Capital press. (Salem, OR) 19??-current, September 16, 2016, Page 2, Image 2

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CapitalPress.com
September 16, 2016
People & Places
Dietitian presents dairy’s case
Crystal Wilson
provides ‘thought
leaders’ with facts
about milk products
Western
Innovator
Capital Press
Crystal Wilson
Title: Vice president of
health and wellness, United
Dairymen of Idaho
Professional: Registered
dietitian; master’s degree
in adult and organizational
learning and bachelor’s
degree in food and nutrition,
University of Idaho
Background: Born and
raised in Jerome, Idaho
Family: Husband, Chance;
three children, 14, 11 and 9
Sean Ellis/Capital Press
Crystal Wilson, vice president of health and wellness for the United Dairymen of Idaho. “I believe in
dairy products,” she says.
emy and also for our organiza-
tion.”
Wilson, 42, who has degrees
in food and nutrition and adult
and organizational learning,
worked in child nutrition for
almost 20 years.
“Crystal is fabulously tal-
ented,” said UDI Chief Exec-
utive Oficer Karianne Fallow.
“She is one of the most respect-
ed dietitians in the state (and)
we’re lucky to have her.”
At UDI, Wilson’s job is to
get science-based facts about
dairy into the hands of the pub-
lic.
One way she accomplish-
es that is by arming so-called
thought leaders with informa-
tion. That includes educators,
child nutrition experts, health
professionals, coaches, athletic
directors, physicians and oth-
ers who inluence large num-
bers of people when it comes
to diet.
“Our approach is to go to
those thought leaders who work
with consumers every day,” she
said. “Who do you trust? You
trust your physician, you trust
your dietitian, you trust your
coach, you trust your teachers.
Going to those individuals and
arming them with the informa-
tion is our approach.”
Wilson grew up in Ida-
ho’s Magic Valley, the center
of the state’s dairy industry.
Though she didn’t live on a
dairy farm, she spent a lot of
time on a family friend’s dairy
operation, moved irrigation
pipe, bucked hay bales and
raised some starter cows.
She recommended dairy
products to her students be-
fore she joined UDI, and said
her current job is a great it for
her.
“I would not work for
an organization if I didn’t
believe in the products that
they represent,” she said. “I
believe in dairy products.
I recommended (them) be-
fore I started working here.
I feel as a dietitian, my
dream has come true as far
as what I get to do every
day.”
Wilson also hosts interns
from universities as a way to
introduce future dietitians to
the dairy industry. “I think it’s
a great career for a dietitian to
look into in the future,” she
said.
Oversized Holstein vies for ‘tallest bovine’ title
EUREKA, Calif. (AP) —
Holy cow! A giant, one-ton
Holstein steer who loves to eat
bread and romps like a puppy at
a Northern California zoo is vy-
ing for the title of tallest bovine
in the world.
The Holstein, named Dan-
niel, measures 6 feet, 4 inches
from the hoof to the withers,
Established 1928
Board of directors
Mike Forrester ..........................President
Steve Forrester
Kathryn Brown
Sid Freeman .................. Outside director
Mike Omeg .................... Outside director
Corporate oficer
John Perry
Chief operating oficer
By SEAN ELLIS
BOISE — One of the Idaho
dairy industry’s top priorities is
providing the public with accu-
rate, science-based information
about dairy nutrition and its
role in a balanced diet.
Dietitian Crystal Wilson,
United Dairymen of Idaho’s
vice president of health and
wellness, is in charge of carry-
ing out that mission.
Getting accurate nutrition
information about dairy to the
public “is tremendously im-
portant to our industry,” said
Gooding dairyman Steve Bal-
lard, a UDI board member.
“(Crystal’s) really great at ig-
uring out ways to get that infor-
mation out to the public.”
Wilson was recently select-
ed as president-elect of the Ida-
ho Academy of Nutrition and
Dietetics, which represents the
state’s 576 registered dietitians.
She said the position is a
good it for both groups. The
mission of the academy is to be
the premier source of reliable,
objective food and nutrition in-
formation in Idaho.
“That’s a very similar mis-
sion for (UDI), so those two
missions align very closely,”
she said. “I think it will create
great opportunities for the acad-
Capital Press
a smidge taller than the cur-
rent record holder, the Eureka
Times Standard reported.
A veterinarian and his keep-
ers at the Sequoia Park Zoo in
Eureka, California, measured
Danniel to conirm his height,
but Guinness World Record has
yet to verify the measurement.
According to the Guinness
website, the tallest bovine ever
was Blosom, a cow from Oran-
geville, Illinois, that measured
6 feet, 2 inches.
Blosom died last year at the
age of 13.
Owner Ann Farley says
Danniel is a gentle giant who
loves hay and bread and acts
like a puppy, trotting over to
whoever calls his name.
“He’s a handful to keep
penned but he’s part of the fam-
ily,” Farley said.
Caring for the giant steer
can be a challenge, said Aman-
da Auston of the Sequoia Park
Zoo, adding that Danniel eats
about 50 pounds of hay every
day and produces up to 150
pounds of manure a day.
“It’s a small enclosure so we
have to pick it up all the time,”
she said, “I would like him to
have more room to wander
around and graze and do some
more natural behavior.”
The Farleys are looking
to ind Danniel a permanent
home.
Capital Press Managers
Mike O’Brien .............................Publisher
Joe Beach ..................................... Editor
Elizabeth Yutzie Sell .... Advertising Director
Carl Sampson ................Managing Editor
Barbara Nipp ......... Production Manager
Samantha McLaren .... Circulation Manager
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California extends most ambitious climate change law in U.S.
By ALICIA CHANG
AP Science Writer
LOS ANGELES — A decade ago,
California vowed to dramatically slash
greenhouse gas emissions by 2020.
With the nation’s most populous
state on pace to meet that target, Gov.
Jerry Brown on Thursday charted a
new goal to further cut carbon pollu-
tion by extending and expanding the
landmark climate change law.
It will “keep California on the
move to clean up the environment,”
Brown said moments before signing
a pair of bills in a Los Angeles park
amid opposition from the oil industry,
business groups and Republicans.
Experts said going forward will
be more challenging because the new
goal — to reduce emissions 40 percent
below 1990 levels by 2030 — is con-
siderably more ambitious and many
of the easy solutions have been em-
ployed.
“The long and the short of it is that
meeting the goal will require sustained
regulatory effort across all sectors of
the economy,” said Ann Carlson, a
professor of environmental law at the
University of California, Los Angeles.
California is on track to meet the
2020 climate goal that called for re-
ducing emissions to 1990 levels by
restricting the carbon content of gaso-
line and diesel fuel, encouraging sales
of zero-emission vehicles and impos-
Calendar
Richard Vogel/Associated Press
California Gov. Jerry Brown, center,
lanked by Senate President pro tempore
Kevin de Leon, D-Los Angeles, right,
and Assemblyman Eduardo Garcia,
D-Coachella, left, speaks during a news
conference prior to signing legislation
in Los Angeles on Sept. 8. The law sets
a new goal to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions 40 percent below 1990 levels
by 2030.
ing a tax on pollution.
The state plans to build on that
foundation and ramp up other efforts
including increasing renewable elec-
tricity use, boosting energy eficiency
in existing buildings and putting 1.5
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home page of our website at www.
capitalpress.com and click on “Sub-
mit an Event.” Calendar items can
also be mailed to Capital Press, 1400
Broadway St. NE, Salem, OR 97301.
Friday, Sept. 16
Grass-Finished Meat School,
5:30-9 p.m. OSU Extension Center
Auditorium, SOREC, 569 Hanley
Road, Central Point, Ore. Topics cov-
ered include live animal evaluation
and selecting animals, nutrition and
creating and managing high quality
forage, butchery, carcass evalua-
tion, meat taste and texture. Cost:
$195/$370 for two from the same
farm. http://extension.oregonstate.
edu/sorec/small-farms-2016-classes
Washington State Fair, 10 a.m.-
9 p.m., 110 Ninth Ave. SW, Puyal-
lup. (253) 845-1771, http://www.
thefair.com/
Saturday, Sept. 17
ALBA Family Farm Day, 10 a.m.-
3 p.m. Agriculture and Land-Based
Training Association, 1700 Old Stage
Road, Salinas, Calif. The community is
invited to visit the organic farm to har-
vest and purchase fresh seasonable
vegetables and berries from local fam-
ily farmers while they learn about sus-
tainable agricultural practices. There
will also be hay rides, bilingual farm
tours, all while exploring the beautiful
farm landscape.
Grass-Finished Meat School, 9
a.m.-3:30 p.m. OSU Extension Cen-
ter Auditorium, SOREC, 569 Hanley
million zero-emissions vehicles on the
road, according to the California Air
Resources Board, which is in charge
of climate policy.
Supporters overcame strong oppo-
sition from oil companies and other in-
dustry interests to pass the legislation
a year after business-friendly Demo-
crats in the Assembly derailed an even
more ambitious proposal to limit the
use of oil in the state.
The new law puts “very severe
caps on the emission of greenhouse
gases in California without requiring
the regulatory agencies to give any
consideration” to how it will affect the
economy and residents, the California
Chamber of Commerce said in a state-
ment.
Manufacturers in California al-
ready have higher energy costs com-
pared to counterparts across the
country and setting a new climate
goal without providing cost-effective
options “contributes to an already
challenging business environment for
manufacturers,” Dorothy Rothrock,
president of the California Manufac-
turers and Technology Association,
said in a statement.
Since California became a green
leader by passing the climate change
law a decade ago, the state has seen a
lourishing clean-energy industry, said
Carlson, the UCLA law professor.
“One big accomplishment to date
of California climate policy is demon-
strating that we can cut greenhouse
gases and still achieve impressive eco-
nomic growth,” she said in an email.
Brown, a Democrat who has trav-
eled the world promoting green-
house-gas reduction efforts, issued an
executive order last year setting the
new 2030 goal. On Thursday, he also
signed a companion bill that provides
more legislative oversight of the ap-
pointed state air resources board and
gives aid to poorer areas that lawmak-
ers say have suffered the most harm
from climate change.
Despite pushing the climate goals
through, the centerpiece of the state’s
effort to combat global warming re-
mains in jeopardy.
The law doesn’t address the cap-
and-trade program, which requires
companies that spew greenhouse gas-
es to buy pollution permits that are
auctioned quarterly. The funds can be
spent only on programs that reduce
carbon pollution. After impressive
sales early on, the last two permit sales
have izzled, prompting concerns that
funding won’t be available to continue
programs in the long run.
With the uncertainty over the cap-
and-trade program, the expanded cli-
mate change law “is a point on a map,
but the roadmap to that point has not
been illed in yet,” Dan McGraw, a
Houston-based carbon analyst with
the ICIS trade publication, said in an
email.
GASES / WELDING / SAFETY / FIRE
www.oxarc.com
Road, Central Point, Ore. Topics cov-
ered include live animal evaluation and
selecting animals, nutrition and creat-
ing and managing high quality forage,
butchery, carcass evaluation, meat
taste and texture. Cost: $195/$370
for two from the same farm. http://ex-
tension.oregonstate.edu/sorec/small-
farms-2016-classes
Washington State Fair, 9 a.m.-10
p.m., 110 Ninth Ave. SW, Puyallup.
(253) 845-1771, http://www.thefair.com/
Sunday, Sept. 18
Washington State Fair, 9 a.m.-10
p.m., 110 Ninth Ave. SW, Puyallup.
(253) 845-1771, http://www.thefair.com/
Monday, Sept. 19
Sustainable
Small-Acreage
Farming and Ranching, 5:30-8:30
20 Northwest Locations
p.m. Carnation Farm’s Alpine Room,
28901 NE Carnation Farm Road,
Carnation, Wash. Weekly presenta-
tions will include growers, organiza-
tions and agriculture professionals
with expertise in direct marketing,
value-added processing, production
planning, agronomy and livestock
production. Sponsored by Washing-
ton State University King County Ex-
tension, King Conservation District,
SnoValley Tilth and King County,
Cultivating Success provides stu-
dents with the tools necessary to run
a sustainable farm operation. Every
Monday through Dec. 5. Cost: $300
per farm or family.
Washington State Fair, 10 a.m.-9
p.m., 110 Ninth Ave. SW, Puyallup.
(253) 845-1771, http://www.thefair.
com/
1-800-765-9055
Tuesday, Sept. 20
13th Annual Oregon Farm Bu-
reau Classic Golf Tourney, 1-6 p.m.
Stone Creek Golf Club, 14603 S.
Stoneridge Drive, Oregon City.
This scramble format golf is a
fundraiser for the political action
committee. oregonfb.org
Grass-Finished Meat School,
5:30-9 p.m. OSU Extension Center
Auditorium, SOREC, 569 Hanley
Road, Central Point, Ore. Topics
covered include live animal evalua-
tion and selecting animals, nutrition
and creating and managing high
quality forage, butchery, carcass
evaluation, meat taste and texture.
Cost: $195/$370 for two from the
same farm. http://extension.oregon-
state.edu/sorec/small-farms-2016-
classes
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Index
California ...............................11
Dairy ...................................... 9
Idaho ...................................... 8
Markets ............................... 13
Opinion .................................. 6
Oregon .................................. 7
Washington ......................... 10
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