June 9, 2017 CapitalPress.com 3 Oregon ranchers claim BLM lawsuit wrongly dismissed Dispute pertains to deal over grazing and water rights By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Courtesy Oregon NRCS Natural Resources Conservation Service hydrologist Julie Koeber- le performs a manual snow survey at the Mt. Hood snow telemetry site to assess peak season snowpack levels on March 30. Oregon heads into the summer showing no sign of drought for the first time since 2011. Heading into summer, Oregon’s water supply outlook holding steady By ERIC MORTENSON Capital Press Oregon heads into the summer showing no sign of drought for the first time since 2011, according to the USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service. The agency’s month- ly water outlook report for June said the state will have adequate water for irrigation and recreation this summer even though May was dri- er than normal. Since the “water year” began Oct. 1, a heavy winter snowpack and a cold, rainy spring com- bined to fill reservoirs and restore streamflows to nor- mal or better throughout the state. Even the snowmelt is go- ing better than usual. Most of the snow below 5,000 feet elevation is gone, but at many monitored sites the snow melted slower than usual — up to three weeks late in some areas, according to NRCS. The NRCS report is at http://bit.ly/2rBudu9 Meanwhile, research cli- matologist and professor Gregory Jones of Southern Oregon University said the weather into mid-June will remain unsettled, with lower temperatures and rain return- ing to the West Coast. The warm spell that marked the start of the month brought a “flush of growth” to vine- yards, but it will give way to weather that’s more like early to mid-spring instead of summer, said Jones, who specializes in the impact of climate variability on grape- vine growth and wine pro- duction. Despite the cool down, the forecast is that June will end up warmer than normal from the Pacific Northwest into California, Jones said in a climate update he circu- lates by email. PORTLAND — An Ore- gon ranching couple claims their lawsuit over grazing and water rights against the U.S. Bureau of Land Man- agement was wrongly dis- missed. Jesse and Pamela White of Malheur County have asked the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to overturn a federal judge’s decision to throw out the case for juris- dictional reasons. During oral arguments in Portland on June 6, attorneys for the Whites and BLM sparred over whether the federal agency had a legal duty to alter or remove water reservoirs before reducing the ranch’s grazing levels. The dispute originated in the 1960s, when BLM con- structed 20 reservoirs that impaired water rights now owned by the Whites. In exchange, in 1973 the agency permitted the ranch an additional 1,400 animal unit months on the feder- al land. An AUM is enough forage to support a cow-calf pair for a month. When the Whites tried to enforce their water rights with the Oregon Water Re- sources Department more than two decades later, how- ever, the BLM determined the agreement was invalidat- ed. In response, the agency decided in 2008 to remove or retrofit the 20 reservoirs while phasing out the cou- ple’s extra 1,400 AUMs. A complaint filed by the Whites claimed the BLM never lived up to that agree- ment but nonetheless entire- ly canceled the additional grazing. A federal judge dismissed that case in 2015, in part be- cause the matter is under the jurisdiction of the Oregon Water Resources Depart- ment. Mateusz Perkowski/Capital Press The Pioneer Courthouse in Portland, Ore., where the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals held oral arguments on June 6 in a dispute between an Oregon ranching couple and the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. Alan Schroeder, attor- ney for the Whites, told the 9th Circuit that BLM was regardless obligated to fin- ish work on the reservoirs, which was a final federal de- cision by the agency. “They have not con- formed to what they said they were going to do, yet they took the AUMs,” Schroeder said. Since the BLM hasn’t completed the 2008 agree- ment, the ranchers should have their grazing levels restored — a matter over which OWRD does not have authority, he said. “They have no jurisdic- tion over the AUMs, and that’s what the appellants are complaining about,” Schro- eder said. David Shilton, an attor- ney for BLM, said the agen- cy doesn’t have a duty to take a “discrete agency ac- tion” in this case, but is only required to follow Oregon water law. If there’s an impairment to the Whites’ water rights, the BLM must follow the advice of OWRD’s local wa- termaster, Shilton said. “Their remedy is with the Oregon Water Resources Department,” he said. Once the ranchers breached the 1973 agree- ment by invoking a “water call,” the BLM was no lon- ger obligated to provide ad- ditional grazing, he said. As for the agency’s 2008 decision, “it’s not a contract like the 1973 agreement,” Shilton said. “BLM did not create any new legal obliga- tions.” University of Idaho College of Agricultural and Life Sciences PARMA RESEARCH & EXTENSION CENTER FIELD DAY 30 PM JUNE 21, 2017 • 8:30 AM - 1: Join us for tours of on-going agriculture research and extension projects for crops grown in southwestern Idaho – and for lunch after the tour. Pesticide Application Recertification and CCA credits will be available right after lunch. Please RSVP By phone: (208) 722-6701; OR By e-mail: laphillips@uidaho.edu You can view or download the field day agenda at www.uidaho.edu/cals/parma 23-7/#17 Bill to expand buffers near wild, scenic rivers dies in Assembly By TIM HEARDEN Capital Press SACRAMENTO — Leg- islation that would have expanded buffers around state-designated Wild and Scenic Rivers has died in the California Assembly. The state Cattlemen’s Association and other farm groups opposed the bill by Assemblywoman Laura Friedman, D-Glendale, to limit certain activities within a quarter-mile in each direc- tion from designated rivers. The bill might have se- verely impacted grazing and accessing water rights, the CCA said in a legislative newsletter. The 1972 California Wild and Scenic Rivers Act re- quires more than a dozen riv- ers and streams be preserved in their “free-flowing” state. It was patterned after the 1968 National Wild and Sce- nic Rivers Act, according to an Assembly bill analysis. Among its provisions, Friedman’s Assembly Bill 975 would have added pro- tection for “historical, cultur- al, geological or other similar values” along designated riv- ers and expanded the protec- tions from immediately adja- cent to the river, the analysis explains. But Friedman couldn’t gather the 41 votes necessary to advance the legislation to the Senate before the June 2 deadline for moving bills out of their original chamber, ac- cording to the bulletin. The CCA sent producers two “action alerts” about the legislation in recent weeks and asked them to urge their As- sembly members to oppose it. 23-4/#4N