Feb
22

SDSU Extension offers estate planning sessions in three S.D. communities – Tri State Neighbor: Regional: estate planning, sdsu, extension, south dakota,

1329912979 87 SDSU Extension offers estate planning sessions in three S.D. communities   Tri State Neighbor: Regional: estate planning, sdsu, extension, south dakota,

BROOKINGS, S.D. – Aberdeen, Sioux Falls, and Mitchell, S.D.,will be the sites for a series of SDSU Extension training sessionswhich will focus on estate planning.

Sustaining the Legacy conferences also help people who seektransition of their farm or ranch from one family member toanother. Extension staff and industry professionals will helpparticipants develop the tools they need in order to faceestate-planning challenges with less stress.

The sessions will be hosted in Aberdeen March 12, 19 and 26 at theAberdeen Regional Extension Center at 13 2nd Ave. SE; in SiouxFalls March 13, 20 and 27 at the Sioux Falls Regional ExtensionCenter at 2001 E. 8th St.; and in Mitchell March 14, 21 and 28 atthe Mitchell Regional Extension Center at 821 North CapitalSt.

The training costs $75 per person. Registration is required byMarch 6. To register, call livestock business management fieldspecialist, Heather Gessner at 605-782-3290. Find the brochure andregistration form at igrow.org.

“Each session is filled with important information that can helpfarm and ranch families address questions they may face as parentsor grandparents get older and consider their legacy,” Gessner said.”Producers have told me that the value of this program was $1million, due to the changes they made to their estate plan and thereduction of potential estate taxes.”

Each day of the three-session programs is full of tools and how-toinformation families can use to create and implement theirindividualized plan, no matter how big or small the operation.Topics for the sessions cover communication styles, businessstructures, goals, asset distribution, wills and probate,retirement planning and funding, fair versus equal distribution,tax implications for the operation, life insurance, long-term careinsurance, trusts and other topics as determined by theaudiences.

“Many of the past participants have utilized the information fromthe conference to reduce potential estate taxes and ensure thattheir operation is passed down to the next generation in a smooth,hassle-free transition,” Gessner said.

All family members are encouraged to attend the sessions, and on-and off-farm heirs are also invited to learn about the tools andparticipate in the discussions.

“Past participants have used this conference to interview attorneysand insurance agents while they are presenting the basics of usingthe many tools available to them,” Gessner said. “If you are makingplans to retire or becoming a partner in the operation, or if youown farm or ranch assets, this program is a great start for you.Our goal is to give you the tools to develop your estate plan andthe motivation to get started, combined with some gentle nudgingthat keeps you moving forward with the process.”

Partial funding for this program is provided by the South DakotaSoybean Research and Promotion Council.

“SDSRPC is proud to be one of the sponsors for this year’s estateplanning workshops. With rising land values and profit margins,estate planning has never been more important,” said Doug Hanson,an SDSRPC board member and a past participant of the conference.”My wife and I have attended these workshops in the past and havefound them very informative.”

Call Gessner at 605-782-3290, or email her .

Feb
22

Snuggle Up With An Alpaca-Wrapped I-Heart Hot Water Bottle This Winter!

1329908168 58 Snuggle Up With An Alpaca Wrapped I Heart Hot Water Bottle This Winter!

February is still cold and flu season, and there’s nothing I like less than the chills a fever brings. For those too-hot-with-the-blanket, too-cold-without-it nights of battling it out with the germs, a hot water bottle is just what the doctor ordered. Or at least it’s just what my grandma ordered, and the world might be a little nicer of a place if we all listened to our grandmas a bit more.

Of course, I can’t cozy up with some hospital’s idea of a hot water bottle. When I’m sick, I need a little pampering, and the I-Heart Hot Water Bottle Warmer does the trick. These Fashy® hot water bottles are dressed up for snuggling in what look like little sweaters. They’re double cute and just as functional, which is why they were recently featured on ecofabulous.com!

Fashy® makes their hot water bottles out of specialized thermoplastic designed to retain heat for extended periods. Plus, their odorless, safe plastics are completely recyclable, which is good to know if you ever actually consider letting it go. We wrap these hot water holsters in heart-patterned baby alpaca fiber covers that are hand-knit in Peru. They’re not all made by grandmas, but I know mine would really like one of these for Valentine’s Day.

You want to make a new mom really happy this holiday? Give her the gift of a decent night’s sleep by soothing her colicky baby with a Fashy® hot water bottle in one of our I-Heart Hot Water Bottle Warmers. They’re also great for moms’ sore backs (and fronts), making this the gift that keeps on giving. Listen up, new dads. Skip the flowers and help her sleep. She’ll love you forever.

Feb
22

FarmVille Limited Edition Valentines Day Animals: Romance Horse, Rose Boar, Romeo Alpaca & Magpie Duck « Lets Get A Farmin

1329906988 44 FarmVille Limited Edition Valentines Day Animals: Romance Horse, Rose Boar, Romeo Alpaca & Magpie Duck «  Lets Get A Farmin

FarmVille Romance Horse

FarmVille Romeo Alpaca

FarmVille Magpie Duck

The latest Valentines Day animals going to the FarmVille Market add a Romance Horse, Rose Boar, Romeo Alpaca, and Magpie Duck.

The Romance Horse will produce a similar type foal when placed into your FarmVille Horse Paddock. The Rose Boar introduces a whole new pattern to Pig Breeding that you just can try outside in your FarmVille Pig Pens. The Magpie Duck is that this Thursday’s Farm Coin animal costing 2 million Farm Coins.

Each of those limited Edition animals will likely be available via industry during the next 13 days only.

FarmVille limited Edition Valentines Day Animals (Released: February 8, 2012)

  • FarmVille Romance Horse – 26 Farm Cash
  • FarmVille Rose Boar – 16 Farm Cash
  • FarmVille Romeo Alpaca – 12 Farm Cash
  • FarmVille Magpie Duck – 2,000,000 Farm Coins

FarmVille Romance Horse

FarmVille Romeo Alpaca

FarmVille Magpie Duck

Will you give any of these animals a property in your farm?

Incoming search terms:

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Feb
22

English Channel wind farm plans to go on display

1329905807 80 English Channel wind farm plans to go on display21 February 2012 Last updated at 04:42 ET Share this page The wind farm would be located 8.2 miles (13.2km) off Peveril Point

Residents in Hampshire, Dorset and the Isle of Wight are being given the chance to see plans for a major offshore wind farm.

The company behind the 76 sq-mile (200-sq-km) project is holding public exhibitions over the next 18 months.

The Infrastructure Planning Commission, a body which rules on major national projects, will then consider approval.

If agreed, the wind farm will generate power for between 615,000 to 820,000 homes a year.

Potential impact

Last November, the public in Dorset were shown plans for the onshore parts of the project, including locations for the substation.

The consultation will now focus on the offshore aspects of project, which is called Navitus Bay.

The developers, Eneco, says it wants feedback on important viewpoints from the coastline and the impact to fishing, diving, recreational activity and commercial shipping.

The original proposals unveiled in March 2011 were for up to 240 wind turbines.

It showed a wind farm located 8.2 miles (13.2km) off Peveril Point at Swanage and 8.4 miles (13.5km) south west of The Needles.

The project is one of nine UK sites earmarked for large offshore wind farms.

Details of the public exhibitions can be found of the developers website

Feb
22

Farm equipment makers stay course despite jump in demand

1329904620 46 Farm equipment makers stay course despite jump in demand

A recent spike in demand for new tractors, combines, grain wagons and planters brought about by farmers with more cash to spend has not altered a shift in the way manfacturers supply dealers.

With vivid memories of unsold equipment inventory tying up much-needed cash when the farm economy tanked in the early 1980s, Deere & Co. and other major farm implement manufacturers have shifted to making tractors, combines, planters and other implements on a presold basis.  

Ken Golden, Deere director of global public relations, confirmed that the Moline, Ill.-based farm and landscape manufacturer does not maintain an inventory as it had in the past.

“Most of the equipment we build now has already been ordered by a customer or a dealer,” Golden said. “We have an allocation system to inform dealers how many units they may order in a given year.”

Golden said Deere, like other farm implement manufacturers, is faced with the challenge of meeting customer demand during periods of increased sales. 

“John Deere had a record year in 2011 and we announced in November that we expect another record year in 2012 for net income,” Golden said. “Deere has invested millions of dollars in U.S. factories to expand manufacturing capacity and added a significant number of employees.

“Despite these activities, our lead time for new products is a longer than when sales are at a more average level, but not exceedingly so.”

At Kinze Manufacturing in Williamsburg, dealers have seen inventories shrink as demand has increased for the company’s planters and grain carts.

“We are having our best sales year ever. We are nearly sold out and dealer inventory is at an all-time low,” said Susanne Kinzenbaw Veatch, vice president and chief marketing officer. ”Farmers have money to spend and they are out buying equipment.”

Veatch said farmers have become more sophisticated in terms of knowing when they need to equipment and understanding the lead times required to get what they want.

“Farmers are very good businesspersons,” Veatch said. ”Many of them are operating multimillion-dollar businesses and they are planning just like anyone else would in business. They look at the coming year and determine what they need to do in terms of assets and equipment.

“Many of them will plan what equipment they need to buy from a tax standpoint. Farmers have become much more knowledgable about the information they can collect and study before making purchasing decisions.”

While acknowledging that the lead times for ordering and taking delivery of row crop tractors and combines from Deere have increased in the last two to three years, John Sindt of GreenValley Ag & Turf in Hiawatha said dealers understand that the manufacturers determine buying opportunities — not the dealer or customer.

“Farmers understand the best time to buy. They also realize it could be as much as six months, nine months or even a year in advance of when they take delivery of a new tractor or combine,” Sindt said. “Sometimes they are making their decision to buy a new combine before they’ve even  had a chance to run the one they have in the field.”

Sindt, former president of Sindt Implement before it merged with Tri County Implement to form Green Valley Ag & Turf, said farmers do not make “impulse” decisions to buy a tractor or combine, so dealers rarely face losing a sale to a competitor if a tractor or combine is not available on their lot.

“We might lose some, but the number is not super significant,” he said. “Having said that, anytime you’re talking about a $250,000 or $300,000 piece of equipment, losing one of those sales is significant. I’m not trying to downplay that, but it’s not like losing 10 or 20 sales, which would be super significant.”

Sindt said Deere competitors can start to gain marketshare if the lead times continue to grow and farmers are not willing to make their buying decision that far in advance.

“The competition would also have to deliver an equivalent product at a better price point in a more timely manner,” Sindt said. “That would definitely provide an opportunity for farmers to jump ship.”

Kinze, which has record high employment of 650, is expecting another strong year in 2013.

“One of the things that we look at is dealer inventory as we try to forecast sales for the coming year,” Veatch said. “With dealer inventory at quite low levels, this year is looking like a strong year as well. It also depends on what happens to corn prices and international markets.

“We’re seeing a lot of optimism, and maybe some pessimism from those who are looking ahead, but we believe next year also will be a strong year.”

Feb
22

Visual Evidence/E-Discovery has supporting role in famous lawsuits – Plain Dealer

1329903384 45 Visual Evidence/E Discovery has supporting role in famous lawsuits   Plain Dealer

Winery on Middle Bass Island in Lake Erie turned an afternoon of revelry into catastrophe.

One person was killed and 75 were injured when a patio buckled and dropped them into a cellar. Within three days, the old wine cellar was empty. The injured partygoers, the shattered furniture and the broken concrete were all gone.

But photos of the disaster from witnesses and officials remained. From these, a small company called Visual Evidence/E-Discovery reconstituted the scene for potential jurors in personal-injury lawsuits.

The 22-employee company in Cleveland’s Warehouse District is little known outside legal circles. But Visual Evidence has had a supporting role in some of the region’s most familiar lawsuits and criminal cases since 1987.

“We’re an aid to the people who are in the courtroom,” said Daniel Copfer Sr., president. “You can get an expert in the courtroom for hours, speaking. It will put the jury to sleep. A picture is worth a thousand words.”

Visual Evidence artists spent 285 hours creating a 3-D replica of the collapsed concrete decking in the July 2000 winery accident.

They meshed information from 850 photos from police officers, insurers, TV helicopter crews and bystanders who snapped pictures of the steel beams, concrete chunks, broken picnic tables, paper plates and smashed wine bottles that a few hours earlier had been the backdrop to a peaceful afternoon on the terrace.

Artists merged the photos using 16 acetate overlays with photos shot from different viewpoints. With the composite they built a replica to 1/12th scale, right down to tiny paper plates and painted tomato paste cans that were the right size to represent 55-gallon drums in the winery cellar.

A separate slide tour showed the picnic area before the collapse.

Plaintiffs’ lawyers wheeled an 80-pound chunk of concrete from the wreckage into the courtroom as one lawsuit was on the brink of trial. Visual Evidence selected the piece because it had obvious rust stains from corroded metal supports, an indication that the winery owners had not properly maintained the patio over the years.

“They took a peek at it and they called a conference in the judge’s chambers and they settled,” said Manfred Troibner, Visual Evidence principal and marketing director.

Public’s expectations changed by television

Legal experts say a public brought up on crime TV shows like “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation” expect vivid courtroom exhibits.

The 1994 O. J. Simpson trial was a turning point for forensic evidence. A blood-stained leather glove found near the bodies of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman and another found at Simpson’s home — gloves that seemed too tight for Simpson to slip on at trial — seemed to cinch his acquittal.

Defense lawyer Johnnie Cochran Jr. famously drew attention to the courtroom display saying, “If it doesn’t fit, you must acquit.”

And the legal industry took note.

“It was a simple demonstration of a glove that won him the case,” Copfer said.

Surging interest in demonstrative aids took off, fueling the growth of Visual Evidence. The company opened offices in Columbus, Richmond, Va., and Tampa, Fla. The staff grew from four employees to 29, including five graduates of the Cleveland Institute of Art.

In 2000, Visual Evidence became involved in one of the most celebrated trials of the decade — the attempt by the son of Sam Sheppard to clear his father’s name in his mother’s 1954 slaying in Bay Village.

The litigation was a civil lawsuit filed by Sam Reese Sheppard for wrongful imprisonment of his father Sam Sheppard. But it called on prosecutors to establish the underlying criminal case in order to affirm Sheppard’s sentence. Sheppard had served almost a decade in prison before his conviction was overturned and he was acquitted in a new trial.

Visual Evidence/E-Discovery

    Founded: 1987

    Employees: 22

    Visual Evidence section: Graphic and medical artists create demonstrative aids such as 3D scale models, animations, medical illustrations and interactive time lines to help lawyers lay out their case to the jury.

    E-Discovery section: Computer technicians sift through masses of electronically-stored information with special software that codes, tags and sorts to allow efficient review of documents. One program called VeHarvest forensically collects data from network servers and office PCs during normal business hours without users knowing. Electronic legal discovery has exploded nationwide, amounting to an $800 million industry in 2011.

Visual Evidence digitized thousands of photographs, TV broadcasts, newspaper clippings and transcripts from the original trial. Prosecutors tapped the material for courtroom displays in the civil case. Since the Sheppard home in Bay Village had been razed eight years earlier, artists created a model for jurors.

Helping lawyers make their points

“What they’re very good at is taking complex factual issues, whether it be statistics or scientific concepts, and really helping you present that graphically,” said William Hubbard, a Thompson Hine attorney who uses Visual Evidence in product liability and construction law cases. “People are familiar with visual media and expect it. Without it, you’re missing an opportunity to get your point across in a way that people can understand and remember.”

Other cases with a Visual Evidence role include:

• A March 2007 trial over the value of alpacas killed by poisoned feed at Magical Farms and another alpaca ranch in Medina County. Visual Evidence used videos of the farms; an electronic map of feed lots to show the location of sickened animals; and a pair of life-size wooden alpaca cutouts that dropped to the courtroom floor with a smack to show how the animals succumbed.

• A huge divorce case in 2001 involving beer company heir Edward Hamm. Visual Evidence assembled 30,000 documents, including inspection reports and panoramic photos of the couple’s 27 homes. Visual Evidence worked for the legal team of Carol Hamm. She gambled that she would get a bigger amount in the 17-month marriage than she was guaranteed under an $80 million prenuptial agreement, but ending up settling for $28 million.

• The retrial of Randy Resh for the 1988 murder of a Portage County woman. Exhibits in the April 2007 case included displays of inconsistent statements by a central prosecution witness, a 6-foot by 4-foot map of the crime scene and a point-and-click interactive timeline.

Resh’s attorney Steve Bradley mined the visuals in his opening statement.

“It’s hugely important to make sure jurors understand your position right from the start,” Bradley said. “They will set up in their mind, unconsciously, filters that will affect how they see testimony and evidence moving forward.”

Resh was acquitted after the defense exposed the state’s star witness as a liar. Prosecutors dropped charges against Resh’s buddy, Robert Gondor. Like Resh, he was found to have wrongfully served more than 16 years in prison.

An avalanche of electronic evidence

Visual Evidence in its early years faced a “David-and-Goliath effect” — juries sympathetic to low-funded legal teams facing opponents armed with the latest electronic gadgetry.

The imbalance faded as courtrooms — especially at the federal level — provided equipment to all sides — video monitors in the jury box, video conferencing to reach long-distance witnesses and a “John Madden” device that lets attorneys and witness sketch lines on top of electronic images.

Changes sweeping litigation in the past decade have reshaped Visual Evidence.

A 2002 Ohio law capping lawsuit damages fed a sharp decline in medical malpractice litigation, which up to then accounted for half the company’s revenue. Add in a soft economy and ever more cases settling before trial, and Visual Evidence’s work was shrinking. It was forced to retrench and shut all but its Cleveland office.

Growth returned with the wild explosion of electronic evidence in litigation.

Think of it: In days of yore, company messages were on a pink slip that you threw away when you were done with it. Today there is a blizzard of electronically stored information — emails, voice mail, data on smartphones, servers, laptops and thumb drives.

A U.S. Supreme Court ruling in December 2006 tried to grapple with the realities of modern business life. It said that electronic information was “discoverable.” Businesses had to preserve it.

“The legal system has to adapt to this deluge of information that it’s never had to deal with in the past,” said attorney Michael D. Berman, an expert on computer search methods. “To the extent that someone ignores electronic data, they’re ignoring 90 to 95 percent of the evidence in lawsuits.”

Visual Evidence caught the wave by merging with Solutions Business Systems in 2004.

The renamed Visual Evidence/E-Discovery plugged in to the electronic side of things — collecting and culling the word files, spread sheets and email traffic of business combatants. It polished its ability to find deleted files. It analyzed hard drives. It sniffed out when computers had been wiped and contracts altered.

The company’s client base now extends to more than 3,000 firms and lawyers. Visual Evidence/E-Discovery is privately held, so it doesn’t release its finances. But Copfer said that revenue jumped 30 percent between 2010 and 2011.

The Cleveland firm is positioning itself for more growth, hiring a sales manager, three forensic technicians, a software developer and a graphic designer since November.

Much of the work is behind-the-scenes now — helping lawyers keep a grip on the mass of electronic, virtual information in business lawsuits, said Linda Weber, a litigation consultant for the company. But when cases go to trial, the focus shifts to the show-me side.

“People on the jury have watched so many television shows,” Weber said. “They expect to see kind of a magical thing happen when an attorney speaks to them.”

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Feb
22

A roaring economic engine

Rwanda knocks poverty down but the next round could prove more challenging

Before 2007 Daphrose Nyirabaziga, a resident of Kigali City and a mother of three, was depending solely on her husband for everything, including her clothes.

Three years later, thanks to Kigali City Council (KCC), which initiated Agaseke Promotion Project in which Nyirabaziga has learnt basket weaving, she no longer lives off her husband. Nyirabaziga weaves popular Rwandan baskets, sells them to a Japanese client and earns a small income to cater for a few of her needs. “When I started weaving baskets, everything has changed in my favour,” she explains. “I am able to buy things like clothes, mobile phone and pay for health insurance without going to my husband for money.”

Nyirabaziga is one of many Rwandan women whose life has changed because of various government and donor funded programs that have reduced poverty. Women empowerment programs such as Agaseke Promotion, one cow per poor household and crop intensification program in agriculture have contributed highly in pushing poor Rwandans out of poverty.

Approximately one million Rwandans emerged from poverty in the past five years benefiting from stable economic growth supported by better policies at hand. This has resulted in a decline in poverty rates from 56.7% in 2005/6 to 44.9 percent in 2010/11, surpassing the target of 46% end of this year.

Kigali City emerged with lowest poverty levels with 16.8%, followed by Eastern province with 42.6%, Northern province with 42.8%, Western province with 48.4% and Southern Province with 56.6%.

With regard to the province that registered highest poverty reduction level since 2005, Northern Province comes out on top with 17.7%, followed by the Western province with 12% and Southern province with 10.2%. The Eastern province ranks second to last with 9.5% followed by Kigali City with 4%.

Improved agricultural production, agri-business, farm wage employment, increased off-farm jobs, money transfers from family to friends, slowing population as well as improvements in basic infrastructure such as roads and electricity were cardinal in aiding more Rwandans to break from their poverty shackles.

These findings are enclosed in the third Integrated Household Living Conditions Survey (EICV3), released by the National Institute of Statistics of Rwanda (NISR) in Kigali on Feb.7. On the same day, NISR released the fourth Demographic and Health Survey (DHS4), which indicates that Rwanda had maintained HIV prevalence rate at three percent over the past five years.

These pieces of extensive research were presented to a high-profile gathering that included President Paul Kagame, other officials in his government, developmentpartners such as the World Bank and United Nations, heads of foreign diplomatic missions and guest speaker Paul Collier, Professor of Economics and Director of the Centre for the Study of African Economies at Oxford University in Britain.

The meeting was also intended to share and celebrate the achievements of the Economic Development and Poverty Reduction Strategy (EDPRS), which was launched in 2008 to help reduce poverty, improve growth and governance.

The EICV3, which was conducted in 2010, indicates that Rwanda has enjoyed a stable economic growth over the past five years, with the poor reaping more benefits compared to the rich, something that happened for the first time in the country.

The survey, which is conducted every five years, shows that the inequality between rich and poor Rwandans has been narrowing, with the poor mainly reaping from the recent consistent growth. According to the statistics, the ratio used to calculate the inequality gap, fell to 6.36 in 2010/11 from 7.1 in 2005/6. It is benchmarked against 10 points.

NISR Director General Yusuf Murangwa who presented the findings said that the higher the ratio, the wider the gap and the small the ratio, the narrower the gap. In the Rwandan case, the ratio narrowed down meaning that the poor were getting closer to the rich.

The report points out that since 2006, Rwanda’s economy has been expanding at an annual average growth rate of 8.2% each year supported mainly by improved agricultural production, robust growth in services sector and slow but steady growth in the industry sector. As a result, Rwanda’s total value of goods and services or Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has increased pushing up per capita income from $333 in 2006 to $540 in 2010; the target for 2020 is to reach $900.

According to the survey, Rwanda has made tangible progress in increasing the number of pupils going to school at the right age, and has increased the provision of safe drinking water, distribution of electricity and access to telecommunication, especially mobile phones. These indicators help to determine the level of welfare of an individual or a household. Overall, 45.2% (over 4 million) of the Rwandan population has a mobile phone, while 215,000 households have access to electricity.

Presenting the results of EICV3 and DHS4, Murangwa sounded even more optimistic than the politicians in the front seats. He said the country could even meet some targets of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by 2015.

For instance, the country has significantly reduced the number of pregnant women that die from complications at birth to 487 in 2010 from 750 women in 2005 and 1071 in 2000 survey. This resulted from significant improvements in antenatal care, delivery assisted by skilled provider and delivery in a health facility. Murangwa said if Rwanda maintains this pace it could bring down the number of dying pregnant women to 258 by 2015, which is one of the MDGs target.

The study also shows that the number of married women using any form of modern contraceptive measures was increasing steadily since 2000, which was drastically reducing fertility rates. This is an indication that Rwanda’s rapid population growth, which is a threat to development, could finally be narrowed down. In 2005, a Rwandan woman could give birth to 6.4 children in her entire life but in 2010, the number had gone down to 4.6, indicating an increased use of family planning techniques already available in the country.

In regard to protecting the life of a child, statistics indicate progress as well; the percentage of children aged 12 to 23 months, who have received vaccination is increasing, helping to reduce the number of deaths in young infants.

However, Rwanda, like most African countries, still faces high levels of malnutrition among children. Nevertheless, ongoing campaigns such as school feeding and one glass of milk per child program and the upcoming decree on mandatory food fortification could see further improvements in this area.

Cases of children with stunted growth (lower height with higher ages), and children with weight that is not equivalent to their age is still a problem in Rwandan households, especially in poor and rural based ones, the study showed.

The report further indicates that Rwandans highly benefited from EDPRS, which is an upgrade of the Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSP) series that were implemented after the 1994 Genocide. EDPRS, which was set to end with this year, has been pushed to June 2013 following Rwanda’s alignment of the budget year to that of other member states of the East African Community (EAC), which starts with July and ends in June. The program runs on three flagship programs, which all combined, seek to address poverty challenges at both urban and rural levels.

The first program— sustainable growth for jobs and exports—aims at engineering sound growth by enhancing the country’s competitiveness, private sector investment and innovation, agricultural productivity, exports and Information Communications Technology (ICT).

The second program–Vision 2020 Umurenge (VUP Umurenge)–intends to make it easier for the implementation of the broader national vision in which Rwanda seeks to become a middle-income economy by 2020. This program aims at eradicating extreme poverty and vulnerability in the rural areas.

The third flagship program under EDPRS is governance. After the horrific 1994 genocide the country was completely shattered. This tragedy not only took away the country’s resources and institutional strengths but it also eroded good practices and humanity that had characterised the Rwandan society for so long, leading all sorts of evils in the land of a thousand hills.

For the new government to rebuild confidence among the wounded and traumatised population, various approaches were needed to allow the gradual healing of the survivors and the suitable punishment of the culprits. This called for strong institutional capacity to deal with all sorts of governance issues at hand.

Governance, which is a combination of all of the programs that are intended to build a better Rwanda, was placed under the EDPRS to provide solutions to most of the governance related challenges. The program aims at maintaining peace and security, improving relations with other countries, promoting national unity and reconciliation, justice, human rights and the rule of law as well as public financial management, service delivery and the fight against corruption.

Although EDPRS implementation still has over one year remaining, the assessment done by the Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning (Minecofin) indicates that since 2008 more than 85% of the targets have been met and in some cases achievements surpassed the targets. Finance and Economic Planning Minister John Rwangombwa said that consistent drive for results has been essential for the country’s achievements.

Professor Paul Collier, the author of The Billion Bottom, an award-winning book, which analyses why poor countries fail and what needs to be done to save them, also applauded Rwanda’s achievements. “These are deeply impressive results,” said Collier. “That’s what should happen everywhere in Africa and it’s happened nowhere except in Rwanda.”

Collier also warned Rwanda that the next step could be more challenging. The country, he said, should put more focus on helping the rural population, especially the youth, get out of poverty. He said urbanisation, which is one phenomenon that creates jobs to the masses especially the youth, should be at the centre stage of Rwanda’s development goals.

Aurelien Agbenoncia, the representative of the development partners who doubles as the resident representative for the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and one UN family in Rwanda, acknowledged the discipline of the Rwandan government in implementing programs and policies that support economic growth and poverty reduction to improve the welfare of its people.

President Kagame who was the guest of honour thanked members of his government, public institutions, development partners and the private sector because of the role of each one played in supporting the government programs whose results were poverty reduction, high growth and improved welfare of Rwandans.

Kagame also kick started the roadmap towards the design of the second EDPRS, which will mainly focus on the areas that the first phase showed need more support. These areas, which were presented as challenges, include high population growth, price increases on both food and non-food items, need for increased efforts in agriculture especially in some districts to get out of poverty, creating more nonfarm jobs and boosting self employment and improving trade especially for agro products as well as the development of essential infrastructure such as roads, electricity and markets for the rural and urban areas.

busy A roaring economic engine

Feb
22

Community boat raffle to benefit Waconia

1329899779 54 Community boat raffle to benefit Waconia

Published: Wednesday, February 8, 2012 10:35 AM CST Ask any ice anglers and they’ll say we have hardly had winter, but many have already set their sights on spring. To aide in their warm weather wanting is the presence of a brand new Crestliner boat, placed in prominent places throughout Waconia these past few weeks. A closer look at the 17.5 foot thing of beauty reveals yet another reason for spring fever to hit a person hard. The boat could be yours, for just five dollars.Sponsored by Crestliner, the brand new Crestliner 1750 Raptor TE Boat complete with a Mercury 115EXLPT OptiMax, ShoreLand’r Trailer and custom travel cover valued at $27,849 is being raffled off. Proceeds from the raffle are going toward paying expenses related to the 2012 Lake Waconia Governor’s Fishing Opener on May 12. Second prize is an Arctic Cat DVX 90 Youth 4-wheeler. There are an additional five prizes of $100 in Waconia Chamber Bucks.Raffle tickets can be purchased wherever the boat is found and also at a variety of locations throughout the city, including HEI Collision (where the boat is now!), InTowne Marina, GK2 Promotions, Waconia Farm Supply, Waconia Ford, Security Bank, Frost & Steam, Bob’s Barber Shop, Mackenthun’s Fine Foods, City of Waconia, Becky Larsen – RE/MAX Results, Lola’s Lakehouse, Legacy Wine & Spirits, Cabin Fever, Holiday of Waconia and the Waconia Chamber of Commerce. The drawing will be held on May 12 and you need not be present to win. For the first time in history, Lake Waconia will host, what has become the state’s rite of spring, the Governor of Minnesota’s celebration of the walleye fishing opener. This year, Governor Mark Dayton and scores of other dignitaries, media and sponsors will try their luck in the Waconia waters and bring state-wide attention to the lake and the city.”We feel this is such a great opportunity for the people of Waconia to show off the many things that make our town such a great place to shop, dine, fish and stay,” said Waconia Chamber of Commerce President Kellie Sites. “We look forward to showing the state of Minnesota that it made the right choice when it decided to celebrate the fishing opener on our wonderful lake.”Sites says the 2012 Lake Waconia Governor’s Fishing Opener Committee is organizing a community picnic, to allow the public to be a part of the celebration. She says details about the picnic will be published in the weeks to come. Reader Comments Submit a Comment –> Submit a Comment

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Feb
22

Alpacas As Pets « Day at the Ranch

1329897424 85 Alpacas As Pets « Day at the Ranch

There are those out there who think alpacas are soooo cute – me included!  But, there should be lots of research done before deciding whether to buy an alpaca as a pet.  The term ‘pet’ can be confusing.  Dogs, cats, rabbits, guinea pigs, etc. come to mind.  We all love our pets.   But, when considering an alpaca as a ‘pet’ you must be aware of a few things…

1.  People like to cuddle their pets.  Alpacas aren’t usually very fond of being cuddled and when that cuddlee is a male alpaca look out – he will one day be a big male alpaca and boy can those guys chest-butt!

2.  People like to keep their pets in their backyard.  Beware – there are plants growing in your backyard that can be VERY harmful to your alpacas and fertilizers used can be deadly!

3.  People sometimes only want one pet.  Alpacas are a herd animal and MUST be kept with atleast one other alpaca and usually three or more is a better number.  They stress easily when kept alone and stress can cause health problems.

Remember alpacas are livestock.  You can love your alpacas, but do so by being there for their health and safety.  Please don’t buy alpacas solely for the purpose of cuddling and hugging them.  They are livestock.  They are known for their fabulous fiber production – known in South America as ‘The Fiber of the Gods’.

All that being said, I am not against buying an alpaca and calling them a pet.  In fact there are many young male alpacas that aren’t quality enough to be a herdsire that will need someone to consider them as a ‘pet’.  If that would fit what you are looking for, God bless you!  Alpacas can be so enjoyable and fun to have around plus they come with the added benefit of that great fiber.  Shear them once a year and get that fiber to a mill to be processed.  Alpaca yarn sells quite nicely and is wonderful to work with.   I would recommend Georgia Mountain Fiber, Texas Fiber Mill, and NAAFP.

Check out this website for further information on alpacas as pets.  pet-alpaca.com

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Feb
22

Animal Rescue Farm in Danger of Foreclosure

1329896189 24 Animal Rescue Farm in Danger of Foreclosure

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