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SFCC to Receive $6M in Federal Funds for Agriculture Workforce Training Center

State Fair Community College will receive $6 million in federal funding to build a Workforce Training Center for Agriculture Advancement on the college’s 200-acre farm.

Rep. Mark Alford, R-Mo., secured the Community Project Funding request. The allocation was approved by Congress and signed by President Donald Trump as part of the fiscal year 2026 budget. The training center at SFCC is included among $23 million in targeted federal investments for Missouri’s 4th Congressional District.

“Missouri’s growth requires strategic investment,” Alford said. “The kind that strengthens infrastructure, advances research, supports rural health care and prepares the workforce of tomorrow.

“These are not giveaways,” Alford added. “They’re investments with measurable returns in jobs, innovation, health care access and long-term economic resilience. To put it simply, we’re turning the Show-Me State into the Grow Me State.”

The training center developed through this program will include an all-weather livestock working facility and provide a dynamic learning environment for students studying agriculture, animal science, agronomy and agricultural technology.

SFCC President Dr. Brent Bates expressed gratitude to Alford for investing in the future of Missouri’s agriculture workforce and for continuing to advocate for community colleges and strong educational partnerships.

Source : sfccmo.edu

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Disease risk, biosecurity, and real-time monitoring continue to be major topics across the pork industry. In this episode of Swine Web Industry Perspectives, presented by Farm Health Guardian, we discuss how digital biosecurity and real-time data are changing the way producers think about herd protection, people movement, and operational decision-making.

The conversation explores:

disease risk in modern pork production,

the impact of people movement on biosecurity,

the importance of real-time monitoring,

digital biosecurity technology,

and how Farm Health Guardian developed tools designed to support modern swine operations.

As the industry continues focusing on prevention, preparedness, and operational efficiency, connected technologies and actionable data are becoming increasingly important parts of modern herd health management.