(Washington, D.C.) – This morning, U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) emphasized the importance of a complete and thorough investigation by the U.S. House of Representatives into President Trump’s repeated attempts to invite foreign interference in our elections, and whether President Trump or any of his associates committed high crimes or misdemeanors in the process. During a speech on the Senate floor, Senator Murray also shined a spotlight on the threat President Trump’s reckless behavior poses to our nation’s security and the foundations of our democracy.
Key excerpts from Senator Murray’s remarks:
“Our nation is at a crossroads that strikes at the heart of our democracy. The increasingly outrageous actions of this President and his administration have brought us to this moment, where we—as a nation—must make a decision about who we are, what we stand for, and what kind of behavior we will allow at the highest levels of our government.”
The President has repeatedly sought foreign interference in our elections, which we should all find appalling . These facts are indisputable and can’t be spun—President Trump and his circle of friends have been clear about their actions and their intentions, and it is clear they are unacceptable.”
“For me and for so many other people across the country—this is not about partisan politics or any politics. This is about maintaining our nation’s security and defending the rule of law. It is about nothing less than the future of our democracy.”
“Based just on what we know, it would be a dereliction of duty for Congress not to investigate the grave threats to our country’s safety and to our democratic institutions, and if President Trump and his administration have nothing to hide, they should stop obstructing—let Congress do its job to find all the facts.”
“Will we allow foreign actors to interfere in our elections and undermine our security—or not? Will we stand by and allow this President, and perhaps future presidents, to ignore our Constitution and mangle our democratic norms—or not? Will we be a nation of laws—or not? I believe that this country is a country of laws, that our elections must be completely free from foreign interference, and that every elected official should ensure these fundamental principles come before party or partisanship as this process moves forward.”
“If and when the House elects to accuse the president of an impeachable offense or offenses, the Senate, right here, will host the trial and as Senators we will serve as jurors. If and when that time comes, I know I will approach it seriously, and I deeply hope each of my colleagues will, too.
A ground-up approach to baking.
WSDA press release issued 10. 14. 19
When Barn Owl Bakery owner Sage Dilts explains the potential health benefits of the wild sourdough starter and heritage grains she uses in her artisan breads, she astutely points out -- the digestion process begins when you smell the food.
“That’s when you start salivating,” she says.
Walk into her tiny Lopez Island bakery and you’ll see what she means. The rich aroma of her craft bread, fresh out of the wood-fired oven, is sure to make your mouth water.
Wild Starter
Dilts says the yeast and bacteria in her wild leaven (or sourdough starter) provide the complex flavors that make the bread taste so good, and they also help break down parts of the grains that can be hard to digest, allowing the body to better absorb the nutrients.
She is committed to using locally grown and milled grains and even grows her own specialty and heritage varieties of wheat, rye and barley that add to the distinctive flavors in her loaves.
In the 200-square-foot bakery she and her husband Nathan Hodges built in 2012, she has established a thriving niche market on the islands with baked goods made in ways she believes are healthy for the body and the planet.
Farm to Food Competition
This year, Dilts won the National Association of State Departments of Agriculture (NASDA) Foundation’s Women’s Farm to Food Competition. The contest is dedicated to fostering growth among women producers (i.e., farmers, fishers, ranchers) and women entrepreneurs with food and beverage businesses in Oregon and Washington.
When competitors presented their business plans at NASDA’s Winter Policy Conference in Washington DC in February, WSDA Director Derek Sandison presented Dilts the $20,000 Grand Prize and promised to visit to the Barn Owl Bakery.
Last week he followed up on his commitment and made the trip to the remote island in Northwest Washington.
Sandison said this type of competition and the awards are important because they help promote diversity in agriculture.
“We are trying to encourage women to enter agriculture and for them to thrive once they are in it,” Sandison said.
A big challenge
“Particularly for small-scale operations, you have to develop your own markets,” Sandison said. “It’s not just that you have to grow or produce something, but you then have to find a way to market that product.”
Dilts and her husband Nathan Hodges moved from the San Francisco Bay area eight years ago and set up shop on this laid-back island known for its artists, craftspeople, farmers, and fishermen. The area’s tight-knit, open-minded community was the perfect business micro-climate to start a bakery embracing ancient baking and farming methods, and adhering to Dilts’s ideals about health and nutrition.
Dilts makes her bread by hand from scratch using no commercial yeast or chemical leavening. Instead she maintains and relies on a wild leaven, rich with bacteria and yeasts, to impart flavor and nutrition to her breads and pastries.
A world of wheat varieties
Hodges, her husband, zealously experiments with heirloom grains trying to identify varieties that grow well in the area and taste good in the bread.
“There’s all these crazy flavors,” Hodges said. “It takes three or four years for us to get enough seed to mill up to actually taste the grain. So there’s always that moment where it’s like, what’s this one going to be? Sometimes it’s not that interesting but other times it’s really wild!”
In the past four years he had planted more than 50 varieties in search of a seed like the Ethiopian Blue Tinge emmer wheat, for example. His crop notes describe it as grain that threshes easily with an intriguing dark purple seed that makes a dough that darkens to the color of chocolate.
“In our baking trials, this is always a crowd favorite for taste,” he notes.
Hodges and Dilts hope to cultivate the connection between food and the land as part of their business model.
“Modern wheats tend to be ill-suited to our form of agriculture here,” he said. “We don’t water our wheats, we don’t fertilize our wheats, and our soils are relatively poor. But the older wheats, like the Landrace varieties, are perfectly suited to that form of agriculture because that’s the way they were grown for thousands of years.”
The right niche
The Barn Owl Bakery’s business model may not be suited to other bakeries. They run a bakery with no counter help and customers pick out their own purchases and pay on the honor system in an open bowl on the baking rack.
But on this low-key, high-minded island, it seems to be working.
In fact, the bakery is expanding. Dilts can make 25 loaves an hour in her Allan Scott style wood-fired oven, but even with 13 hours of baking a day, that’s not enough bread to keep up with demand.
With the prize money from the NASDA Foundation competition, she is upgrading to a Bassanina wood-burning deck oven that will allow her to quadruple output.
WORLD NEWS HEADLINES
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A staggering 1.5 million people died from tuberculosis (TB) last year, the UN health agency said on Thursday, in an appeal for far greater funding and political support to eradicate the curable and preventable disease.
Ending extreme poverty crucial to sustainable future for all: UN chief.
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On a Friday afternoon, in a small restaurant kitchen in the New York borough of Brooklyn, head chef Alexander Harris is giving instructions to his attentive team, preparing them for the busy evening ahead. So far, the tables are empty, but the small, popular space, with just a handful of tables - and some stools around the bar - will soon be bustling with the evening crowd.
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Soaring obesity rates, sustainable development funding alliance, new UN office to support Haiti
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IN THIS WEEK'S EDITION
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