After Immigration Crackdown, Alabama And Georgia Farmers Fear They Won’t Have Enough Labor To Harvest
As a new planting season begins, farmers across Alabama and Georgia are unsure if they will have enough labor this year when it comes time to harvest. Farmers have been struggling with a dearth of skilled farm workers ever since officials in both states passed harmful anti-immigrant laws that prompted many migrant workers and their families to flee. Some farmers are considering planting less or moving to less labor-intensive crops, and others are anticipating higher labor costs to attract workers. “Before this law [HB 56], migrant workers would just show up. They knew when they were needed,” said Brett Hall, Alabama’s deputy agriculture commissioner. “That’s not happening anymore.”
What happens when you leave a beautiful new bike locked up on a busy street? This time-lapse video illustrates it.
One clever solution is to create on-street bike parkings near intersections. It provides more parking for cyclists, and it improves visibility for drivers, making everybody safer.
Could old electric car batteries find a second life on the power grid as storage for emergency situations and/or renewable energy?
by Shakeb Afsah, Eric Ness and Kendyl Salcito* in a 
Nuclear power phase outs, good and bad news there; Obama backs fracking; and another look into whether or not wind turbines have much affect on human health. Here's what we're reading this morning:
A world facing economically disruptive climate change can no longer justify subsidies to expand the burning of coal and oil. Governments are shelling out nearly $1.4 billion per day to further destabilize the earth’s climate.

