Siamo in Libano da anni. Da Beirut partono i nostri corridoi umanitari, abbiamo il progetto Medical Hope e il nostro staff. Quello che sta accadendo in queste ore è devastante. Siamo preoccupati per l’escalation di violenza e per le tante persone costrette a lasciare le loro case. Il nostro pensiero va alle persone ferite e che hanno perso la vita in questi giorni. Siamo vicini alla popolazione, con tutto il nostro cuore e cercheremo di continuare a fare il possibile per aiutare.
قلوبنا و أفكارنا مع الأشخاص الذين أصيبوا وفقدوا حياتهم في الأيام الأخيرة.
نقف إلى جانب كل الشعب في هذه الأوقات الصعبة.
Farmworkers pick strawberries at Lewis Taylor Farms, which is co-owned by William L. Brim and Edward Walker who have large scale cotton, peanut, vegetable and greenhouse operations in Fort Valley, GA, on May 7, 2019.
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Mr. Brim talks about the immigration and disaster relief challenges following Hurricane Michael. USDA helped this farm with the Farm Service Agency (FSA) Emergency Conservation Program (ECP) for structural damage cleanup. He also mentions the importance of having Secretary Sonny Perdue, a person with agricultural background, come visit and listen to 75 producers six months ago, in southern Georgia.
The farm’s operation includes bell peppers, cucumbers, eggplant, squash, strawberries, tomatoes, cantaloupe, watermelon and a variety of specialty peppers on 6,500 acres; and cotton and peanuts on 1,000 acres. Near the greenhouses is a circular crop of long-leaf pines seedlings under a pivot irrigation system equipped with micro sprinklers. Long-leaf pines are an indigenous tree in the Southeast. Growers are working to increase the number of this slower growing hearty hardwood tree in this region.
USDA Photo by Lance Cheung. Original public domain image from Flickr