The Switchyard Food Issue is a finalist for a 2024 National Magazine Award in the category of Single-Topic Issue. This is one of two National Magazine Awards for which FERN is a finalist in 2024. Read More
Alone on the range is a finalist for a 2024 National Magazine Award in the category of Public Interest reporting. This is one of two National Magazine Awards for which FERN is a finalist in 2024. Read More
In "A tell-tale tragedy," Esther Honig and Johnathan Hettinger dig into how the nation’s most important agricultural visa program is failing the workers it is supposed to protect. The story was part of the Pulitzer Center’s Farmworker Housing in America …
In "Alone on the range," Teresa Cotsirilos brings readers to the West's remote mountains and deserts, where we learn about the abuses that sheepherders withstand in an industry "beset by a level of abuse that even seasoned farmworker attorneys, government …
Officials at a massive pork plant with a history of labor violations called the cops on a disgruntled employee. Why did he end up dead? In "A police killing on the packing line," Ted Genoways recounts the tragic details of …
In Lisa Morehouse's audio story, "Peach farmer ‘Mas’ Masumoto talks about farming with ghosts," a collaboration with KQED's The California Report, we learn how labor and lessons can present themselves in the soil of grapevines and orchards, and the importance …
In "Facing the floodwaters in California’s San Joaquin Valley," a collaboration with KQED's The California Report, Teresa Cotsirilos digs into the deep-rooted struggles of the historically Black town of Allensworth. The residents there are trying to overcome a legacy of …
For her FERN exclusive story, "The child workers who feed you," Teresa Cotsirilos dug into investigation data from the Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division and found that more than 75 percent of recent child-labor violations were committed by …
In "Our Mango Republic," a collaboration with The Nation, Esther Honig explains how countless people have been trapped in Tapachula, a sprawling Mexican border town where many of the migrants take jobs in agriculture. They are helping to bolster the …
In "Lab-grown meat has a P.R. problem," published in collaboration with Bloomberg Businessweek, Joe Fassler explains that although leading scientists agree that cultured meat products won't give you cancer, the industry doesn't have the decades of data to prove it, …
In "Extreme weather means less food for California's farmworkers," published in collaboration with WBUR's Here and Now, Teresa Cotsirilos explains that farmworkers who harvest the nation’s food are paid so little that they can’t always afford to eat. Now extreme …
In “As heat rises, who will protect farmworkers?,” a FERN exclusive, Bridget Huber, Nancy Averett and Teresa Cotsirilos explain that though heat-related illness and death are a growing problem in U.S. agriculture, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration still hasn't …
In “The collective future of American agriculture,” published with The Nation, Dean Kuipers describes how pandemic-driven shortages gave fresh relevance to co-ops, hubs and other forms of collective agriculture. And with a trust-buster in the White House and a current …
In “Biogas from America’s favorite meat: pollution solution or a prop for poultry?,” Leanna First-Arai takes us to the top chicken-cultivating county in the United States. On the Delmarva Peninsula — which stretches down the eastern side of the Chesapeake …
In “The farmworkers in California’s fire zones,” published with Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting, Teresa Cotsirilos explains that when wildfires forced thousands of Californians to evacuate, a little-known 'ag pass' program let employers keep farmworkers on the job. …
In “Facing a merger and a pay cut, chicken farmers push back,” published with The Capitol Forum, Marcia Brown details how in Mississippi, contract growers risk retaliation by protesting a pay cut they say is tied to the latest Big …
In “Scorched,” published in print and online by Pacific Standard, Lauren Markham recounts the harrowing saga of a young woman and her daughter who make the trek across the U.S. border to flee political unrest in Honduras. They were caught by …
“The Trouble with Iowa: Corn, corruption, and the presidential caucuses,” by Richard Manning, was the cover story in the February issue of Harper’s Magazine. That alone is impact, as the venerable magazine has a gravitas that extends beyond its 560,000 monthly …
In “Big Tech’s food-delivery apps face a grassroots revolt,” published with Mother Jones, Dean Kuipers explains how restaurants got fed up with the exorbitant fees and other aggressive tactics from food-delivery apps like Grubhub and Uber Eats. So they took …
“Children Left Vulnerable By World Bank Amid Push For Development,” which was published on The Huffington Post in October 2015, is the latest installment of “Evicted and Abandoned,” a yearlong investigation into the hidden toll of World Bank-financed development projects on the …
Our April 2014 piece for American Prospect, “Plowed Under,” looked at native grassland across America’s Western Corn Belt, which are being plowed under and replaced with row crops at an unprecedented rate. The story reached an audience of 625,000 and had …