Capital Press Agriculture News Oregon

2 Josephine County commissioners admit hemp investment

GRANTS PASS, Ore. (AP) — Two Josephine County commissioners who sent a letter to the Oregon Legislature opposing a bill that would restrict hemp production have revealed they are partners in a consortium that is growing hemp near Murphy.

The Daily Courier reports that following threats of an ethics investigation against Commissioner Cherryl Walker, Commissioner Simon Hare announced Wednesday that he also is an industrial hemp production.

Walker has been fending off claims by critics that she has a conflict of interest by advocating against House Bill 2668, which would place restrictions on hemp production and specifically would affect industrial hemp production in Josephine, Jackson and Douglas counties.

Marijuana growers have opposed hemp farms because they fear cross-pollination.

Oregon Ethics Commission officials say they have not received a formal complaint against Walker.

Growers hear OSU scientists discuss wheat from root to crown

MORO, Ore. — The latest developments on soil problems, diseases and varietal options attracted about five dozen wheat growers and others to Oregon State University’s Sherman County field day.

Stephen Machado, a crop physiology and agronomy professor assigned to the Columbia Basin Agricultural Research Center in Pendleton, explained ways to increase soil pH and reduce acidity.

While lime application is the usual fix, biochar shows promise, Machado said. Biochar, a charcoal-like substance produced by heating woody biomass such as logging slash, carries a pH of about 10, Machado said. Trials have shown wheat yield increases ranging from 26 to 34 percent, and biochar may need to be applied only once, compared to every couple years with lime, he said.

“It’s still new, but it’s something we are considering,” Machado said. He acknowledged biochar production would have to be increased to establish a dependable supply and bring down the price.

Soil scientist Don Wysocki, also at OSU’s Pendleton station, delivered the news that black leg disease was found in Eastern Oregon canola. An outbreak in the Willamette Valley last year was a concern to specialty seed growers and became part of the unresolved argument about allowing canola in the valley.

After the discovery, Wysocki examined last year’s canola stubble and found it there, too.

“That tells me it was fairly wide spread in 2014,” he said.

He said growers shouldn’t panic.

“You manage it,” Wysocki said. “We have the disease. We just don’t know how severe it’s going to be or what the effect will be.”

Mike Flowers, an OSU wheat breeder, walked growers through the characteristics of multiple new varieties under development.

Richard Smiley, an OSU expert in soil-borne pathogens, held forth on root lesion nematodes and fusarium crown rot. All types of wheat are vulnerable to the pathogens, which interfere with plants’ ability to extract water and nutrients from the soil, he said.

In one Iranian study, the combination of root and crown diseases reduced yield 68 percent, Smiley said.

A common weed in wheat fields, jointed goat grass, is a good host of nematodes, but spraying for the weed may cause the nematodes to migrate to moist wheat roots, Smiley said.

He said barley is much less sensitive, and wheat following barley in rotation does well.

“There’s something magical about barley’s resistance to these root lesion nematodes,” Smiley said.

Smiley, who is retiring, spoke briefly at a lunch following the field presentations. He thanked local growers “for the 30 years of a good ride I’ve had here at the Sherman station.”

The field day coincided with a visit from a Chinese trade team representing several grain and oil companies. Blake Rowe, CEO of the Oregon Wheat Commission, said he’s hoping to convince Chinese companies to buy Oregon wheat instead of Australian and Canadian products.

Buck shot outside deer hunting season in La Grande

LA GRANDE, Ore. (AP) — Investigators with the Oregon State Police Fish and Wildlife Division are trying to solve a poaching case outside of La Grande, and it wants the public’s help.

Sgt. Chris Hawkins says a buck in the Starkey Unit was shot twice in the head with a .17-caliber rifle. The shooting happened around June 3, a time when deer hunting is not in season.

Hawkins says a citizen found the buck only a couple miles off Interstate 84 in Union County.

A reward is being offered by the Oregon Hunters Association through the Turn-in-Poachers program for any information leading to a conviction.

The program number is 1-800-452-7888.

Farm exemption to paid sick leave bill rejected

SALEM — The Oregon Senate rejected a last-ditch effort to exclude farms from a bill that requires employers to provide workers with paid sick leave.

Senate Bill 454 was approved by the Senate 17-13 on June 10 despite requests by several lawmakers to send the proposal back to committee for an amendment to exempt agricultural businesses.

“I don’t care what anybody else says in this room, you’re going to hurt ag,” said Sen. Chuck Thomsen, R-Hood River, who raises pears.

The bill was approved largely along partisan lines, with all Democrats except Sen. Betsy Johnson, D-Scappoose, voting in favor and all Republicans voting against it.

Under the legislation, employers with more than 10 workers must provide them with 40 hours of paid sick time per year. Those with fewer workers must provide unpaid sick leave.

During a floor debate on SB 454, Thomsen argued that farmers should be exempted because many hire large numbers of workers to pick perishable crops, with prices dictated by global supply and demand.

“We don’t have the ability to recoup costs,” he said.

The bill could theoretically allow an entire picking crew to take paid sick leave at once, leaving the farmer with an unharvested crop while they go harvest for another grower, Thomsen said.

Agricultural employers say the bill is a “job killer and a business killer,” not only for fruit growers but also cattle and wheat producers who have year-round workers, said Sen. Ted Ferrioli, R-John Day.

Opponents of SB 454 claim that it amounts to an unfunded mandate that will cost Oregon companies about $1 billion a year.

“This is the straw that breaks the camel’s back,” said Ferrioli.

Sen. Michael Dembrow, D-Portland, said the bill has undergone multiple changes to accommodate employers and he denied that agriculture’s unique needs were ignored.

“When someone came to us with a problem, we tried to solve it whenever possible,” he said.

Specifically, workers can only use their paid sick leave after completing a 90-day probation period, so many seasonal workers will never even qualify for the benefit, Dembrow said.

It’s also unlikely that workers will pretend to be sick and forgo picking fruit at piece rate wages, which are usually higher than the minimum wage they’d get under paid sick leave, he said.

The bill is necessary because higher-paid workers in Oregon generally get paid sick leave but most low-wage workers do not, Dembrow said.

Such workers risk getting fired or losing significant income by not showing up for work when ill, he said. “This is one of the most striking examples of economic inequity that we face.”

The 90-day probation period won’t actually stop many farm workers from qualifying for paid sick leave, since growers plant multiple varieties of crops, such as blueberries, to mature over a longer period of time, said Roger Beyer, lobbyist for the Oregon Blueberry Commission and other farm groups.

“Their picking season lasts 100 days or more,” he said.

Also, workers who return to a farm to prune or perform other duties within 180 days will continue to accrue time toward the 90 day probation period, said Jenny Dresler, government affairs associate at the Oregon Farm Bureau.

Growers will need to contend with a complicated formula to determine whether they average 10 workers per year, and track workers who leave and return to the farm, she said.

While SB 454 has yet to be approved by the House, it’s proponents likely don’t expect significant obstacles, Dresler said. “I doubt they would be moving forward if they didn’t think the votes were there.”

Ag’s needs from Willamette Basin’s dam, reservoir system studied

With drought and changing precipitation patterns on the minds of farmers and ranchers, an ongoing study of the Willamette River Basin’s dams and reservoirs is taking on a new urgency.

One of the key issues to be answered in the Willamette Basin Review is how much water agriculture really needs — or wants.

“That is indeed the question,” said Jim Johnson, land use and water planning coordinator for the Oregon Department of Agriculture.

The study is a joint project of the Oregon Water Resources Department and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and it could ultimately result in Congress being asked to re-allocate water stored behind 13 dams in the Willamette River drainage system.

The Corps of Engineers owns and operates the dams and reservoirs. The projects were built for flood control, irrigation, power production, navigation, wildlife and other purposes, but it’s water for agricultural use that is getting close attention.

Another federal agency, the Bureau of Reclamation, holds the water rights certificates for the entire conservation storage available in the Willamette system. The certificates authorize 1.64 million acre-feet of stored water for irrigation annually, but less than 5 percent of it is used. Meanwhile, growing cities and industrial users can’t get at the remainder. The Willamette Basin, running roughly 120 miles south from Portland to Cottage Grove, holds about 75 percent of the state’s population and is growing rapidly.

But agriculture is big in the Willamette Valley as well, growing about 170 crops and accounting for more than 40 percent of the state’s gross farm sales, according to a 2013 Water Resources Department draft report.

Johnson and others point out that a significant amount of farmland in the valley isn’t irrigated and potentially could be used to grow higher-value crops if farmers could turn on the sprinklers. That capability should be taken into consideration when deciding future water allocations, Johnson said in an email.

“We have a great deal of acreage in the Valley that has greater potential if water could be made available,” he said.

Climate change is a big part of the discussion. In the Pacific Northwest in recent years, winter precipitation has arrived as rain rather than snow. This year, meager mountain snowpacks have already melted, according to federal hydrologists.

The WRD draft report says that may be the new normal. Scientific models indicate the Willamette Basin is headed for warmer, wetter winters and hotter, drier summers. The average temperature is projected to increase by 2 to 7 degrees Celsius over the next century, and the Cascades snowpack will decrease by 60 percent, according to the report.

Melting snow traditionally provides up to 80 percent of the Willamette River’s flow in late summer, but that flow is expected to decrease by 20 to 50 percent as the mountain snowpacks diminish, according to the report.

“The area’s reliance on high-elevation water during summer months highlights the vulnerability of the Willamette Basin to the influences of a warming climate,” the report concludes. “Water stored in the Willamette Basin Corps Reservoirs is viewed as the last remaining supply of water for meeting future needs, both in-stream and out-of-stream needs.”

The changing patterns already play havoc with reservoir operators. This year, despite near normal precipitation in some areas, water levels in the Willamette Basin reservoirs are 51 percent of normal because the peak snow melt runoff occurred before operators began refilling reservoirs.

Corps of Engineers spokesman Scott Clemans said he’s heard some people question why the Corps doesn’t begin refill operations in December or January instead of waiting until February.

The reason is that the dams were built primarily for flood control, Clemans said, and the risk from flooding must be accounted for throughout the winter months.

Clemans said there are likely to be “wilder and wider swings” in refill operations as climate change takes hold.

The Corps and state Water Resources Department are expected to finish a report to Congress in three years.

Wildlife officials track wolf to southwest Oregon

KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. (AP) — Wildlife officials are tracking a wolf they say has made its way into southwest Oregon’s Klamath County.

The Herald and News reports the 2-year-old male gray wolf is one of two to make its way into the county from a dispersed Imnaha Pack in northeastern Oregon.

Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife official John Muir called the wolf that was captured and collared in 2014 a “wandering teenager.”

He said the wolf has made its way through a large swath of eastern Oregon and most recently sent signals near a cattle ranch.

Wildlife officials notified Yamsi Ranch partners John and Jerri Hyde of the wolf’s presence, who said they’ve had wolves on the property before, but never any problems.

They said they hope it moves on.

Judge: Logging project won’t impact wolves

The U.S. Forest Service doesn’t have to study the impact of logging on wolves before proceeding with a thinning project in Oregon’s Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest, a federal judge ruled.

The agency plans to treat about 3,200 acres as part of the Bybee project, which is aimed at reducing the risk of wildfire in overstocked forest stands.

Oregon Wild, an environmental group, filed a legal complaint claiming the Forest Service should have supplemented its environmental assessment of the project due to the presence of wolves in the area.

A male radio-collared wolf originally from Northeast Oregon, known as OR-7, sired two pups with a mate in the area last year. Gray wolves are protected as an endangered species in that part of the state.

The Forest Service conducted a “new information review” to see if logging would affect the wolves, but concluded it would not since their den was at least 15 miles away from the project site.

U.S. District Judge Owen Panner found that the agency took a sufficiently “hard look” at the issue, given the wolves’ distance and the lack of designated critical wolf habitat in the area.

Panner reached a similar conclusion in regard to the northern spotted owl, a threatened species, because the Bybee project doesn’t remove any of critical habitat or “take” any birds.

The Forest Service also postponed thinning some areas to preserve high value wildlife habitat, he said.

Oregon Wild claimed that the agency should have undertaken a more comprehensive “environmental impact statement” of the project because it contains potential federally designated areas and due to its proximity to the Crater Lake National Park.

The judge rejected these arguments because the project only has a small amount of acreage eligible for wilderness designation, the strictest form of federal land protection.

Panner said the Forest Service addressed concerns about Crater Lake National Park by scaling back the project near the park’s border, and he agreed that thinning will help protect the area from fire.

Oregon lawmakers getting closer on shaping new pot industry

GRANTS PASS, Ore. (AP) — In less than a month, Oregonians over age 21 will be able to legally grow, own and consume their own small amounts of recreational marijuana.

Legislators, however, are still working on the regulations that will govern the legal marijuana industry. After months of talks, they’re getting closer.

Oregon and Alaska both approved measures to legalize recreational marijuana last fall, following Washington state and Colorado, whose markets are up and running. Consumption of recreational pot becomes legal in Oregon on July 1.

As they hammer out the details of the larger retail marijuana industry, lawmakers are hoping to build a strong new economic sector for the state.

“The goal is to give everyone a fair shot at competing in this new marijuana market,” said Rep. Ann Lininger, D- Lake Oswebo, co-chair of the joint committee developing guidelines for the regulations. “We are welcoming people who want to invest in or come to Oregon and help us create a strong sector.”

Growers said they are excited by the prospect of coming into the mainstream.

“We are witnessing the surfacing of an old industry that’s 78 years in the making,” since Congress outlawed marijuana in 1937, said Richard Reames, a member of the board of directors of the Oregon SunGrown Growers Association. The group has hired a lobbyist to make sure its interests are protected in the Legislature.

Oregon already had a thriving medical marijuana program. Based on surveys of growers, Oregon consumes 160,000 pounds of marijuana a year, with up to 80,000 pounds consumed by the state’s 70,000 medical marijuana patients, said Seth Crawford, who teaches a class in marijuana policy at Oregon State University.

Based on interviews with Oregon lawmakers, state officials and industry representatives, there is strong support to let medical marijuana dispensaries, approved by the Legislature in 2013, also sell recreational marijuana.

However, it doesn’t look like retail operations will be able to sell recreational marijuana until late 2016, to allow time for setting up an orderly system for granting permits to growers, processors, wholesalers and dispensaries, and tracking pot from seedling to retail sales to keep it out of the black market.

Another issue has been how to satisfy indoor and as well as outdoor growers. Outdoor growers tend to be in southern Oregon, in the so-called Emerald Triangle, where there’s more sunshine. A lot of indoor growers are in the Portland area.

“I think that it is important for them to strike some sort of balance between the north and the south, the outdoor and the indoor,” said Donald Morse, a medical marijuana dispensary owner and director of the Oregon Cannabis Business Council. “It’s not just economics. It’s making sure that there’s enough supply, but not too much supply and the supply comes on a regular basis, and is not always just a land rush of marijuana in the fall from the outdoor harvest, while the rest of the year, people are starving.”

It looks likely that grower permits will give indoor growers and outdoor growers equal access to the market.

The Oregon Liquor Control Commission, which has authority over recreational sales, could award grower permits based on the canopy area — the horizontal area covered by branches and leaves. Individual outdoor growers would have up to four times the canopy area because they only produce one crop a year, while indoor growers can produce up to four crops a year under artificial lights.

Oregonians seem eager to get started. The city of Vancouver — just across the Columbia River from Portland — has become one of the hottest cannabis markets in Washington state. Four stores have reported sales totaling more than $18 million — better than 12 percent of all retail marijuana sales in Washington.

Fire line completed at Corn Creek blaze near Canyonville

ROSEBURG, Ore. (AP) — Crews have completed a fire line around a 100-acre blaze burning east of Canyonville, Oregon.

Kyle Reed of the Douglas Forest Protective Association says 90 firefighters, a bull dozer, and two water tenders are on scene Tuesday at the Corn Creek wildfire. They plan to strengthen fire lines and start mopping up.

The cause of the fire has yet to be established.

Reed says firefighters in that part of southwest Oregon are also responding to new reports of small fires after a lightning storm moved through Tuesday morning.

Oregon faces summer with little water to spare

If there were any doubt, the final snowpack report of the year from the USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service shows Oregon has little water to spare going into the height of summer.

Sixty percent of the NRCS’s automated measuring stations, called SNOTEL for snow telemetry, recorded their lowest snowpack on record. As of June 1, only one of the 81 SNOTEL sites in Oregon had any snow left.

Water forecasters and researchers have been repeating the same refrain for months: While the state’s precipitation totals were near normal over the winter, it fell as rain rather than snow and won’t be available to melt and feed streams as the weather warms.

In Western Oregon, the snowpack was 60 to 90 percent below normal. On the east side of the Cascades, the snowpack ranged from 30 to 80 percent of normal, according to NRCS.

In May, NRCS reported the snowpack wasn’t just meager, it was already gone. In many streams, the peak flow from melting snow occurred in February.

“Snowmelt in February is months too early to synchronize crop planting and irrigating,” NRCS Portland snow survey supervisor Scott Oviatt said in a news release.

The melt and runoff also came too early for Oregon reservoir operators to capture and store. Reservoirs were designed for flood control and late season irrigation, and operate under rules that govern spring water releases.

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown has already declared a drought state of emergency for Klamath, Lake, Malheur, Harney, Crook, Baker, Wheeler, Josephine, Jackson, Lane, Deschutes, Wasco, Grant, Morrow and Umatilla counties. The southeast corner of the state is considered an “extreme” drought area by the USDA.

Oregon’s situation isn’t as severe as California’s, where a continued drought has caused farmers to leave fields fallow and touched off a well-drilling spree that was featured in a June 7 article in the New York Times.

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee declared a statewide drought emergency in mid-May. In Idaho, the U.S. Drought Monitor lists various regions of the state as in extreme or severe drought, and the remainder in moderate drought or as “abnormally dry.”

NRCS allocated up to $2.5 million for Oregon farmers, ranchers and woodland owners in drought-declared counties to help mitigate the effects on their operations. Funding is available through the Environmental Quality Incentives Program. Producers should file funding applications by June 26; details are available at USDA county service centers. http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/nrcs/main/or/contact/local/

Oregon’s mosquito control effort focuses on larvae

MEDFORD, Ore. (AP) — Technicians in southwest Oregon’s Jackson County are going after larvae instead of adult mosquitoes in their control efforts this year.

Jackson County Vector Control manager and biologist Jim Lunders said verifying what types of mosquitoes are present and then targeting those insects at their source will help eliminate populations, the Mail Tribune reported (http://bit.ly/1dXJxbh ).

“You can’t just go spray for adult mosquitoes anymore,” Lunders said. “We need to be going out and finding these larval sources and controlling the mosquitoes there first.”

New federal environmental guidelines prompted the changed policy.

“We were transitioning this way anyway,” he said. “It’s just a better way to do what we do.”

Lunders said the agency got about 3,000 calls for service last year that mostly dealt with returning adult populations.

“Once we know all the larval sources have been controlled in that area ... then we’ll do adult mosquito application,” Lunders says. “We’re trying to fix the problem rather than just put a Band-Aid.”

Vector Control officials are encouraging the public to eliminate standing water sources that can yield new mosquitoes in seven days.

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Information from: Mail Tribune, http://www.mailtribune.com/

Canola extension bill heads for Senate vote

SALEM — A bill to extend limited canola production in Oregon’s Willamette Valley will move to a vote on the Senate floor over the objections of a specialty seed growers’ group.

House Bill 3382, which allows canola to be grown on 500 acres in the region through 2019, had already passed the House and was approved on June 3 by the Senate Committee on Environment and Natural Resources with a “do pass” recommendation.

Lawmakers contemplated banning canola in the Willamette Valley in 2013 due to fears of cross-pollination with related seed crops but instead opted for a six-year moratorium.

During the first three years, Oregon State University was directed to study volunteer plants, cross-pollination and disease issues associated with canola on 500 acres annually.

Growers who want to continue raising canola are now pressing lawmakers to extend that 500 acres of production through the final three years of the moratorium by passing HB 3382.

The Willamette Valley Specialty Seed Association and the Friends of Family Farmers group oppose the bill, fearing a larger “seed bank” of canola, among other issues.

Sen. Chris Edwards, D-Eugene, said that opponents have also expressed concerns with the integrity of OSU’s study, such as the amount of scientific peer review it will receive.

To assuage their concerns, an amendment to HB 3382 specifies that canola can only be grown in the region for another three years if it’s cultivated under the same restrictions as during the OSU study, he said.

Under the amendment, OSU’s study must also be reviewed by experts on vegetable seed production and include data on canola and brassica seed production in several other regions in the U.S. and around the world.

The Oregon Department of Agriculture must also make recommendations based on OSU’s study about what protections are necessary to ensure coexistence between the canola and specialty seed industries.

Opponents of HB 3382 said the revisions weren’t enough to overcome their objections, stating they’re afraid the ODA will interpret the bill as authorizing the agency to allow unrestricted canola production after 2019.

Edwards said the legislature will inevitably have to make further decisions about canola after 2019.

Although the amendment did not result in a “Kumbaya moment” of agreement, it nonetheless has enough support among lawmakers, he said.

The committee unanimously referred the bill to a vote on the Senate floor, though Sen. Floyd Prozanzki, D-Eugene, said he will continue to analyze the bill and may ultimately change his mind.

Klamath water transfer bill awaits governor’s signature

SALEM — Legislation that permits water right transfers by Klamath basin farmers has been approved by Oregon lawmakers. Supporters say it will provide flexibility during chronic water shortages.

Senate Bill 206, which allows such leases and transfers before water rights in the regional are adjudicated in court, was approved by the House on June 4 after earlier passing the Senate and now awaits Gov. Kate Brown’s signature.

While water rights in the Klamath Basin have been quantified by state regulators, the legal adjudication process is still pending, which has prevented growers from making transfers.

Aside from shifting limited water among growers, transfers let farmers dedicate water to in-stream uses for environmental benefits without risking a forfeiture of their water rights, said Greg Addington, executive director of the Klamath Water Users Association.

“It’s another tool we’re able to use, not just in drought years,” he said.

Lawmakers also recently passed companion legislation, Senate Bill 264, which authorizes Oregon water regulators to oversee a water agreement among tribes and irrigators in the Upper Klamath Basin.

Both pieces of legislation have drawn fire from opponents of a controversial proposal to remove four hydroelectric dams along the Klamath River, which is meant to improve its hydrologic function.

Opponents fear that dam removal will release built up toxic sediment. They also say it will deprive local governments of tax revenue.

Tom Mallams, a Klamath County commissioner, urged lawmakers to reject SB 206 because it will result in more water diversions for non-agricultural uses.

He also asked them to abandon SB 264, arguing that it’s a necessary part of broader water deals in the region that require dam removal.

During the House vote on June 4, Rep. Gail Whitsett, R-Klamath Falls, said she her support of the bills was not intended as an endorsement of those larger agreements. Both bill passed the House unanimously.

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BANKS, Ore. — Eighteen college forestry students from Norway visited a Banks, Ore., Christmas tree farm June 3 as part of a two-week stint here to study Northwest farm and forestry practices.

The students, mostly seniors, peppered farm owner Mark Schmidlin with questions: How many trees does he plant per acre, they wanted to know. What percentage of the trees make top grade? How much fertilizer does he add and when? How does he harvest the trees? How long does it take to produce a Christmas tree? How does he process and transport them?

From the Norwegian University of Life Sciences, the students were primarily interested in forestry operations, but also wanted to see a Christmas tree farm. So tour organizer, Olav Hoibo, who is spending a year’s sabbatical at the College of Forestry at Oregon State University, called Schmidlin and arranged the stop.

Two of the students, including Lars Raaen, said their families are involved in Christmas tree production. And, according to Raaen, many Norwegian families decorate their homes each holiday season with a Christmas tree.

“Christmas trees are as big in Norway as they are here,” Raaen said.

Among forestry stops, the students visited forest products operations in British Columbia, Washington and Oregon.

Birger Eikenes, a forest technology professor at the Norway’s University of Life Sciences and one of three professors to make the trip, said the students already knew a lot about U.S. forest products practices. “But it is another thing to go and see with your own eyes,” he said.

“They wanted to go out and see how forestry is done in other places,” Eikenes said.

“We wanted to see how things are done on the other side of the water,” said Terje Olav Ryd, “and see if it is as big as we expected. We always hear that everything is bigger in America.

“It is,” he said.

The students were next headed to Northern California to view Sequoia trees and Coastal redwoods, Eikenes said.

“There is nothing that size in Norway,” Eikenes said, noting that trees in Norway are more similar in size to East Coast trees.

Of course, there are a lot of similarities between the two countries, the students said, including environmental regulations.

“We have a lot of environmental rules that will shut down areas for a while,” said Ingebord Anker-Rasch.

Also, she said, like here, the industry has mechanized its harvest in recent years, and is recovering from a lengthy economic downturn.

“The last few years, the pulp industry was suffering from low prices,” Anker-Rasch said. “But now there is a big focus on using wood products in construction.”

Friends, colleagues laud OSU’s Kelvin Koong

CORVALLIS, Ore. — About 200 friends, colleagues and family of Kelvin Koong gathered June 5 at Oregon State University’s Oldfield Animal Teaching Facility to celebrate Koong’s 28 years of service to the university.

Koong, who began his career at OSU in 1987 as associate director of the College of Agricultural Sciences Experiment Station, is retiring June 30.

He spent the past three years as executive director of the university’s Agricultural Research Foundation.

Between those two assignments, Koong held several positions, including a two-year stint as dean of the university’s College of Veterinary Medicine, interim dean of the College of Agricultural Sciences and interim director of the OSU Extension Service.

Several praised Koong during the celebration for his willingness to take on the different assignments, many for short durations, and for putting his best behind each position.

“It seems like every time we had a sticky job to do, we’d ask Kelvin,” said former OSU President John Burns.

“Some folks in a temporary role would’ve just filled out their time,” said U.S. Rep. Kurt Schrader, D-Ore., who worked with Koong on establishing a four-year veterinary college at OSU. “Not this guy. He said, ‘Why don’t we have a four-year veterinary college?’”

Schrader, a veterinarian who was serving in the Oregon Legislature at the time, said Koong was able to bring Republicans and Democrats together to back the effort to expand the veterinary college from two years to four years at a difficult budget time.

“This was a bill that we couldn’t afford,” Schrader said, “but somehow, Kelvin Koong found the money.”

Schrader said Koong also was instrumental in eliciting state funds to help back the construction of the now nearly three-year-old College of Veterinary Medicine’s Multi-Animal Teaching Facility.

“He’s very good at making us do the right thing at the end of the day,” Schrader said.

Sharon Harmon, executive director of the Oregon Humane Society, praised Koong for his work in establishing the first of its kind hands-on program for veterinary students to train at the Humane Society’s Portland shelter.

“This was groundbreaking,” Harmon said. “Prior to this, there was no partnership between a humane society and a university in the U.S.

“This program is now in place in 14 universities across the country,” she said.

“Kelvin deeply cares about this institution and the students who go here,” said Katie Fast, new executive director of Oregonians for Food and Shelter, who worked with Koong often in the Legislature in her role in government affairs for the Oregon Farm Bureau.

Phil Ward, state executive director of the Farm Service Agency who worked with Koong while serving first as assistant director and then as director of the Oregon Department of Agriculture, characterized Koong as “the best relationship builder I’ve ever known. And those relationships have stood the test of time.”

Thayne Dutson, former dean of the OSU College of Agricultural Sciences, said what many believed in closing his comments.

“OSU is a better place now because you were here,” Dutson said. “Thank you, Kelvin.”

Egg farm honored by Oregon economic development agency

Wilcox Farms, a 106-year-old family business, was selected Agri-Business of the Year by the Strategic Economic Development Corporation of Marion, Polk and Yamhill counties.

The award from SEDCOR, the lead economic development group for the three counties in Oregon’s Willamette Valley, is presented annually to a business that achieves excellence in agri-business and maintains the role of ag in the economy.

The company is based in Roy, Wash., and has egg farm operations there and in Aurora, Ore., and a processing facility in Great Falls, Mont. Its products are sold at Fred Meyer, Safeway, Roth’s, Lamb’s, Natural Grocers, New Seasons, Costco and LifeSource Natural Foods stores.

Wilcox was founded in 1909 and now is in its fourth generation of family operation. In recent years the company has committed itself to raise chickens in a cage-free environment and on organic feed. It has been certified by Certified Humane, Food Alliance, Salmon Safe and Oregon Tilth.

Scaled-back GMO mediation bill advances

SALEM — A bill aimed at encouraging mediation over biotech crop disputes is poised to become law in Oregon, but the original idea has been scaled back substantially.

An amended version of House Bill 2509 is headed for a vote on the Senate floor after earlier passing the House despite some unexpected pushback from critics of genetically modified organisms.

Under the initial version of the bill, a farmer who refuses to engage in mediation but then loses a lawsuit over a biotech crop dispute would have to pay the opposing party’s legal bills.

Although HB 2509 quietly passed the House without attracting controversy, it met with resistance in the Senate, where GMO critics pounced on it as being unfair to non-biotech growers.

Friends of Family Farmers, Our Family Farms Coalition and the Center for Food Safety argued that growers shouldn’t be forced into mediation that could prevent them from obtaining timely legal relief if they’re threatened with cross-pollination from GMOs.

Critics also objected to the lack of time and cost limits on mediation, claiming it could become prohibitively expensive and thus discourage growers from approaching neighbors with concerns.

The Oregon Department of Agriculture’s oversight of the mediation program was also called into question, since some GMO critics claim the agency is biased in favor of genetic engineering.

An amendment to HB 2509, recently adopted by the Senate Committee on Environment and Natural Resources, gives farmers the option of seeking mediation through ODA or the USDA.

The time and cost of mediation is capped at four hours and $2,500, and the threat of liability for the opposing party’s legal expenses is removed from the new version.

Instead, if a lawsuit is filed, a judge “may impose sanctions” against a farmer who refuses mediation and “may consider that unwillingness when determining whether to grant or deny a preliminary injunction.”

These changes have convinced Friends of Family Farmers, which is closely involved in legislative negotiations over GMOs, to drop its opposition to HB 2509.

The group was nervous about the attorney fee provision because biotech companies like Monsanto and Syngenta have tremendous legal resources they could deploy to aid biotech growers, said Ivan Maluski, its policy director.

“I don’t think you need to encourage people toward mediation with stiff penalties,” he said.

While Maluski acquiesced to HB 2509, he said it’s “laughable” to consider the bill an important step in state oversight of GMOs.

He would prefer the legislature adopt a proposal that would create control areas where biotech crops are subject to restrictions, such as isolation distances.

“The legislature has really accomplished nothing significant on this issue so far,” Maluski said.

The Oregon Farm Bureau, which opposes stricter GMO regulations, is still supportive of HB 2509 even though it’s been toned down, said Katie Fast, vice president of public policy for the group.

“It doesn’t have as many teeth to push people into mediation” but the bill will still hopefully help them to find ways to coexist, she said.

The Oregon Farm Bureau isn’t aware of any lawsuits over cross-pollination among organic, conventional and biotech growers, so a more drastic approach is unnecessary, Fast said.

More stringent proposals debated this year appear to be a “solution in search of a problem,” she said. “We’re hearing of very few neighbor-to-neighbor conflicts.”

Fake orca spouts, plays whale sounds to scare off sea lions

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — A fake life-sized orca that spouts water and plays recordings of its real-life counterparts is being deployed to scare off hundreds of sea lions crowding docks off the Oregon coast, but it ran into a snag its first day on the job.

The orca was brought over land from Bellingham, Washington, on Thursday, but as soon as it hit the water at Astoria, its engine flooded, KGW-TV reported. Officials in Astoria say they have found a replacement motor and the fake orca will make it to the water near the docks within several hours.

The fake orca, named “Island,” belongs to a whale watching business and was originally built in the 1980s. It’s outfitted with a Suzuki eight-horsepower outboard motor and speakers.

The replica orca is actually a boat and will be driven around in the waters near Astoria, free of charge to the port. It will also tow a smaller, 7-foot-long orca behind it.

Sea lions have become a nuisance to the city and commercial fishermen because they damage docks, prevent boaters from using them and eat too many salmon.

In recent weeks, the Port of Astoria tried creative ways to keep the animals away, including installing beach balls, colorful tape, chicken wire and electrified mats — but were not successful.

The sea lion population has increased dramatically in recent decades. The animals are protected under the Marine Mammal Protection Act, but the law includes provisions allowing for deterrence of the sea lions to protect private property.

Officials said it’s not known if the sea lions will actually be scared of the phony killer whale. Wildlife official say sea lions are smart and might figure out it’s a fake.

“It’s a theory, we don’t know how it will work. An orca is a natural predator to a sea lion. But we don’t know if they will totally ignore it, or swim for their lives,” said Port of Astoria Executive Director Jim Knight.

Knight said one of the sounds the fake orca will emit is a “call to dinner” — usually emitted by the killer whales in the wild after they kill a sea lion or seal.

Lloyd’s ends long relationship with Oregon cannabis businesses

The famous insurance marketplace Lloyd’s of London is pulling out of the cannabis insurance business.  That’s surprised agents in Oregon who’ve used Lloyd’s for almost a decade to insure medical marijuana businesses. “It had been one of the oldest programs in the country,” said Todd Foster, an agent with Oregon Cannabis Insurance. Foster’s company has offices in Portland, Medford and Bend and provides liability, property and inventory insurance to a wide range of clients -- from warehouse grow operations to marijunana gelato makers. According to Marijuana Business Daily, in a memo explaining the decision, Lloyd’s cited the conflict between federal and state law in the United States.  The company concluded that money stemming from legal state marijuana sales could be subject to federal anti-money laundering laws. Foster said about 30 of his clients are insured through Lloyd’s. The policies protect against risks like general business liability — for example, a customer slipping and falling — and property and inventory loss from fire or robbery.Foster hasn’t yet heard whether Lloyd’s will actively cancel policies or will not renew them when they expire. He is working to switch his clients over to five other insurers who are willing to work with cannabis businesses. The only one Foster is willing to name is Hannover Re of Germany, a large insurer that recently launched a marijuana program to compete with Lloyd’s. “The other four I’m going to keep close to my chest,” Foster said. Amy Margolis, a cannabis attorney and a lobbyist, said the timing of Lloyd’s decision creates a challenge in Oregon where many people are preparing for a legal market and trying to legitimize their businesses.  She expects the OLCC will require legal cannabis businesses to carry liability coverage. That’s among the requirements established in Washington state.  “You can tack this issue up along with the banking issue. We’re asking cannabis businesses to be active participants in a traditional business market. They can’t access banking and now it has become much more difficult to access insurance,” she said.

State Issues First Local Advisories To Boat Operators For Distant Tsunamis

OPB

In the event of a distant tsunami coming to the Oregon coast, you might not expect boat owners to head out to sea.

But that’s what many commercial and sports fishers do — to protect their vessels from the groundings, capsizes and collisions in harbors when tsunami waves near the shore.  In deep water, a passing tsunami is such an elongated hump that sailors might not even notice.

The state has released the first in a series of local advisories showing coastal boat operators where to go and what to do in the event of a distant tsunami.

Back in 2011, when boat owners heard a tsunami was on its way to the West Coast from Japan, many headed out to sea. The passing tsunami wasn’t a problem for them.  But in Crescent City, California, for example, the fleet couldn’t return because of harbor damage.

Jonathan Allan, with the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries (DOGAMI), says to make matters worse, a storm was approaching.

“It presented some challenges because people were evacuating quickly and weren’t necessarily adequately prepared, both in terms of having support staff on their vessels, you know fuel, etc. to be out there for extended periods of time, or food etc.,” he said.  “And so they were having to come up with alternative options for where to safely move to.”Those who didn’t have enough fuel returned to Crescent City, but had to anchor in some unusual spots.

Others had to sail to Humboldt Bay or Brookings Harbor, in Oregon, ports that some captains had never negotiated before.

The new DOGAMI advisory’s focus on a distant tsunami is important.

When a Cascadia Subduction Zone earthquake hits right off the Oregon coast, the resulting tsunami is expected to reach land in about 10 minutes.  So there won’t be time for boaters to head out to deep water.

But if the earthquake happens in Alaska, boat operators will have about four hours; if it occurs in Japan, they have about nine hours.

In 2011, after the Japan earthquake, what boat owners did in the end was keep close contact and help each other out.

Allan says the state’s new advisories focus on Newport and Toledo, but other locations will follow. “The regionally-released map is the first of its kind on the Oregon coast for a specific port community,” he said “It’s providing information to recreation and commercial boat operators as to the types of responses they can take in the event of a distance tsunami taking place.”

Terry Thompson is a commercial fisherman and a Commissioner for Lincoln County, and he thinks the advisory will help boat owners make good decisions. “A lot of people think they’re just going to go a short distance off shore,” he said. “They don’t realize that in a major tsunami, they’ve go to get outside of 100 fathoms. In a distant tsunami - that would be one like in Alaska or Japan - they’re going to have to get a shorter distance.”

In Newport and Toledo, that “shorter distance” could still take a couple of hours to reach. Boat operators would have to reach an area where the water was 30 fathoms - that is water at least 180 feet deep.

Thompson says when the next tsunami hits, boat owners need to take account of more than just the new map — they need to ask themselves questions like: “What’s the weather forecast?” and “How much time do I have?”

“Can you get to port and get up the hill before the tsunami hits, is the question,” he said. “In a distant tsunami, I’d have a chance. In a near shore tsunami and I’m off shore, I may just gamble for going to the deep, but I may be out there for a while.”

Walter Chuck’s small fishing boat was out of the water in 2011, so he didn’t have to make any difficult decisions. But he served on the committee that put the new advisories together.

He said some people wanted more details included. But he disagrees.

“I think if the plan was too detailed and there were too many steps, I think that in essence you would give someone a false sense of security that if you followed this plan, you would be okay,” Chuck said. “And in the event of a disaster, everything is very variable.”

He says when the next tsunami hits, he’ll monitor the marine channels and take advice from the U.S. Coast Guard.

http://www.opb.org/news/article/state-issues-first-local-advisories-for-distant-tsunamis/

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