October 2, 2015 CapitalPress.com 3 Offi cial explains defense of Clean Water Act rules Opponents fear the new regulations will expand federal authority By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press SALEM — The State of Oregon is defending the fed- eral government’s new Clean Water Act regulations in court because they’re expected to simplify the statute’s admin- istration, according to a top state offi cial. It’s possible that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s new rules will allow state offi cials to issue Clean Water Act permits, which are currently dispensed by the EPA and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, said Richard Whit- man, natural resources policy adviser for Oregon Gov. Kate Brown. The regulations have met with controversy because opponents fear the new defi - nition of “waters of the Unit- ed States” will signifi cantly increase the federal govern- ment’s jurisdiction over wa- terways on private property. Multiple states have fi led lawsuits challenging the rules, while Oregon and several oth- er states have intervened as defendants in support of the regulatory change. “This is an issue that has frankly been politicized na- tionally,” Whitman said be- fore the House Committee on Rural Communities, Land Use and Water. Oregon offi cials believe the amount of water under the federal government’s purview will only increase by 3 to 5 percent under the new regula- tions, he said. “As a technical and policy matter, we do not believe the rule is a major expansion of federal jurisdiction,” Whit- man said. Congress decreed that “waters of the U.S.” fall under Clean Water Act jurisdiction but did not defi ne the term, leaving that problem to agen- cies and courts, he said. The matter was the subject of three U.S. Supreme Court rulings, the most recent in 2006. Because the justices dis- agreed on how to determine whether a water body is reg- ulated, the case established three confl icting standards, Whitman said. “You have complete con- fusion in the lower courts about which of these three tests is the right one,” he said. The EPA’s new rules are meant to clear up some of that confusion by reducing the number of waterways that must be examined on a case-by-case basis, Whitman said. Most agricultural activities continue to be exempt from Clean Water Act regulations, he said. The Oregon Cattlemen’s Association, which is in- volved in litigation against the rules, is disappointed that the State of Oregon intervened as a defendant without consult- ing with agricultural groups, said Jerome Rosa, the organi- zation’s executive director. Rosa said he disagrees with Whitman’s characteriza- tion of the regulations, which OCA thinks will be extremely detrimental to ranchers. “We don’t see it that way,” he said. Western Washington wolf killed by vehicle had also been shot By DON JENKINS Capital Press Puget North Bend Sound 169 Tacoma 167 512 Lone wolf struck and killed by traffic April 27 N 7 161 10 miles WASH. Area in detail MT. RAINIER NATIONAL PARK Mt. Rainier Capital Press graphic John O’Connell/Capital Press Harold Beckstead, left, and Blake Marsden, a junior at Shelley High School in Eastern Idaho, sort potatoes being loaded into storage at grower Merrill Hanny’s farm. Hanny says students, who get a two-week harvest break from school, are essential for his operation. Harvest break aids Idaho spud farmers By JOHN O’CONNELL Capital Press John O’Connell/Capital Press Blake Marsden, a junior at Shelley High School in Eastern Idaho, works potato harvest for grower Merrill Hanny. Hanny says the students, who get a two-week harvest break from school, are essential for his operation. derives a feeling of accom- plishment from the hard work. “It’s given me a really great appreciation for farmers and what they do and what they go through,” she said. Duggan Grimes, a West Jefferson High School fresh- man also on a two-week har- vest break, is earning money toward a car and dirt bike by working for a grower in Terreton, where he’s moved irrigation pipes and cleaned equipment. Grimes said the job should help him get in better shape for football, but admits after a 12-hour shift “it feels good to get home.” LEGAL ers willing to endure 12-hour shifts has become increasing- ly diffi cult, for the local grow- ers. “People just don’t want to do any kind of manual labor,” Hanny said. “We’ve moved to a technology-based society. A lot of people want a job, but they don’t want to work, at least physically.” But Hanny does count a few adults among his seasonal staff — mostly people seeking to “reconnect with their roots” and “be close to the soil.” Harold Beckstead, an op- erator specialist with Thresh- er Wheat in Idaho Falls, uses vacation time to help Hanny at harvest. The extra income is nice, but he insists he does it because he enjoys the expe- rience. “I just enjoy working with the guys and working with po- tatoes,” Beckstead said. Shelley High junior Blake Marsden has been working harvest since eighth grade, saving for college and a mis- sion with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He said spud trucks get steamy and it’s “pretty much the hardest job I’ve done.” “It defi nitely teaches younger kids how to work re- ally hard,” Marsden said. Kayla DePriest, of Merid- ian, is staying with grandpar- ents while working for Han- ny. DePriest takes online high school classes through the Idaho Virtual Academy and will tend to classwork during early mornings and weekends throughout harvest. DePriest LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 98 Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be sold, for cash to the highest bidder, on 10/12/2015. The sale will be held at 10:00am by RANDY’S TOWING 925 WILCO RD, STAYTON, OR 2007 SUZUKI S 50 MC VIN = JS1VS52A772101239 Amount due on lien $3,844.00 Reputed owner(s) CLAYTON K. BAUMAN HSBC RETAIL CREDIT USA, INC. SECRETARY OF STATE NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULEMAKING Oregon Department of Agriculture, Natural Resource Program, Administrative Rules Chapter #603, Sue Gooch, Rules Coordinator, (503) 986-4583. Adopt: OAR 603-059-0060; Amend: OAR 603-059-0020, 603-059-0030, 603-059-0050, 603-059-0055, 603-059-0070, 603-059-0080. RULE SUMMARY: The rules implement Enrolled HB 2443 that increase fertilizer, soil amendment, lime and compost product registration fees, implements an inspection fee on lime, increases the product evaluation fee and updates the Rule to conform with the American Association of Plant Food Control Officials Publication #68. Hearing date: October 16, 2015 at 2:00 p.m. Location: Oregon Department of Agriculture, Basement con- ference room D, 635 Capitol St NE, Salem, OR. Last day for public comment is October 23, 2015. 40-2/#4 ROP-32-52-2/#17 SHELLEY, Idaho — Local grower Merrill Hanny isn’t sure how he’d harvest his 500-acre potato crop without a labor pool made possible by Shelley High School’s two- week fall harvest break. For decades, Hanny has re- lied on high school students to provide seasonal help at har- vest — driving spud trucks, sorting out defective tubers and ridding conveyors of dirt clods and vines. He’s among the many Eastern Idaho growers who believe the long-standing tra- dition of harvest breaks by some Eastern Idaho rural dis- tricts provides a vital commu- nity service. “We have to have these kids to survive on our opera- tion,” Hanny said. Hanny explained harvest breaks started back when workers dug spuds and fi lled sacks by hand. Larger school districts and many of the big- gest farms — which are heav- ily mechanized and require less labor — have moved away from the tradition. But there are also growers, such as Steve Christensen, of Shelley, who employ a har- vest-time labor force entirely comprising high school stu- dents. “I don’t have any other help,” said Christensen, who shares resources, including a labor force of a dozen high school students, with another grower at harvest. “We appre- ciate (harvest break) and try to make our gratitude known.” Christensen acknowledges he worries every year that the harvest break may disappear. Finding seasonal work- 39-2/#4 Friedman said killing wolves will slow recovery and delay removing them from the state’s protected spe- cies list. “I wish people would stop shooting wolves. It doesn’t do anybody any good,” he said. “It doesn’t surprise me peo- ple are shooting at wolves. There’s plenty of that on the Internet. That attitude — shoot, shovel and shut up — is openly expressed, so it’s not surprising, but it is disap- pointing.” Washington Cattlemen’s Association Executive Vice President Jack Field said the wolf’s death won’t slow the spread of wolves, which is increasing the need to foster social acceptance. Tolerance can be increased with policies that assure ranchers and hunt- ers that wolf populations will be controlled, he said. “It’s going to be an issue we have to deal with as we work toward recovery,” Field said. “All stakeholders have to believe the plan will work.” The Teanaway pack has killed two cows this summer, according to wildlife offi - cials, but neither USFWS nor WDFW has the authority to le- thally remove wolves in Cen- tral or Western Washington. In the eastern one-third of Wash- ington, where wolves have been taken off the federal en- dangered species list, WDFW can authorize shooting wolves to stop livestock depredations. Wildlife offi cials immedi- ately believed the animal hit on I-90 was a western gray wolf, but held off positively identifying the species pend- ing a forensic investigation by the USFWS laboratory in Ash- land, Ore. The agency says it completed the genetic analysis in September. A motorist reported seeing the wolf in the highway medi- an. By the time state wildlife offi cials arrived, the animal had been hit. 40-2/#4 The fi rst gray wolf known to venture west of the Wash- ington Cascades in decades was shot in the right rear leg several weeks before it was struck by a vehicle last spring on Interstate 90, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said Sept. 25. An examination of the car- cass found that the gunshot wound was healing when the adult female was killed April 27 west of Snoqualmie Pass near North Bend, USFWS spokeswoman Ann Frosh- chauer said. Details about the severity of the wound were unavail- able. The wolf was apparently hit by a large vehicle, and the carcass was badly damaged, Froshchauer said. Wolves are federally pro- tected in the western two- thirds of Washington. Harm- ing a federally endangered species can be punished by up to a year in jail and a $100,000 fi ne. Froshchauer said the agency is closing its investigation. The wolf was killed about 30 miles east of Seattle and 50 miles west of the state’s west- ern-most pack, the Teanaway pack, which roams east of Snolqualmie Pass. Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife offi cials said the wolf’s black coat in- dicated it came from a differ- ent pack and could have come from northeast Washington or even the Rockies. State offi cials said the wolf appeared to be about 2 years old, the prime age for wolves to disperse. USFWS did not provide an estimate of the wolf’s age. Although the wolf’s jour- ney ended in tragedy, con- servation groups hailed it as a landmark, saying it showed that wolves will spread across Washington, a key goal of the state’s recovery plan. Pred- ator-control programs drove wolves from the West by the 1930s. Wolves were reintro- duced beginning in 1995 in Wyoming and Idaho and have dispersed west. Conservation Northwest Executive Director Mitch Friedman said he was dis- appointed the wolf had been shot. Environmental groups, including Conservation Northwest, are offering a $20,000 reward for informa- tion leading to a conviction in the fatal shooting of a Te- anaway pack female in Octo- ber 2014. Sammamish Seattle 40-2/#4x