Today in Print - April 5, 2011

Page 1

Football: Wilson quickly establishes recruiting base at LSU, p. 7

Budget Cuts: Three AgCenter research stations to close, p. 6

Reveille The Daily

www.lsureveille.com

Women’s Basketball: Caldwell introduced as new coach, p. 7 Tuesday, April 5, 2011 • Volume 115, Issue 121

Totally Sweet

PREPAREDNESS

‘Command College’ to aid disaster response LSU partners with state in new program Matthew Albright Chief Staff Writer

photos by ZACH BREAUX / The Daily Reveille

[Left] Coca-Cola boxes roll off a conveyor belt at the Baton Rouge Coca-Cola Bottling Co. [Right] An employee rides a bike through the facility as part of the company’s eco-friendly mantra. Read more about Coca-Cola’s green initiatives on page 4 and see more photos at lsureveille.com.

State officials will be going back to school in disaster management once a new “Command College” hosted at the University is up and running. The Stephenson Disaster Management Institute, partnering with the Governor’s Office ‘This isn’t of Homeland just a Security and Louisiana Emergency issue.’ Preparedness , will create a Joseph Booth series of edu- Stephenson Disaster cational proManagement grams to train Institute executive director state leaders on how to better respond to catastrophes. “When you see a police RESPONSE, see page 15

ECONOMY

La. agriculture industry earns state nearly $10B in 2010 Poultry and forestry saw greatest earning increase Kevin Thibodeaux Contributing Writer

The Louisiana agriculture industry earned nearly $10 billion for the state’s economy in 2010, according to a list compiled by the LSU AgCenter. The number is up 20 percent from the year before, according to the summary. The data for the Agriculture Summary, collected under John Westra, LSU AgCenter economist and project director, was based on the production and income of certain commodities like forestry, poultry, aquaculture and sugar cane. Agencies like the U.S. Department of

Agriculture and the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries measure the production and income of corn, cotton, sugar cane and other crops but ignore areas like fruit and vegetables produced in Louisiana, which are included in the AgCenter summary, Westra said. Of the areas studied, the summary shows the poultry and forestry industries increased in production and income the most. The poultry industry earned about $1.5 billion, and the forestry industry earned around $3 billion, according to the summary. The two industries make up nearly half of the total agricultural earnings. Westra said the two industries make up such a significant part of the industry that when they suffer, as they did in 2008 and 2009, they bring the entire

Louisiana agricultural earnings up 20 percent from 2009.

AGRICULTURE, see page 15

graphic by STEPHANIE GIGLIO / The Daily Reveille


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