as its parent Department of Agriculture consolidates out of ...
Nigeria has committed $538.05 million to the first phase of its Special Agro-Industrial Processing Zones (SAPZ) programme and unveiled a ...
The U.S. Department of Agriculture plans to slash its presence in the Washington, D.C., area by sending employees to five regional hubs, Secretary Brooke Rollins said Thursday.
The Trump administration plans to relocate 2,600 USDA employees to five cities, which includes Fort Collins, surprising local officials.
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