Independence Day celebrations
can be tough for pets that are noise-phobic.
My dog, who is usually fairly laid-back, absolutely
hates bottle rockets
and those whistler fireworks that kids shoot off on July 4.
The U.S. Humane Society says
dog freakouts on July Fourth are so common that pet shelters often receive
"July 4 animals" that run for their lives when they hear fireworks. The Humane Society says:
Pets across
the nation often become frightened and frantic by the noise
and commotion of Independence Day. In fact, animal shelters across the
country are accustomed to receiving "July 4th" dogs -- dogs who run off
during fireworks celebrations and are rescued by animal control
officers or Good Samaritans who take them to the safety of the local
shelter.
The Humane Society of Boulder Valley (Colo.) says that, on the Fourth of July, it is typically inundated with animals:
Firecrackers,
cherry bombs and sparklers are fun for humans, but when pets see and
hear them, they head for the hills, warns the Humane Society of Boulder
Valley. "Animals have extremely sensitive ears," explains Chief
Executive Officer Jan McHugh-Smith. "To a dog or cat, even the distant
sound of fireworks is like a bomb exploding."
Each Fourth of July the Society is inundated with lost pets from all over Boulder County.
"We receive many cats and dogs who aren't wearing tags and who aren't
microchipped," says McHugh-Smith. Animals wearing identification can
often be returned to their homes immediately, either by a good Samaritan or an animal control officer.
What can do you for Fido? Here are some tips.
Paying Farmers Who Don't Farm
Nationwide, the federal government has paid at least $1.3
billion in subsidies for rice and other crops since 2000 to individuals
who do no farming at all, according to an analysis of government
records by The Washington Post.
Here's some context:
The payments now
account for nearly half of the nation's expanding agricultural subsidy
system, a complex web that has little basis in fairness or efficiency.
What began in the 1930s as a limited safety net for working farmers has
swollen into a far-flung infrastructure of entitlements that has cost
$172 billion over the past decade. In 2005 alone, when pretax farm
profits were at a near-record $72 billion, the federal government
handed out more than $25 billion in aid, almost 50 percent more than
the amount it pays to families receiving welfare.
The Post's nine-month
investigation found farm subsidy programs that have become so
all-encompassing and generous that they have taken much of the risk out
of farming for the increasingly wealthy individuals who dominate it.
Get local. It is easy to find out who in your county is paid the most in farm subsidies. Just click here. The Environmental Working Group's database is easy to use.
(The EWG is a farm-policy reform activist group.) As you use this database, remember: Just because somebody is getting a subsidy does not imply that he or she is doing something wrong. Far from it. It is a reflection of how the system is
currently set up. The question is whether or not it should be set up this way.
Green Burial
More than one in ten burials in the United Kingdom are "green" burials, involving biodegradable caskets, not watertight
steel vaults. Now, there are a handful of these "green" cemeteries
around America. The Associated Press explains:
At Greensprings [Natural Cemetery],
where a plot costs $500 plus a $350 fee to dig the grave, bodies cannot
be embalmed or otherwise chemically preserved. They must be buried in
biodegradable caskets without linings or metal ornamentation. The
cemetery suggests locally harvested woods, wicker or cloth shrouds.
Concrete or steel burial vaults are not allowed. Nor are standing
monuments, upright tombstones or statues.
Only flat, natural fieldstones are permitted as grave markers (they can be engraved). Shrubs or trees are preferred.
And only one person is allowed in each 15-foot-by-15-foot plot.
"This is more than
just dig a hole in the woods and roll them in. We see it as a natural
return to the Earth, becoming part of the circle of life," said Mary
Woodsen, a lifelong conservationist and the cemetery's president.
"Not everyone will find this appealing," she said. "But there are people who want that look and feel of nature."
Natural
or woodland cemeteries are common in the United Kingdom, where they
make up more than 10 percent of burials. In the United States,
however, green burial is a relatively new idea, but one that has caught
the attention of people who favor blending land conservation with a
natural approach to funerals.
Are the Penny's Days Numbered?
The end could be in
sight for the penny. As I reported to you some time ago, it now costs
more than a penny to mint a penny and that could be enough to push the
Mint into a change. AP reports:
For the first time,
the U.S. Mint has said pennies are costing more than 1 cent to make
this year, thanks to higher metal prices. "The penny is going to
disappear soon unless something changes in the economics of
commodities," says Robert Hoge, an expert on North American coins at
The American Numismatic Society.
That very idea of
spending 1.2 cents to put 1 cent into play strikes many people as
"faintly ridiculous," says Jeff Gore, of Elkton, Md., founder of a
little group called Citizens for Retiring the Penny.
And yet, while its
profile of Abe Lincoln marks time in the bottom of drawers and
ashtrays, the penny somehow carries a reassuring symbolism that
Americans hesitate to forsake.
"It's part of their past, so they want to keep it in their future," says Dave Harper, editor of Numismatic News.
Gallup polling has shown that two-thirds of Americans want to keep the penny coin. There's even a pro-penny lobby called Americans for Common Cents [PDF].
The Mint's
announcement is a milestone, though, because coins have historically
cost less to produce than the face value paid by receiving banks. They
are moneymakers for the government.
U.S. Rep. Jim Kolbe of Arizona
wants to keep it that way. But when he asked Congress to phase out the
penny five years ago he failed; he intends to try again this year. If
he fails again, he joked recently, he may open a business melting down
pennies to resell the metal.
We are always looking for your great ideas. Send Al a few sentences and hot links.
Editor's Note: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas,
edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites,
as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes
directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be
provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends
upon the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. Errors
and inaccuracies found will be corrected.
The Post's articles are an interesting departure from stories on...