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The Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services  VDACS  encourages dairy and other farmers who were adversely affected by trade tariffs in 2018 to sign up for the Market Facilitation Program  MFP .This program, administered by the USDAs Farm Service Agency, provides a direct payment to offset some of the losses growers experienced.The sign-up period for MFP ends on February 14. Farmers should contact their local Farm Service Agency office immediately to apply for the assistance.    Share this page                  Share                                    Facebook                                  Twitter                                  Linkedin                                  Telegram                                  E-mail        ContributorsContributorsHave a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip  Email editor Chris Graham at <email>160;protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple Podcasts,聽Spotify,聽Pand <a href=https://www.cups-stanley.de>stanley cup deutschland</a> ora and  YouTube.View all posts by Contributors              Local News                                                                        Ben Cline won ;t hold a town hall: So, his constituents held one for him                                    Chris Graham                      February 27, 2025                                <a href=https://www.cups-stanley.ca>stanley cup</a>                                <a href=https://www.cups-stanley.co.uk>stanley thermos</a>                                                            Developing: One person dead in fatal crash on Tinkling Spring Road in Augusta County                               Fgoh Brunswick Power Station producing electricity for customers
Dear EarthTalk: What can we do to solve the e-waste problem caused by so many of us tossing our cell phones out and getting new ones every two years 鈥?Sandy Bartram, Beverly Hills, CAAs more and more of the world develops鈥攁nd smartphones become ubiquitous鈥攅lectronic waste  AKA  e-waste   is a bigger problem than ever. Around the world, people ge <a href=https://www.cup-stanley-cup.de>stanley deutschland</a> nerate some 50 million tons of e-waste every year, much of which ends up improperly disposed of in landfills where toxins common in electronics like lead, mercury and cadmium can leach out an <a href=https://www.cups-stanley.com.de>stanley cup</a> d contaminate surrounding soils and groundwater. Much of the remaining e-waste gets shipped off to developing countries happy to profit from taking others trash despite the environmental consequences, or even worse, just dumped illegally into the ocean.But thanks to consumer pressure to do the right thing, most major electronics manufacturers have started to pay attention to the problem and take action to reduce the flow of e-waste. Apple, for instance, long targe <a href=https://www.stanleyusa.us>stanley website</a> ted by Greenpeace and others for lack of concern about the environmental and health impacts of its sourcing and production processes, has made great strides in the last five years in recovering customers old products and reusing the constituent parts in new products.In 2015 alone, the company collected some 90 million pounds of Apple-branded e-waste, recovering upwards of 61 million pounds of material, including steel, plastics, glass, aluminum, copper, cobalt, zinc, lead, nickel, silver,
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