top of page

News

Click to read more.

Tax Season Cleanup: Which Records Can You Toss?

If you’ve filed your 2024 tax return, you may be eager to do some spring cleaning, starting with tax-related paper and digital clutter. The documentation needed to support a tax return may include receipts, bank and investment account statements, K-1s, W-2s, and 1099s. How long must you save these records? Three years is the general rule. But don’t be hasty: Failure to keep a paper trail for the information reported on a tax return could lead to problems if the IRS audits it.

Read more

Click to read more.

Payroll Fraud Threats Inside and Outside Your Company

Payroll fraud schemes can be costly. According to a 2024 Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE) study, the median loss generated by payroll fraud incidents is $50,000. It’s essential to know the payroll schemes making the rounds and how to prevent them or at least catch them before they go on very long.

Read more

Click to read more.

Enhancing Equipment, Safety, and Payroll: What’s New in BusyBusy!

At BusyBusy, we’re committed to making time tracking and workforce management as seamless as possible. Our latest updates introduce powerful new features that put more control into your hands. Here’s what’s new with our 2025.1 release:

Read more

Click to read more.

Are Nutrient Management Plans Working? Here’s What the Latest Water Quality Data Shows

As a sixth-generation farmer, Jeff O’Connor has seen his family farm change through the generations. The one common thread is a love of taking care of the land.

Read more

Click to read more.

Trench Rescue & What to Expect from Your Local Fire Department

It is important to understand that for your local fire department or rescue squad, trench rescue is a low frequency/high risk event. Fire departments across the country can have rescuers trained to an awareness level, operations level, or technician level.

Read more

Click to read more.

Legacy Phosphorus Sources Dominate P Losses from Tile Drains

Tile drainage is an important pathway for agricultural P losses in Ohio and Indiana, but little is known about the relative importance of newly applied P fertilizers and old soil P (aka legacy P) to tile drainage losses. Understanding these sources could help direct efforts to reduce P loss, for instance 4R fertilizer management practices will primarily reduce new P losses, while old P losses may require edge-of-field practices and/or drawdown of soil P.

Read more

Click to read more.

Seriously, Call Before You Dig

National Safe Digging Month serves as a reminder that digging without locating utility lines results in injuries, loss of life and property damage every year.

Read more

Click to read more

Secretary Rollins Names NRCS Chief

Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins announced the appointment of Audrey Bettencourt to lead the department’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS). Bettencourt is a third-generation California farmer and most recently served as the Global Director of Government Relations and External Affairs at Netafim, an international company specializing in irrigation technology.

Read more

Click to read more.

7 Data Sources That Cut Project Costs and Time

Every project, no matter how big or small, is a race against time. The longer it takes, the less profitable it is. And while shortcuts can save time, they can also lead to accidents. Striking the right balance between efficiency, productivity, profitability and ensuring worker safety is always the goal but recent data shows construction projects are exceeding budgets.

Read more

Click for more info.

OSHA's Focus Four Training Program

The four most common causes of worker fatalitiesin the construction industry are falls, being caught in or between machinery or equipment, being struck by objects, and electrocution. That is why we created a set of training resources to teach workers how to stay safe from these hazards.

Read more

Click to read more.

Truck Driver Pinned, Crushed Between Backing Dozer and Truck

He was standing near the back of the truck when the dozer was being backed up. The dozer operator did not see the truck or driver. The truck driver was crushed between the dozer and the truck and pronounced dead at the scene, according to the patrol.

Read more

Click to read more.

Are Nutrient Management Plans Working? Here’s What the Latest Water Quality Data Shows

Bringing science to actionable and practical insights to reduce nutrient runoff has been the task of a multi-state effort, developed in response to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) 2008 Gulf Hypoxia Action Plan.

Read more

Watch now

Personal Reflections for World Water Day

Water shapes lives, communities, and the world we share. For World Water Day, hear directly from our team members about what water means to them and why protecting it matters. Watch the video to see their perspectives and let their words remind us that water management is essential, today and every day.

Watch now

Click to read more.

Constructed Wetlands for Water Quality: Insights and farmer perspectives

In agriculture, wetlands can be a powerful tool used to intercept tile drainage, reducing nutrient loss for water quality improvement. An edge-of-field practice included in the Illinois Nutrient Loss Strategy (NLRS) suite of agricultural conservation practices. Wetlands, constructed or restored, have benefits for water quality and wildlife.

Read more

Watch video

Describing Drainage Intensity and Drainage Coefficient

Learn about Drainage Intensity and Drainage Coefficient with a simple example. Learn how the main pipe should be sized for best drainage performance.

Watch video

Click to view tools

Transformingdrainage.org Conservation Drainage Tools

The TRANSFORMINGDRAINAGE.org project has developed a suite of tools aimed at improving water management in agricultural landscapes.

Read more

NACD

NACD Report Highlights Impacts of Funding Cuts

The National Association of Conservation Districts (NACD) has released a report about the impacts of recent Executive Orders and funding freezes on America’s locally led conservation delivery system, including conservation districts and the producers and communities they serve. The report was informed by a survey the association distributed to conservation districts last month, which received over 350 responses from across 45 states and territories.

Read more

Trench Worker

Data Shows 70% Decline in Trench-Related Worker Fatalities

Common Ground Alliance (CGA) applauded the recent decline in trench-related fatalities highlighted by OSHA's preliminary data. This steep 70% decrease since 2022 shows the effectiveness of focused safety partnerships, including CGA's participation in OSHA's Safe Trenching and Excavation Operations Alliance, which emphasizes outreach, education and training.

Read more

Capitol Building

Administration Initiates WOTUS Definition Reform

The seemingly never ending battle to bring reasonable rules to the definition of “Waters of the United States” (WOTUS) took a positive turn when EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin announced that the agency had worked with the Army Corps of Engineers on new guidance clarifying the WOTUS definition to comport with the U.S. Supreme Court’s Sackett decision.

Read more

Click to read more

Feather Prairie Farm: Conservation for Wildlife & Ag Resilience

Previously, ISAP offered a training on how conservation drainage practices –saturated buffers, bioreactors, controlled drainage, and constructed wetlands– can reduce pollution. We reached out to some of those trainees to learn how this training has been a benefit to them. One student was Wes Lehman, a conservation specialist and sales representative for Springfield Plastics, Inc. Wes his wife, Andie, also operate Feather Prairie Farm near Dwight, IL.

Read more

bottom of page