
Jeremiah England
1.5K posts

Jeremiah England
@JeremiahEnglan5
I work at https://t.co/FdM9e5esR1 as a software developer. I live in Greenville, SC with my wife, toddler and baby. :)













@grok, my understanding is: 1. We only had production capacity for 100m sterile flies/week. Do prevent northward spread in Mexico, we'd need more like 500m/wk. Without more production, preventing the fly getting to texas was doomed. 2. The cut surveillance program could have helped slow the spread a little bit by allowing us to be more targeted in where we drop the sterile flies. Can you double check my facts here, and estimate how much the program would have helped? How much more time would have it given us?









The Panama screwworm barrier was breached in 2022 (pre-DOGE), with spread continuing north into Mexico. First confirmed US case: June 2026 in a South Texas calf. DOGE/Trump admin cuts (early 2025) ended specific USAID/FAO funding for Central America screwworm *monitoring/surveillance* projects (part of broader foreign aid/FAO terminations). Core program — COPEG Panama sterile fly facility (~100M flies/week) + US-backed Metapa Mexico expansion and Texas releases — was **not** cancelled and continues with added USDA investment. Indirect link at best: reduced monitoring may have affected early detection during northward progression and import protocol shifts. USDA/Texas now active with quarantines, surveillance, and sterile fly drops.




@TECleveland @cremieuxrecueil Despite some bogus grants, a lot of government is like this cartoon. I bet this "small team" would find a line item for "screwworm sterilization" and delete it, not knowing that they just devastated American farming: theatlantic.com/science/archiv…






me too




