January 27, 2017 CapitalPress.com 19 Wash. senator named special assistant to ag secretary By DON JENKINS Capital Press A Republican state sena- tor from northeastern Wash- ington has resigned from the Legislature to become a special assistant to the U.S. agriculture secretary. Brian Dansel, a resi- dent of Republic in rural Ferry County, announced his resignation and new job in a press release Tuesday. “It is no secret that I think we could be moving more timber off the forests, while putting people back to work and reducing our sus- ceptibility to wildfires,” he said in a written statement. “I think we also need to re- form regulations that have prevented mining companies from exploratory drilling, rendering the mining indus- try nearly obsolete when it has been an iconic industry in northeast Washington for many decades.” Dansel, 33, did not de- tail his duties as special as- sistant. Efforts to reach him Tuesday afternoon were not successful. He will begin his duties in Wash- ington, D.C., immediate- ly, according to the press release. President Donald Trump has nominated former Geor- gia Gov. Sonny Perdue for agriculture secretary. Dansel was elected Fer- ry County commissioner in 2010. He won a special elec- tion in 2013 to represent the Don Jenkins/Capital Press Washington state Sen. Brian Dansel, R-Republic, has resigned from the Legislature to become special assistant to the U.S. agri- culture secretary. 7th District, which has most of the state’s wolves. Dansel has been a vocal supporter of taking wolves off the state protected species list in the eastern part of Washington. “It has been the honor of my life to serve as your sen- ator, and this decision was not an easy one for me,” Dansel said. Senate Majority Leader Mark Schoesler congratulat- ed Dansel. “The 7th Legislative Dis- trict, which Sen. Dansel rep- resents, is heavily affected by agriculture policies, so we know it’s a policy area that he cares deeply about. It’s good to see Washing- ton state getting a seat at the table in the new admin- istration,” said Schoesler, R-Ritzville. Republican precinct com- mittee officers in the 7th District will nominate three candidates to replace Dan- sel. Commissioners from Okanogan, Ferry, Stevens, Pend Oreille and Spokane counties will pick from the three. Republicans will need to have the seat filled to retain a majority in the Senate. Senate Republicans said they hope the commissioners will meet by Feb. 6 to select the new senator, sooner if possible. Another Republican senator, Doug Ericksen of Ferndale, is dividing time between the Senate and a temporary position with the Environmental Pro- tection Agency. Erickson has been named the com- munications director for Trump’s regional transition team. Potato pathologist warns of future disease threats By JOHN O’CONNELL Capital Press John O’Connell/Capital Press National Potato Council Executive Vice President and CEO John Keeling speaks about the ramifications of Donald Trump’s presi- dency on the U.S. potato industry Jan. 18 during the 49th annual Potato Conference in Pocatello. National potato leader voices optimism about Trump By JOHN O’CONNELL Capital Press POCATELLO, Idaho — A top national potato leader is optimistic Donald Trump’s presidency will be good news for his industry. National Potato Council Executive Vice President and CEO John Keeling spoke Jan. 18 on the Idaho State Univer- sity campus during the 47th annual Potato Conference. On immigration, Keeling said NPC supports a foreign guestworker program “that works,” as well as a change in legal status that would en- able agriculture to retain un- documented foreign workers who are “here doing the work now.” “It would shock me given the understanding Trump has of the hospitality industry if we don’t do something,” Keeling said. “He under- stands who changes the beds in his hotels and who buses the tables in his restaurants.” Keeling said 20 percent of U.S. potatoes are exported, and NPC will “push the con- cept of trade and the value of trade.” Despite comments Trump has made about many of the major U.S. trade agree- ments not being in the coun- try’s best interests, Keeling predicts U.S. foreign exports will continue to grow under the new administration. Keeling supports being “tougher on trade partners,” and he predicts rather than starting from scratch with trade agreements, Trump will change them slightly. “He is the king of re-brand- ing,” Keeling said. Keeling believes Trump’s vision for the Environmental Protection Agency should be much more in line with potato growers’ priorities than under President Barack Obama. “There’s not a single agen- cy of all of them where the turn-around in direction, phi- losophy and everything else will be bigger than with the EPA,” Keeling said. Keeling believes Trump’s pick to head EPA, Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt, will place a higher premium on states making environmen- tal decisions. He said having “an EPA that works” is vital to ensuring agricultural chem- icals are approved in a timely manner. He believes Obama’s EPA too often based decisions on epidemiological data — relying on patterns and appar- ent correlations — even when it was inconsistent with scien- tific data. Keeling argues there was no scientific justification for EPA’s controversial choice to expand Clean Water Act reg- ulation to “cover every drain- age area that might be wet once every two years,” and he expects that policy will be re- versed within Trump’s first 90 days in office. Keeling was also critical of shortened EPA public com- ment periods. Idaho Potato Commission President and CEO Frank Muir is encouraged by com- ments Trump made about the Idaho potato industry. In a video shown at the Expo, Muir included a clip of Trump saying, “Obviously, I love Idaho potatoes. Who doesn’t love potatoes from Idaho?” POCATELLO, Idaho — A leading potato pathologist warns restrictions on soil fu- migants may lead to greater problems with certain diseas- es and a reemergence of some pathogens that are now under control. North Dakota State Uni- versity professor Neil Gud- mestad also predicted during the University of Idaho’s re- cent 49th annual Potato Con- ference soil-borne genotypes of diseases that now need living tissue to survive will eventually move into the U.S. Gudmestad said there are about 150 diseases affecting potatoes, 40 of which are economically important. He said the industry faces a new pathogen about every 5.7 years. One of the most recent threats is Dickeya dianthicola, a bacterial disease that causes poor plant emergence, discol- ored internal stem tissue and black stems extending from rotting seed pieces. Though dianthicola now has the in- dustry’s attention, Gudmes- tad warned a more aggressive type of the disease that can survive in soil, Dickeya sola- ni, is found in Europe, and he anticipates it will eventually take hold in the U.S. “When solani gets here, trust me, we won’t even care about dianthicola,” Gudmes- tad said. Gudmestad also has con- John O’Connell/Capital Press North Dakota State University potato pathologist Neil Gudmestad discusses potato diseases following a presentation at the University of Idaho’s 49th annual Potato Conference in Pocatello on Jan. 18. cerns about the future emer- gence of soil-borne strains of late blight, a devastating fungal pathogen. Sexually re- producing populations of late blight producing oospores that survive for up to seven years in soil have already sur- faced in the Netherlands. “This could perhaps cause an entire paradigm shift in late blight management,” Gud- mestad said. In the U.S., sexually repro- ducing late blight populations have surfaced in New York, Colorado, California and Tex- as, but none of them have sur- vived in soil. Gudmestad is also con- cerned the EPA is increas- ingly targeting carbamate nematicides, such as Vydate, and a lack of good alterna- tives could make nematodes difficult to control. He fears poor management of the root lesion nematode will exacer- bate challenges with verticil- lium wilt, which causes plants to die early. Tobacco rattle virus, which is now under control, is also vectored by nematodes and threatens to reappear if fumi- gants are lost, he said. Gudmestad warns potato moptop virus could also re- emerge as a disease threat, and potato wart, found in a region of Canada that sells a lot of seed to the U.S., could enter the country. He said pale cyst nematode, now found only in a small region of Idaho with- in the U.S., could be detected elsewhere in the country, and potato spindle tuber may also resurface, because the indus- try has stopped testing for the disease. On the bright side, Gud- mestad said drone technology, improved breeding methods, biotechnology, the growing use of site-specific field treat- ments and commercial accep- tance of more disease-resis- tant varieties bode well for the industry. Scottish expert describes challenges of PCN infestation By JOHN O’CONNELL Capital Press IDAHO FALLS — Many farmers in Scotland plant potatoes less often than they once did and anticipate a 10 percent yield loss because of the spread of potato cyst nematodes, that nation’s chief nematologist says. Jon Pickup shared his country’s PCN woes during a public meeting to underscore the importance of Idaho’s ef- forts to eradicate the destruc- tive microscopic worms from a roughly 5-square-mile quar- antine area of Bingham and Bonneville counties. “You don’t want the situ- ation we’ve got in Europe,” Pickup said. “Pale cyst nema- tode is spreading and severely limiting our ability to produce potatoes in the United King- dom, and it will continue to do that until we have more resistant (potato) varieties and those resistant varieties are accepted by the market.” John O’Connell/Capital Press Jon Pickup, chief nematologist for Scotland, shares his coun- try’s experience with potato cyst nematodes during a Jan. 20 meeting about Idaho’s PCN program in Idaho Falls. Officials at the Jan. 20 meeting said they’re opti- mistic about Idaho’s outlook based on testing of new PCN treatment methods to replace methyl bromide, a chemical the program abandoned two years ago due to residual lev- els found in subsequent crops. Pickup, who participated in an international science re- view of the U.S. and Canadian PCN management programs, admits he was initially skepti- cal the outbreak could be con- tained when Idaho discovered pale cyst nematode in 2007. Pickup now describes Idaho’s program as a “remarkable success,” though he encour- ages the spud industry to test for PCN in its other major potato production areas, espe- cially in seed, to keep the pest in check. Pickup said that thanks to good seed program controls, PCN is limited to 30 percent of Scotland’s production area, but it’s spreading quickly, and more resistant varieties are needed. PCN is the major pest of concern in Scotland and has forced seed growers to expand to six-year potato rotations, he said. Scottish growers who raise spuds for supermarkets that prohibit nematicide use sometimes plant on eight- to 10-year rotations, he said. He said a pale cyst nematode-re- sistant spud called Innovator has become the most popular global variety. Tina Gresham, director of the PCN program for USDA’s Animal and Plant Health In- spection Service, has been seeking to build grower sup- port for expanding use of li- tchi tomato as a trap crop — a plant that stimulates cysts to hatch but isn’t a viable host. Gresham said the program planted litchi tomato on a commercial field with a low PCN infestation during 2015 and 2016 and found no trac- es of the pest following both seasons. “That’s the best news I’ve heard about litchi tomato,” said Shelley grower Steve Christensen, who has a reg- ulated field that now has no detectable PCN and is eligi- ble to be replanted to pota- toes. “I see it more so now as a possible, very effective tool.” Committee turns to state for help on groundwater nitrates By GEORGE PLAVEN EO Media Group A volunteer committee grappling with groundwater contamination in the Lower Umatilla Basin is reaching out to the state for additional help. The Lower Umatilla Ba- sin Groundwater Manage- ment Area, or LUBGWMA, was declared in 1990 due to elevated levels of nitrates in groundwater. Nitrates come from a variety of sources, though the primary culprit is fertilizer, according to the Or- egon Department of Environ- mental Quality. The advisory committee is charged with writing a new action plan designed to curb the level of groundwater ni- trates in the area, which spans 550 square miles and encom- passes six communities in Umatilla and Morrow coun- ties: Hermiston, Stanfield, Echo, Umatilla, Boardman and Irrigon. The committee reached out to Oregon Solutions in Octo- ber, a program that serves at the pleasure of the gover- nor’s office to leverage state resources for local projects. On Monday, Oregon Solu- tions staff met with the com- mittee in Hermiston and said they hoped to finish assessing the group’s proposal by next month. Pete Dalke, senior project manager for Oregon Solu- tions, said they are trying to get more specific feedback from committee members, such as major issues posed by groundwater nitrates and the urgency to address the situa- tion immediately. “It’s hard for us to engage if there isn’t some driver, or some timeline,” Dalke said. “You’ve got to help us with what we need to bring to you to help you move forward.” Tamra Mabbott, Umatilla County planning director, said the groundwater management area is affecting economic development by preventing some businesses from build- ing or expanding. “There are businesses that want to come in that can’t lo- cate here, even if they have enough water, because of lim- itations of land application of wastewater,” Mabbott said. “I think there’s a whole host of things that would warrant Or- egon Solutions, if they could help the group.” Oregon’s Groundwater Protection Act requires DEQ to declare a groundwater man- agement area if contamination exceeds certain levels. In the case of nitrates, the trigger is 7 milligrams per liter, or 70 percent of the federal drinking water standard. The Lower Umatilla Ba- sin came to exceed that mark through a number of different land uses, though DEQ says an overwhelming majority of those leached nitrates — 81.6 percent — come from the re- gion’s vast irrigated farms. Pastures make up 8.1 percent, and food processors account for 4.6 percent. An action plan was devel- oped in 1997 with voluntary actions to reduce nitrates, though after 20 years the re- sults have been mixed. DEQ data shows nitrates are still increasing overall in the ba- sin, though not as sharply as in years past. The LUBGWMA com- mittee is now working on a second action plan, which chairman Clive Kaiser said is nearly ready for peer review. Kaiser, an extension horticul- turist for Oregon State Uni- versity in Milton-Freewater, said he feels Oregon Solutions could help them put their plan into action.