October 30, 2015 CapitalPress.com 3 FEMA denies aid to residents in fire-ravaged counties Agency OKs funds to rebuild public facilities By DON JENKINS Capital Press The Federal Emergency Management Agency will help rebuild public facilities damaged by wildfires in Wash- ington state last summer, but won’t assist individuals who sustained uninsured losses, disappointing state officials and rural residents reeling from back-to-back record-breaking fire seasons. More than 1 million acres burned in Washington after June 1. The fires caused an es- timated $42.49 million in dam- age to roads, bridges, parks and other public property. FEMA has agreed to help repair pub- lic damage in eight counties and the Colville Reservation in northeastern Washington. FEMA, however, rejected a separate request from Gov. Jay Inslee to provide aid to indi- viduals in Okanogan, Stevens and Chelan counties, the hard- Don Jenkins/Capital Press Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, right, and Public Lands Commissioner Peter Goldmark, shown here walking in June in Olympia in a test of their fitness to visit wildire scenes, say they are disappointed that the Federal Emergency Management Agency has declined to provide assistance to people who suffered uninsured losses in wildfires this season. Inslee has appointed Goldmark to lead a council on recovering from and preparing for major wildfires. est-hit areas. “This is very disappointing news. This is the second time in as many years that we’ve been denied individual assis- tance following a major fire,” Inslee said in a written state- ment. “We have homeowners that have lost everything.” Most of the damage oc- curred in Okanogan Coun- ty, one of the top agricul- ture-producing counties in the state. The 522,229-acre Okanogan Complex fire burned one year after the 256,000-acre Carlton Com- plex blazed through the coun- ty. Some 3,850 cattle were lost in this year’s fire, according to a preliminary estimate. Being bypassed again by FEMA is painful, said Jon Wyss, chairman of the Carlton Complex Long Term Recov- ery Group and president of the Okanogan County Farm Bureau. The recovery group issued a statement saying its pleas for FEMA aid fell on deaf ears. “It would have made a world of difference,” Wyss said of the aid. FEMA notified the gover- nor of its decision in an Oct. 22 letter. The agency said the damage suffered by individ- uals wasn’t severe enough to warrant assistance. FEMA spokeswoman Cam Rossie said the agency toured fire-damaged areas to assess property losses, disruptions to daily lives and the availability of volunteers in determining whether it needed to provide assistance. “We’re not always the best option for recovery,” she said. The fires destroyed 146 homes and damaged 476. Nearly two-thirds of the homes were uninsured or un- derinsured, according to the governor’s office. Agriculture is the main eco- nomic driver in the hardest-hit counties, according to a state report submitted to FEMA. “As a native of Okanogan County, it is hard to over- state the heartbreak and the suffering the people of north- east Washington have gone through the past two fires,” Public Lands Commissioner Peter Goldmark said in a writ- ten statement. “By refusing to help, FEMA is letting down communities that are in des- perate need of assistance.” Inslee said FEMA should re-evaluate how it determines eligibility for individual disas- ter assistance. “I will continue to fight for greater federal support for di- saster recovery particularly as our state encounters hotter, dri- er and increasingly devastating fire seasons,” he said. If FEMA had granted the state’s request, individuals would have been eligible to apply for displaced worker benefits, low-interest loans and money for temporary housing and to replace lost property. The Western Governors’ Association last year adopted a resolution calling on FEMA to provide more help for indi- viduals after disasters. Wash- ington officials said Friday that it’s unclear to them how FEMA evaluates requests for assistance. Inslee also announced Fri- day that he will form a wild- land fire council to coordinate recovery and prepare for future fires. Goldmark will lead the council. FEMA approved federal aid to repair public property in Chelan, Ferry, Lincoln, Okan- ogan, Pend Oreille, Stevens, Whatcom and Yakima coun- ties, as well as the Colville res- ervation. Nonprofit organizations that provide public services, such as hospitals, schools and homeless shelters, also will be eligible to apply for money. FEMA will fund up to 75 percent of the cost of repairs. Assistance was not ap- proved for Asotin, Columbia, Douglas, Garfield, the Ka- lispel Tribe of Indians, the Spokane Tribe of Indians, and the Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation. Idaho students continue FFA bus trip tradition WDFW sends report on wolf shooting to prosecutor By JOHN O’CONNELL Capital Press By DON JENKINS For the Mackay Junior-Se- nior High School students who make an annual bus trip to the national FFA convention, the journey is as memorable as the event itself. On Oct. 22, 21 of the Custer County, Idaho, school’s 35 students loaded into an Eagle commuter bus with nearly a million miles on the odometer for a 12-day trip, highlighted by the national FFA convention in Louisville, Ky., and stops in Colorado, Texas, Louisiana and Tennessee. It marked Mackay’s 29th consecutive bus trip to FFA’s crowning event. As usual, Mackay students offered seats to FFA members from other chap- ters, picking up 18 students from Challis, Aberdeen and Shelley. Normally, Mackay students are charged $600. Many opt to work off part of the total in a school-run scrap metal recy- cling operation, which helped the FFA chapter raise money to buy its bus several years ago. This year, however, the cost was just $100, thanks to Mack- ay senior Hailey Hampton. She won $10,000 toward the trip through an agricultural-themed essay contest sponsored by Cul- ver’s restaurants. “I talked about how we need to have empathy for the Ameri- can farmer,” said Hampton, who addressed the abundance of mis- information about agriculture and the importance of setting the Capital Press John O’Connell/Capital Press A Mackay Junior-Senior High School bus taking students to the FFA national convention in Kentucky stops to pick up Aberdeen and Shelley students at the Blackfoot Walmart on Oct. 22. Mackay senior Hailey Hampton, who is standing, won her FFA chapter $10,000, covering the cost of the trip for her classmates, with an essay she wrote about agriculture. record straight. Hampton was recently sur- prised to find her entire family in attendance at a school assem- bly — and to learn it was in her honor, so Culver’s could prop- erly announce her achievement. Culver’s offered an extra $4,000 to fix the bus’s air conditioning when the school’s agricultural teacher, Trent Van Leuven, ex- pressed concern about driving through the Texas heat. Jessie Corning, a senior mar- keting manager with the Wis- consin-based chain, said there were 450 contest entries. “It was an amazing thing to discover such an awesome essay had come from this. It’s a very unique story and something we just stumbled upon,” Corning said. During 80 hours of driving, the students will stop for the Louisiana State Fair, the Grand Ole Opry, dinner and a Jake Owen concert on Culver’s, a Denver hockey game, two na- tional parks and the site of the Kennedy assassination. About 150 Wichita Falls, Texas, FFA students have orga- nized a joint social and barbe- cue for the Mackay group. The students have also scheduled agricultural tours, including the Randal County Feed Yard in Amarillo, Texas, the last Mississippi farm with a work- ing cotton gin, a catfish farm, a horse rehabilitation hospital near Lexington, Ky., and a tour of the University of Missouri’s agricultural programs. As usual, Van Leuven said they’ve packed 300 pounds of fresh potatoes, to offer their tour hosts. Many students who have never left the West will experi- ence 15 states. “I love that we take the bus,” Hampton said. “Other chapters that fly probably have more sleep than us, but we get to see so many incredible things.” Van Leuven has his fingers crossed that the bus won’t expe- rience mechanical trouble — a fairly common occurrence in past years. But, he said, chang- ing the tradition is not an option. “This is kind of a rite of passage. The school board members, nearly all of them have been on the trip or driv- en the bus coming back,” Van Leuven said. “If I said, ‘Hey, we’re not going to take the bus to the national convention this year,’ I’d probably get quartered.” For now, Portland, neighboring cities won’t expand into farmland By ERIC MORTENSON Capital Press Portland and neighbor- ing cities won’t expand their urban growth boundaries any time soon, temporari- ly easing the development pressure on farmland in the tri-county metro area. Neither the population growth forecast nor the job growth forecast sup- ports adding new land for development, said Martha Bennett, chief operating of- ficer of Metro, the regional land-use planning agency. Metro’s elected council will most likely adopt Bennett’s recommendation in Novem- ber. Metro coordinates land- use planning in Multnomah, Washington and Clackamas counties, which include the cities of Portland, Hillsboro, Beaverton and Gresham and 1.5 million people. But the counties, Wash- ington and Clackamas in particular, also are strong agricultural production ar- eas. Farmers grow nursery crops, Christmas trees, seed crops, vegetables, fruit and berries within short drives of city limits, which makes for contentious land-use de- cisions. Oregon’s land-use plan- ning system was intended to protect farmland from city sprawl. Cities are required to establish urban growth boundaries, and expanding beyond them requires a pub- lic process often accompa- nied by conflict. Metro, which has an elected council, attempted to ease the repeated short-term arguments by establishing urban and rural reserves, designating which land will be developed and which land will remain farm or forest for the next 50 years. Legal challenges have prevented full implemen- tation of the reserves plan, however. In the meantime, Clacka- mas County commissioners are pressing to redesignate some land south of Wilson- ville from rural to urban re- serves. They’re opposed by farm groups such as Friends of French Prairie. Given the uncertainty and reduced population and job growth expectations, Bennett recommended Metro hold off on urban growth expansion. 44-2/#4x She said the council should re- visit the question in 2017-18. Washington state wildlife officers investigating the shoot- ing of OR-14, a gray wolf col- lared in Oregon more than three years ago, have submitted their report to the Columbia County, Wash., prosecutor. A Blue Mountains cabin owner reported Oct. 11 that he shot the wolf because he be- lieved it was threatening his dogs, his wife and himself, ac- cording to a Department of Fish and Wildlife report. A WDFW sergeant has discussed the case with prose- cutors. The department hasn’t said whether it will recommend the shooter be charged with tak- ing a state endangered species, a gross misdemeanor punish- able by up to a year in jail and a $5,000 fine. “We want to give the prose- cutor a chance to look at the re- port. Obviously, they’re going to have to make the final deci- sion anyway,” WDFW Capt. Dan Rahn said Monday. The prosecutor’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Last year, WDFW recom- mended charges be filed against a Whitman County man who pursued and shot a wolf in a field. The shooter was charged, but Whitman County Prosecu- tor Denis Tracy dropped the case when the defendant agreed to pay $100 in court costs. In the Columbia County case, according to the WDFW investigation, the shooter was standing on his porch when he fired a .22-caliber rifle 10 times at OR-14. A shot through the skull was likely instantly fa- Courtesy of Oregon Dept. of Fish and Wildlife OR-14, shown when he was fitted with a collar in 2012 by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, was shot and killed Oct. 11 by a Columbia County, Wash., resident who told investigators he felt the wolf was threatening his dogs and family. tal and dropped the animal 43 yards from the cabin, according to WDFW. The cabin owner told inves- tigators that his wife saw the wolf while she was calling their two dogs into the cabin. The man said the wolf looked at him and seemed to be coming his way. He said he was carrying a rifle as a matter of routine because of preda- tors such as bears, coyotes and wolves. He said he fired until the rifle was empty. WDFW Sgt. Paul Mosman interviewed the couple that evening. “It became apparent through talking to them that the entire family’s sense of security at their cabin had been shattered by the appearance of a wolf on their property,” the sergeant wrote in his report. OR-14 was known to cross Interstate 84 into Washington and had drawn the attention of wildlife managers in both states over the years. 44-2/#5