Trade Associations
Here's a look at documents from national and international trade associations
Featured Stories
Statement: AFC Chief Policy Officer Ian P. Moloney on the Ending Scam Credit Repair Act
WASHINGTON, March 24 -- The American Fintech Council, an organization that says it promotes a transparent, inclusive and customer-centric financial system, issued the following statement on March 23, 2026, by Chief Policy Officer Ian P. Moloney on the Ending Scam Credit Repair Act:
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"AFC strongly supports the introduction of the Ending Scam Credit Repair Act in the Senate and commends Senators Murkowski and Coons for their leadership in advancing this bipartisan legislation. This bill is an important step toward addressing harmful practices that have persisted in the credit repair industry.
"For
... Show Full Article
WASHINGTON, March 24 -- The American Fintech Council, an organization that says it promotes a transparent, inclusive and customer-centric financial system, issued the following statement on March 23, 2026, by Chief Policy Officer Ian P. Moloney on the Ending Scam Credit Repair Act:
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"AFC strongly supports the introduction of the Ending Scam Credit Repair Act in the Senate and commends Senators Murkowski and Coons for their leadership in advancing this bipartisan legislation. This bill is an important step toward addressing harmful practices that have persisted in the credit repair industry.
"Fortoo long, some credit repair organizations have exploited legal loopholes to charge large upfront fees and make false promises that harm consumers, particularly those who are least able to afford these fees or combat these misleading practices. These actions undermine consumer trust and weaken the broader financial system.
"By closing these loopholes and establishing clearer requirements for how credit disputes are communicated, this legislation will help create a more transparent and fair credit ecosystem, helping both consumers and the responsible innovators who serve them. AFC looks forward to working with Congress to advance policies that protect consumers, promote accountability, and support responsible innovation."
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Original text here: https://www.fintechcouncil.org/press-releases/statement-afc-chief-policy-officer-ian-p-moloney-on-the-ending-scam-credit-repair-act
[Category: Financial Services]
NWTF Partners With American Hunting Lease Association to Expand Hunting Access and Protect Landowners
EDGEFIELD, South Carolina, March 24 -- The National Wild Turkey Federation issued the following statement:
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NWTF Partners with American Hunting Lease Association to Expand Hunting Access and Protect Landowners
The National Wild Turkey Federation is partnering with the American Hunting Lease Association (AHLA), a leading provider of hunting lease and landowner liability insurance, to enhance hunting access opportunities while protecting the landowners who make those opportunities possible.
"We are excited to partner with the American Hunting Lease Association to provide our members with
... Show Full Article
EDGEFIELD, South Carolina, March 24 -- The National Wild Turkey Federation issued the following statement:
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NWTF Partners with American Hunting Lease Association to Expand Hunting Access and Protect Landowners
The National Wild Turkey Federation is partnering with the American Hunting Lease Association (AHLA), a leading provider of hunting lease and landowner liability insurance, to enhance hunting access opportunities while protecting the landowners who make those opportunities possible.
"We are excited to partner with the American Hunting Lease Association to provide our members withtools that support both access and conservation," said Natalia Daniels, NWTF director of strategic partnerships. "Landowners are essential to the future of hunting, and this partnership helps remove uncertainty by offering simple, affordable liability coverage. By working together, we are ensuring that more people can experience the outdoors while protecting the individuals who make that access possible."
Through this partnership, NWTF members will gain access to AHLA's comprehensive insurance offerings, designed specifically for hunting lease arrangements and private land access. The collaboration underscores a shared commitment to sustaining America's hunting heritage by reducing barriers for landowners and hunters alike.
Founded in 2010, AHLA has become a trusted resource for landowners and hunters navigating hunting lease agreements. In addition to hunt club insurance, AHLA offers vacant land liability coverage for landowners who provide free access to their property. These policies help mitigate liability risks, including costly legal fees that can arise even in states with recreational access protections.
As part of the partnership, NWTF members will benefit from flexible policy options, including annual coverage that can begin the first of any month, allowing insurance to align seamlessly with hunting lease agreements. Policies also allow for up to seven landowners to be included at no additional cost, recognizing the importance of collaborative land stewardship.
Additionally, AHLA provides immediate proof of insurance upon purchase, enabling hunters to quickly secure access to private lands when permission is granted.
"We are just proud that an organization like the NWTF, with its long history and positive influence on conservation, recognizes what we can offer their members and how we can impact hunting in the United States together," said Sean Ferbrache, AHLA chief operating officer. "Our team is excited to bring the AHLA standard of customer service and innovation to the members of the NWTF."
The partnership reflects a broader effort to support landowners who open their properties for outdoor recreation, including hunting, fishing, hiking and camping. AHLA's vacant land liability policies also provide protection against risks such as trespassing, further reinforcing confidence among landowners.
Since 1973, the NWTF has led the charge in wild turkey conservation across North America, investing in critical research, habitat restoration and hunting heritage initiatives. By strengthening relationships with partners like AHLA, the NWTF continues to advance its mission to conserve the wild turkey and preserve our hunting heritage.
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About the National Wild Turkey Federation
Since 1973, the National Wild Turkey Federation has invested over half a billion dollars into wildlife conservation and has positively impacted over 25 million acres of critical wildlife habitat. Since 2022, the NWTF has also invested over $2.3 million in critical wild turkey research that, when leveraged with partner contributions, has resulted in more than $22 million to guide the management of the wild turkey and to ensure sustainable populations. The organization continues to deliver its mission by working across boundaries on a landscape scale to deliver healthy forests and wildlife habitats, clean and abundant water, resilient communities and robust recreational opportunities. With the help of its dedicated members, partners and staff, the NWTF continues to unite a nation through the life-changing power of the outdoors.
About the American Hunting Lease Association
The American Hunting Lease Association, established in 2010, is dedicated to protecting landowners and supporting hunting access through innovative and affordable insurance solutions. By providing hunting lease, hunt club and vacant land liability coverage, AHLA helps ensure landowners can confidently provide access to their properties for outdoor recreation.
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Original text here: https://www.nwtf.org/content-hub/nwtf-partners-with-american-hunting-lease-association-to-expand-hunting-access-and-protect-landowners
[Category: Animals]
Farmer Share of Food Dollar Shrinks
NASHVILLE, Tennessee, March 24 -- The American Farm Bureau Federation issued the following news release:
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Farmer Share of Food Dollar Shrinks
In another sobering reminder of the economic challenges facing America's farmers and ranchers, new data show that farmers' share of the money consumers spend on food continues to shrink, even as expenses rise. The latest Market Intel from American Farm Bureau Federation economists shows that in 2024 farmers and ranchers received a combined 5.8 cents of every food dollar after accounting for expenses, down from 5.9 cents in 2023. 2024 is the latest
... Show Full Article
NASHVILLE, Tennessee, March 24 -- The American Farm Bureau Federation issued the following news release:
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Farmer Share of Food Dollar Shrinks
In another sobering reminder of the economic challenges facing America's farmers and ranchers, new data show that farmers' share of the money consumers spend on food continues to shrink, even as expenses rise. The latest Market Intel from American Farm Bureau Federation economists shows that in 2024 farmers and ranchers received a combined 5.8 cents of every food dollar after accounting for expenses, down from 5.9 cents in 2023. 2024 is the latestavailable data from USDA.
Crop producers saw their share decline from 2.9 to 2.5 cents, while livestock producers experienced a modest increase from 3 to 3.3 cents. The majority of the food dollar is attributed to food marketing costs incurred after food passes the farmgate. "Taken together, the food dollar data highlight a fundamental reality of the modern food system: while farmers and ranchers are the foundation of food production, most of the economic value is created after products leave the farm," the Market Intel states. "Less than 6 cents of total value added occurs at the farm level, while the marketing bill continues to expand as consumer spending increasingly reflects processing, transportation, retail and food service."
The slight increase in share among livestock producers reflects a shrinking herd, which increases the value of cattle. Historically low crop prices and increased expenses including fuel and fertilizer pulled down the share for crop farmers.
AFBF President Zippy Duvall said, "America's farmers and ranchers are the backbone of our country's food system, yet they only see a small share of the total food dollar. While prices may be up at the grocery store, most farmers' paychecks are shrinking. Even modest swings in commodity prices or increases in expenses can quickly strain farmers' finances to the breaking point. This imbalance must be corrected to create a brighter future for U.S. agriculture. The only alternative is reliance on other countries to feed America's families."
Read the full Market Intel on the Food Dollar Series here (https://www.fb.org/market-intel/farmers-receive-less-than-6-cents-of-the-food-dollar).
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Original text here: https://www.fb.org/news-release/farmer-share-of-food-dollar-shrinks
[Category: Agriculture]
Ag Groups Urge Action on Phosphate Fertilizer Duties
CHESTERFIELD, Missouri, March 24 -- The National Corn Growers Association posted the following news:
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Ag Groups Urge Action on Phosphate Fertilizer Duties
Over 50 state grower groups and eight national ag groups filed a letter with the Department of Commerce on Friday urging it to revoke countervailing duties on imports of phosphate fertilizer as the sunset review begins.
The letter, signed by groups like the National Corn Growers Association, American Soybean Association, National Association of Wheat Growers, USA Rice and US Rice Producers Association, said if the duties continue, they
... Show Full Article
CHESTERFIELD, Missouri, March 24 -- The National Corn Growers Association posted the following news:
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Ag Groups Urge Action on Phosphate Fertilizer Duties
Over 50 state grower groups and eight national ag groups filed a letter with the Department of Commerce on Friday urging it to revoke countervailing duties on imports of phosphate fertilizer as the sunset review begins.
The letter, signed by groups like the National Corn Growers Association, American Soybean Association, National Association of Wheat Growers, USA Rice and US Rice Producers Association, said if the duties continue, theywill further worsen the dire economic conditions faced by American farmers.
"Maintaining the phosphate fertilizer [duties] will allow a small set of powerful corporations to continue to limit supply options for farmers," the letter said. "This has already prevented farmers from accessing the tools that meet their crop production needs and resulted in lower yields and negative economic impacts."
Phosphate fertilizer is an essential input for modern crop production, used predominately for growing corn, soybeans, cotton and other agricultural commodities. U.S. growers rely on phosphate fertilizer to maintain yields and remain competitive in domestic and global markets. Phosphate fertilizer is fundamental to producing the food and fiber that sustains American families and rural economies.
In 2020, the Commerce Department, acting on a petition filed by the U.S.-based Mosaic Company, imposed duties on phosphate fertilizers imported from Morocco and Russia. Mosaic claimed at the time that unfairly subsidized foreign companies were flooding the U.S. market with fertilizers and selling the products at extremely low prices. The petition was supported by J.R. Simplot. This year, the duties will be examined under a sunset review process that will determine if the duties should continue.
The duties have had major effects on the phosphate fertilizer market. At least one Moroccan company halted shipments of phosphate fertilizers into the U.S., which led to price hikes and shortages, saddling farmers with a hardship that has only worsened in recent weeks with the conflict in the Middle East.
"These [duties] have placed additional strain on farmers already navigating volatile commodity markets, weather uncertainty, and rising expenses across nearly every category of farm operations, and have impacted the affordability crisis that is so critical today," the letter said. For many growers, fertilizer represented 40 percent of operating costs in 2025, and price increases in this critical input directly affect planting decisions, long-term viability, and the livelihoods of farm families."
Ag groups recently sent a letter to the CEOs at Mosaic and Simplot raising their concerns. There was no response. The groups hope officials at Commerce and the International Trade Commission will strongly consider their perspective in the sunset review and revoke the duties.
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The Honorable Howard Lutnick
Secretary of Commerce
U.S. Department of Commerce
1401 Constitution Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20230
RE: Phosphate Fertilizers from Morocco and Russia, Case No. C-714-001 (SUNR-2026)
Dear Secretary Lutnick:
On behalf of American farmers, growers and producers, we respectfully urge the Department of Commerce ("Commerce") to revoke the countervailing duty orders (CVDs) on imports of phosphate fertilizer. Allowing the CVDs to continue will further worsen the dire economic conditions faced by American farmers.
Phosphate fertilizer is an essential input for modern crop production, used predominately for growing corn, soybeans, cotton and other agricultural commodities. U.S. growers rely on phosphate fertilizer to maintain yields, steward soil health, and remain competitive in domestic and global markets. Unlike discretionary inputs, phosphate fertilizer is fundamental to producing the food and fiber that sustain American families and rural economies.
Maintaining the phosphate fertilizer CVDs will allow a small set of powerful corporations to continue to limit supply options for farmers. This has already prevented farmers from accessing the tools that meet their crop production needs and resulted in lower yields and negative economic impacts. As Deputy Secretary of Agriculture Stephen Vaden has noted, two of the largest U.S. phosphate producers collude to "constrain the supply of so many of the fertilizers that our farmers depend on that they were able to get pricing power."1
Respectfully, these companies--one of which's CEOs receives $9.8 million in annual compensation--do not need import protection to keep them healthy. Farmers on the other hand do need help. The United States simply does not have sufficient domestic phosphate resources to meet agricultural demand on its own. Farmers source domestically when possible, but must rely on imports to fill the gaps in supply. Access to reliable alternative sources of phosphate fertilizer supply is therefore critical to maintaining a competitive and resilient fertilizer market. When import duties substantially restrict that access, supply tightens, and prices rise. These outcomes unilaterally harm farmers, consumers, and the broader agricultural economy.
The current phosphate fertilizer countervailing duties (CVDs) are facilitating that constraint of supply. These CVDs have placed additional strain on farmers already navigating volatile
commodity markets, weather uncertainty, and rising expenses across nearly every category of farm operations, and have impacted the affordability crisis that is so critical today. For many growers, fertilizer represented 40 percent of operating costs in 2025, 2 and price increases in this critical input directly affect planting decisions, long-term viability, and the livelihoods of farm families. This is why the third domestic producer, Nutrien, recently requested that the CVD be terminated, stating: "Based on evolving global phosphate supply and demand dynamics since 2021, we believe re-moving countervailing duties on phosphate imports would be a constructive step that supports U.S. farmer economics, balanced fertilizer application and agricultural productivity."3
We respectfully call for the revocation of the existing phosphate fertilizer CVDs in the upcoming sunset review. Eliminating these duties would help restore balance to fertilizer markets by providing immediate relief to growers facing elevated input costs and a lack of availability. We appreciate Commerce's role in ensuring fair and effective trade enforcement and respectfully ask that Commerce give adequate consideration to the real-world impacts these duties are having across the agricultural sector.
Thank you for your time and attention to this important matter. We stand ready to provide additional information or engage further as Commerce considers this issue.
Respectfully
National Corn Growers Association
American Soybean Association
National Association of Wheat Growers
National Cotton Council
National Sorghum Producers
Society of American Florists
USA Rice
US Rice Producers Association
Arkansas Soybean Association
Colorado Corn Growers Association
Corn Growers Association of North Carolina
Delta Council
Georgia Corn Growers Association
Georgia/Florida Soybean Association
Illinois Corn Growers Association
Illinois Soybean Growers
Indiana Corn Growers Association
Indiana Soybean Alliance, Membership & Policy Committee
Iowa Corn Growers Association
Iowa Soybean Association
Kansas Corn Growers Association
Kansas Sorghum Producers
Kansas Soybean Association
Kentucky Corn Growers Association
Kentucky Soybean Association
Louisiana Cotton & Grain Association
Maryland Grain Producers Association
Michigan Corn Growers Association
Michigan Soybean Association
Mid-Atlantic Soybean Association
Minnesota Corn Growers Association
Minnesota Soybean Growers Association
Mississippi Corn Growers Association
Mississippi Soybean Association
Missouri Corn Growers Association
Missouri Soybean Association
Nebraska Corn Growers Association
Nebraska Sorghum Producers
Nebraska Soybean Association
New Mexico Sorghum Producers
New York Corn and Soybean Growers Association
North Carolina Soybean Producers Association
North Dakota Corn Growers Association
North Dakota Soybean Growers Association
Ohio Corn & Wheat Growers Association
Ohio Soybean Association
Oklahoma Soybean Association
Pennsylvania Corn Growers Association
South Carolina Corn and Soybean Association
South Carolina Corn and Soybean Association
South Dakota Corn Growers Association
South Dakota Soybean Association
Tennessee Corn Growers Association
Tennessee Soybean Association
Texas Corn Producers Association
Texas Grain Sorghum Association
Texas International Produce Association
Texas Soybean Association
Virginia Grain Producers Association
Virginia Soybean Association
Wisconsin Corn Growers Association
Wisconsin Soybean Association
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Original text here: https://www.ncga.com/stay-informed/media/in-the-news/article/2026/03/ag-groups-urge-action-on-phosphate-fertilizer-duties
[Category: Agriculture]
ASA Urges Commerce to Revoke Phosphate Fertilizer Duties
ST. LOUIS, Missouri, March 24 -- The American Soybean Association issued the following news release:
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ASA Urges Commerce to Revoke Phosphate Fertilizer Duties
The American Soybean Association (ASA) joined a coalition of agricultural organizations on Friday in sending a letter to the U.S. Department of Commerce urging the revocation of countervailing duties (CVDs) on phosphate fertilizer imports from Morocco and Russia.
"We are disappointed Mosaic and Simplot did not listen to their farmer customers and are pursuing an extension of these costly countervailing duties. Soybean farmers are
... Show Full Article
ST. LOUIS, Missouri, March 24 -- The American Soybean Association issued the following news release:
* * *
ASA Urges Commerce to Revoke Phosphate Fertilizer Duties
The American Soybean Association (ASA) joined a coalition of agricultural organizations on Friday in sending a letter to the U.S. Department of Commerce urging the revocation of countervailing duties (CVDs) on phosphate fertilizer imports from Morocco and Russia.
"We are disappointed Mosaic and Simplot did not listen to their farmer customers and are pursuing an extension of these costly countervailing duties. Soybean farmers arealready facing tight margins and rising input costs, and fertilizer is one of the most critical and expensive inputs we rely on to grow a crop," said Scott Metzger, ASA President and soybean farmer from Ohio. "Trade import duties that limit supply and drive-up prices only make it harder for farmers to stay afloat. We need access to reliable, affordable fertilizer to remain competitive and continue producing for our customers at home and abroad."
The letter warned that maintaining the duties limits access to essential inputs, reduces market competition, and places additional strain on farmers navigating volatile markets, rising input costs, and ongoing uncertainty. Fertilizer accounted for a significant share of operating expenses in 2025, and elevated prices continue to impact planting decisions and farm viability.
ASA and the coalition called on Commerce to revoke the duties as part of the current sunset review, noting that doing so would help restore balance to fertilizer markets and provide much-needed relief to U.S. farmers.
* * *
The Honorable Howard Lutnick
Secretary of Commerce
U.S. Department of Commerce
1401 Constitution Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20230
RE: Phosphate Fertilizers from Morocco and Russia, Case No. C-714-001 (SUNR-2026)
Dear Secretary Lutnick:
On behalf of American farmers, growers and producers, we respectfully urge the Department of Commerce ("Commerce") to revoke the countervailing duty orders (CVDs) on imports of phosphate fertilizer. Allowing the CVDs to continue will further worsen the dire economic conditions faced by American farmers.
Phosphate fertilizer is an essential input for modern crop production, used predominately for growing corn, soybeans, cotton and other agricultural commodities. U.S. growers rely on phosphate fertilizer to maintain yields, steward soil health, and remain competitive in domestic and global markets. Unlike discretionary inputs, phosphate fertilizer is fundamental to producing the food and fiber that sustain American families and rural economies.
Maintaining the phosphate fertilizer CVDs will allow a small set of powerful corporations to continue to limit supply options for farmers. This has already prevented farmers from accessing the tools that meet their crop production needs and resulted in lower yields and negative economic impacts. As Deputy Secretary of Agriculture Stephen Vaden has noted, two of the largest U.S. phosphate producers collude to "constrain the supply of so many of the fertilizers that our farmers depend on that they were able to get pricing power."1
Respectfully, these companies--one of which's CEOs receives $9.8 million in annual compensation--do not need import protection to keep them healthy. Farmers on the other hand do need help. The United States simply does not have sufficient domestic phosphate resources to meet agricultural demand on its own. Farmers source domestically when possible, but must rely on imports to fill the gaps in supply. Access to reliable alternative sources of phosphate fertilizer supply is therefore critical to maintaining a competitive and resilient fertilizer market. When import duties substantially restrict that access, supply tightens, and prices rise. These outcomes unilaterally harm farmers, consumers, and the broader agricultural economy.
The current phosphate fertilizer countervailing duties (CVDs) are facilitating that constraint of supply. These CVDs have placed additional strain on farmers already navigating volatile
commodity markets, weather uncertainty, and rising expenses across nearly every category of farm operations, and have impacted the affordability crisis that is so critical today. For many growers, fertilizer represented 40 percent of operating costs in 2025, 2 and price increases in this critical input directly affect planting decisions, long-term viability, and the livelihoods of farm families. This is why the third domestic producer, Nutrien, recently requested that the CVD be terminated, stating: "Based on evolving global phosphate supply and demand dynamics since 2021, we believe re-moving countervailing duties on phosphate imports would be a constructive step that supports U.S. farmer economics, balanced fertilizer application and agricultural productivity."3
We respectfully call for the revocation of the existing phosphate fertilizer CVDs in the upcoming sunset review. Eliminating these duties would help restore balance to fertilizer markets by providing immediate relief to growers facing elevated input costs and a lack of availability. We appreciate Commerce's role in ensuring fair and effective trade enforcement and respectfully ask that Commerce give adequate consideration to the real-world impacts these duties are having across the agricultural sector.
Thank you for your time and attention to this important matter. We stand ready to provide additional information or engage further as Commerce considers this issue.
Respectfully
National Corn Growers Association
American Soybean Association
National Association of Wheat Growers
National Cotton Council
National Sorghum Producers
Society of American Florists
USA Rice
US Rice Producers Association
Arkansas Soybean Association
Colorado Corn Growers Association
Corn Growers Association of North Carolina
Delta Council
Georgia Corn Growers Association
Georgia/Florida Soybean Association
Illinois Corn Growers Association
Illinois Soybean Growers
Indiana Corn Growers Association
Indiana Soybean Alliance, Membership & Policy Committee
Iowa Corn Growers Association
Iowa Soybean Association
Kansas Corn Growers Association
Kansas Sorghum Producers
Kansas Soybean Association
Kentucky Corn Growers Association
Kentucky Soybean Association
Louisiana Cotton & Grain Association
Maryland Grain Producers Association
Michigan Corn Growers Association
Michigan Soybean Association
Mid-Atlantic Soybean Association
Minnesota Corn Growers Association
Minnesota Soybean Growers Association
Mississippi Corn Growers Association
Mississippi Soybean Association
Missouri Corn Growers Association
Missouri Soybean Association
Nebraska Corn Growers Association
Nebraska Sorghum Producers
Nebraska Soybean Association
New Mexico Sorghum Producers
New York Corn and Soybean Growers Association
North Carolina Soybean Producers Association
North Dakota Corn Growers Association
North Dakota Soybean Growers Association
Ohio Corn & Wheat Growers Association
Ohio Soybean Association
Oklahoma Soybean Association
Pennsylvania Corn Growers Association
South Carolina Corn and Soybean Association
South Carolina Corn and Soybean Association
South Dakota Corn Growers Association
South Dakota Soybean Association
Tennessee Corn Growers Association
Tennessee Soybean Association
Texas Corn Producers Association
Texas Grain Sorghum Association
Texas International Produce Association
Texas Soybean Association
Virginia Grain Producers Association
Virginia Soybean Association
Wisconsin Corn Growers Association
Wisconsin Soybean Association
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Original text here: https://soygrowers.com/news-releases/asa-urges-commerce-to-revoke-phosphate-fertilizer-duties/
[Category: Agriculture]
ALPA Statement on Fatal LaGuardia Runway Collision
MCLEAN, Virginia, March 24 -- The Air Line Pilots Association International issued the following statement on March 23, 2026:
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ALPA Statement on Fatal LaGuardia Runway Collision
Capt. Jason Ambrosi, president of the Air Line Pilots Association, Int'l (ALPA), issued the following statement after two Jazz Aviation pilots were killed when Air Canada Express Flight 8646 collided with a rescue and firefighting vehicle on Runway 4 at New York's LaGuardia Airport late Sunday night.
"The loss of our two fellow crewmembers onboard Flight 8646 is a profound tragedy. These pilots dedicated their
... Show Full Article
MCLEAN, Virginia, March 24 -- The Air Line Pilots Association International issued the following statement on March 23, 2026:
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ALPA Statement on Fatal LaGuardia Runway Collision
Capt. Jason Ambrosi, president of the Air Line Pilots Association, Int'l (ALPA), issued the following statement after two Jazz Aviation pilots were killed when Air Canada Express Flight 8646 collided with a rescue and firefighting vehicle on Runway 4 at New York's LaGuardia Airport late Sunday night.
"The loss of our two fellow crewmembers onboard Flight 8646 is a profound tragedy. These pilots dedicated theircareers to the safe transport of passengers, and we are all thinking of their families, loved ones, and colleagues at Jazz Aviation during this devastating time.
"ALPA's accident investigation team is on scene assisting the National Transportation Safety Board with its work, and our Critical Incident Response Program is working to support ALPA members and the families involved."
* * *
Founded in 1931, ALPA is the largest airline pilot union in the world and represents more than 80,000 pilots at 42 U.S. and Canadian airlines. Visit ALPA.org or follow us on X @ALPAPilots.
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Original text here: https://www.alpa.org/press-room/2026/03/alpa-statement-on-fatal-laguardia-runway-collision
[Category: Transportation]
A4A Congratulates Markwayne Mullin on Senate Confirmation
WASHINGTON, March 24 -- Airlines for America issued the following statement on March 23, 2026:
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A4A Congratulates Markwayne Mullin on Senate Confirmation
"We congratulate Markwayne Mullin on his confirmation to serve as secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). His leadership will provide stability for Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers and U.S. Customs clearance officers at airports. Both groups of federal employees are critical to the frontlines of aviation security, including our passengers, crewmembers and cargo shipments.
"Unfortunately, Congress has
... Show Full Article
WASHINGTON, March 24 -- Airlines for America issued the following statement on March 23, 2026:
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A4A Congratulates Markwayne Mullin on Senate Confirmation
"We congratulate Markwayne Mullin on his confirmation to serve as secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). His leadership will provide stability for Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers and U.S. Customs clearance officers at airports. Both groups of federal employees are critical to the frontlines of aviation security, including our passengers, crewmembers and cargo shipments.
"Unfortunately, Congress hasyet to fund DHS, and TSA officers have been working without paychecks for weeks. Last fall, they had to survive 43 days without pay. A month ago, they received a partial paycheck. Two weeks ago, TSA employees received $0 paychecks, and another one is coming this Friday. It's getting increasingly difficult to put food on the table, put gas in the car and pay the rent. We are hopeful that Secretary Mullin's arrival at DHS will be a catalyst for Congress to reach a bipartisan agreement and get TSA paid before Congress leaves for a two-week break.
"Amid record spring break travel and ahead of FIFA World Cup and America250 celebrations, it is imperative that our country remains vigilant. Government must pay the men and women who are on the frontlines of our nation's security."
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Original text here: https://www.airlines.org/news-update/a4a-congratulates-markwayne-mullin-on-senate-confirmation/
[Category: Transportation]