Baltimore Sun

Bridge Play

- Frank Stewart

South dealer N-S vulnerable

In the club lounge, Unlucky

Louie was grumbling about the high cost of everything.

“Money isn’t the key to happiness,” I observed.

“If I had the money,” Louie said, “I could have a key made.”

Louie might make money in his penny game if he knew the key to good dummy play:

Count your winners. At six spades, Louie took the ace of hearts, led a trump to his ace and returned a diamond to dummy’s queen. East won and led a trump.

Louie won, took the ace of diamonds and ruffed a diamond with the king of trumps.

When East discarded, Louie was sunk. He could pitch a diamond on the king of hearts but still had a diamond loser.

THREE CLUBS

Louie succeeds if he keys on possible winners. He has six trumps, two hearts, one diamond — and three clubs. At Trick Two, Louie takes the king of hearts to discard his ace of clubs. He next leads the queen of clubs and discards a diamond.

West wins, but Louie ruffs the heart return, draws trumps ending in dummy and takes his club winners.

DAILY QUESTION

You hold: ♠ K32 ♥ AK74

♦ Q2 ♣ Q J 10 9. Your partner opens one diamond, you respond one heart and he bids one spade. What do you say?

ANSWER: At your second turn as responder, you can often place the contract — or suggest a contract by limiting your strength. Here, you have balanced pattern, stoppers in clubs and enough strength for game (but not enough to try for slam). Bid 3NT. A bid of 2NT would not be forcing.

©2021 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

NORTH K32 AK74 Q2 QJ109

BELLE PLAINE, Kan. — More than a year after two U.S. Department of Agricultur­e research agencies were moved from the nation’s capital to Kansas City, Missouri, forcing a mass exodus of employees who couldn’t or didn’t want to move, they remain critically understaff­ed and some farmers are less confident in the work they produce.

The decision to move the Economic Research Service and the National Institute of Food and Agricultur­e in September 2019 was pitched as putting them closer to farmers in the nation’s breadbaske­t, though much of their work involves advising members of Congress back in Washington. After the relocation was announced, President Donald Trump’s chief of staff at the time, Mick Mulvaney, joked that moving the jobs to Kansas City was also “a wonderful way to streamline government.”

Tom Vilsack inherited a demoralize­d workforce at the two agencies when he took over as secretary of agricultur­e under President

Joe Biden. With 235 vacancies between them, the agencies continued to hire during the pandemic and administra­tion change, but they are putting out work that is smaller in scope and less frequent, causing some farmers to look elsewhere for data they rely on to run their operations.

Among them is Vance Ehmke, who said he has been paying a lot more attention to private market analysis and what private grain companies are doing. The informatio­n feeds his decisions on everything from whether to buy more land or a new tractor to whether to build more grain bins.

“Here, when we need really good, hard informatio­n, you are really starting to question groups like USDA, which before that had a sterling reputation,” Ehmke said recently. “But out in the country, people are worried about how good the informatio­n is now because those groups are operating at half capacity.”

The relocation hollowed out years of specialize­d experience and delayed or scuttled some of the agencies’ research and other work.

Hiring at the Kansas City site remains well below the roughly 550 high-paying jobs localleade­rshadantic­ipated.

Farmers rely on the research to make decisions on a wide range of topics, from rural community planning to farming with climate change and volatile weather conditions, said Aaron Lehman, a farmer who is president of the Iowa Farmers Union.

The ERS examines issues including the rural economy, internatio­nal trade, food safety and programs that provide food assistance to poor Americans. NIFA, meanwhile, provides grants for agricultur­al research and other farm services.

“It has gone in the wrong direction in general in terms of accuracy now,” said Adrian Polansky, a farmer and former executive director of the USDA’s Farm Service Agency office in Kansas during the Obama administra­tion. “Whether that was for sure based on that transition or whether it was the leadership in the department in terms of what the political goals may have been, I am not exactly sure. But it seems like there was less reliabilit­y.”

 ?? ORLIN WAGNER/AP ?? Adrian Polansky, a former executive director of the USDA’s Farm Service Agency office in Kansas during the Obama administra­tion, has concerns about the agency.
ORLIN WAGNER/AP Adrian Polansky, a former executive director of the USDA’s Farm Service Agency office in Kansas during the Obama administra­tion, has concerns about the agency.

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