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Storage facility plans for former Stirling food project hub
Storage facility plans for former Stirling food project hub

Daily Record

time09-05-2025

  • Business
  • Daily Record

Storage facility plans for former Stirling food project hub

'The building is currently lying empty and the client has struggled to successfully rent it for a number of years." City centre premises previously used by a local food distribution project could be turned into a storage facility. Transition Stirling's Community Food Project at 5 Wellgreen Lane closed at the end of 2024 after operating out of the building for more than four years, saying that the free section of the enterprise was 'no longer sustainable'. ‌ The project had helped to reduce food waste, collecting excess food from local supermarkets and offering it to members of the community for free. ‌ Now, however, an application has been lodged with Stirling Council planners by Azam Haider Bhatti seeking to turn the premises from a Class 4 use to Class 6 by creating 55 storage units. Documents submitted with the application stated: 'Storage Division Ltd, 5 Wellgreen a one storey building with a class 4 licence. 'The building is currently lying empty and the client has struggled to successfully rent it for a number of years. 'Previously it has been leased to the Stirling Community Food free of charge to give back to the area. 'However this is not sustainable. 'We are seeking for a change of use to a Class 6 to convert into a storage facility. There will be no external material changes to any of the elevations of the building. ‌ 'The storage is aimed for the students and local shopkeepers living and working in the town who don't have cars. There is also a multi storey car park across from the property where we would advise clients to use if required. 'We don't expect any additional noise levels to be generated from the activity. 'This will be open 24 hours and manned by one person. ‌ 'There is a list of prohibited materials issued to users as part of the conditions of use: pets; food; plants; guns; drugs; explosives; toxic materials; radioactive substances; and flammables.' The businessman had joined forces with the community food project on Christmas Eve to operate a Christmas food bank on the premises before it closed for the final time. ‌ As Stirling Aid Christmas Community Food, the volunteers distributed food donated from local businesses and supermarkets for free. The Community Food Project helped an average of 80 people a day, four days a week and helped divert 740 tonnes of food waste from landfill. Transition Stirling have continued to operate a number of other projects which had been based on the premises from alternative venues. Stirling Council planners are expected to make a recommendation on the planning application in due course.

New Mexico congressman partners with Sen. Cory Booker on legislation to help farmers
New Mexico congressman partners with Sen. Cory Booker on legislation to help farmers

Yahoo

time28-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

New Mexico congressman partners with Sen. Cory Booker on legislation to help farmers

Mar. 27—A New Mexico congressman is partnering with New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker on legislation to force the U.S. Department of Agriculture to honor its contracts with farmers and farming organizations. Booker, a Democrat, introduced the Honor Farmer Contracts Act on Thursday in the Senate, and Rep. Gabe Vasquez, D-N.M., introduced a companion bill in the House to release withheld funding for signed contracts and agreements with the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The legislation comes after the USDA paused payments for some programs and canceled others over the last two months. Vasquez's office pointed specifically to a Community Food Project grant frozen for Frontier Food Hub in Silver City and Santa Fe-based Quivira Coalition's Partnership for Climate-Smart Commodities funding getting frozen. "When farmers sign contracts, they expect the government to follow through. It's that simple. This bill will immediately unfreeze critical funding, ensure farmers are paid for their work, and reopen essential USDA offices that were shuttered without notice," Vasquez said in a statement. The bill is one of several recently introduced that draw attention to the ways the Trump administration has upset government norms, including a bill Sen. Ben Ray Luján, D-N.M., introduced Thursday with Rep. Dave Min, D-Calif., to ensure that special government employees like tech billionaire Elon Musk are subject to transparency and accountability requirements. The Honor Farmer Contracts Act would require USDA to pay farmers all past-due payments as quickly as possible and prohibit the agency from canceling contracts with farmers or organizations that assist farmers unless they fail to meet the conditions of the contract. It would also prohibit USDA from closing Farm Service Agency and Natural Resources Conservation Service offices and Rural Development Service Centers without 60 days notice and justification to Congress. Two county Farm Service Agency offices in New Mexico have lease terminations listed on the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) website in Clovis and Roswell, but the Curry County Farm Service Agency in Clovis and the Chaves County Farm Service Agency in Roswell are still operating. USDA did not immediately provide an explanation for the offices' inclusion on the DOGE site. The legislation has support from at least 352 farm and food groups, including more than a dozen based in New Mexico, such as Agri-Cultura Cooperative Network, New Mexico Farmers' Marketing Association, Shiprock Traditional Farmers Cooperative and New Mexico Food and Agriculture Policy Council. "As the most productive season of the year approaches, farmers and rural communities cannot afford further delays — without urgent action to reinstate these contracts, farms and organizations risk laying off workers, missing the planting season, or shutting down entirely," a letter from the hundreds of farming organizations reads.

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