Business AgLife B Thursday, February 25, 2021 The Observer & Baker City Herald Taking the fight to fire Oregon Senate bill would expand cropland firefighting options Ziply Fiber’s new local network goes live March 4 By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press SALEM — Cropland owners in Oregon would be eligible to join rangeland fire protection associations under a bill that seeks to improve their access to equipment and training. Areas that produce dryland wheat are prone to wildfire — as evidenced by the devastating Substation Fire in 2018, which burned 78,000 acres in Wasco and Sherman counties — but currently cannot be included in RFPAs. “During harvest time, ripe grain crops are a tinder box. A lightning strike, a spark of any kind, or chaff falling on a hot engine can cause a crop fire,” said Sen. Bill Hansell, R-Athena, during a recent legislative hearing. Hansell has introduced legis- lation that would allow RFPAs to be organized on “land used for cultivating crops” in addition to rangeland and undeveloped areas. Supporters say Senate Bill 590 will enhance firefighting resources in rural communities. “Wildfire does not adhere to boundaries, it does not stop at fence lines or changes in land- ownership, or rangeland or crop- land,” said Amanda Hoey, CEO of the Oregon Wheat Growers League. By forming or joining an RFPA, farmers could better coor- dinate with state agencies on firefighting and acquire surplus firefighting equipment from the federal government, Hoey said. “Though it may be surplus and at the end of its useful life in the eyes of particular agencies, small groups like RFPAs still can get a lot of use out of some of this equipment,” said Michael Kelly, a farmer and volunteer firefighter in Wasco County. Perhaps more importantly, forming an RFPA would allow cropland owners to establish a closer relationship with the Oregon Department of Forestry and other professional firefighting organizations, he said. Zipping along the net in La Grande The Observer East Oregonian/E.J. Harris, File Farmers watch as 40-foot flames crest the top of a hill July 31, 2015, as they and area firefighters work to contain a wheat field fire northwest of Athena. State lawmakers are considering a bill that would allow cropland owners to join rangeland fire protection associations, which can acquire surplus federal equip- ment and access state training. WHAT THE BILL WOULD DO • Senate Bill 590 would allow rangeland protection associations, RFPAs, to fight fires on croplands. The bill is in the Senate Committee On Natural Resources and Wildfire Recovery. Currently, farmers who volun- teer to fight fires are often seen as a liability, he said. “That makes communication and teamwork all but impossible during an actual fire.” Farmers in RFPAs would receive training from the ODF, which would given them “legiti- macy” among professional orga- nizations, according to Kelly. Aside from training, the agency can help RFPAs apply for grants, make legal filings and pay for liability insurance. Kelly said farmers in his area have organized into a fire district, but the structure isn’t a good fit because they lack employees, tax revenue support or professional equipment. Vol- unteer farmers fight fires with water tanks attached to pickup trucks and with tillage imple- ments on their tractors. “We are an RFPA, we just don’t reap any of the benefits,” he said. Roger Beyer, a lobbyist for the Oregon Small Woodlands Association, said the financial impacts on the state’s Depart- ment of Forestry must be con- sidered as part of the discussion about SB 590. While the bill’s benefits out- weigh any of these concerns, the legislation should provide added funding to ODF, Beyer said. Without adequate funding, the heavier workload could detract from the agency’s existing firefighting duties, he said. The ODF has three full- time employees who support 23 RFPAs that cover about 15 million acres. In the past, the agency estimated that expanding RFPAs to include cropland would require an addi- tional three employees at a cost of more than $700,000 per biennium. The Oregon Farm Bureau, which supports SB 590, is dis- cussing the financial repercus- sions of the proposal with ODF and other stakeholders, said Samantha Bayer, the group’s policy counsel. The legislation is important due to the agriculture indus- try’s frequent exposure to wild- fires, she said. “In unprotected areas, farmers are the first responders and sometimes the only responders to wildfire in their remote communities.” KIRKLAND, Wash — Ziply Fiber recently announced it com- pleted a critical phase of the fiber- optic network build-out in La Grande that will deliver gig-speed fiber internet and an all-new, state-of-the-art network to area residents and businesses. That network is set to go live beginning Thursday, March 4. “Nearly 40% of the approxi- mately 6,600 residential and busi- ness addresses within our service area will be ready for fiber service immediately and the remainder are scheduled for completion early this year,” the company stated in a press release. The new network will put La Grande’s internet connec- tivity “on par with larger met- ropolitan areas throughout the nation,” according to Ziply Fiber, which means benefits such as no data cap and much faster internet uploading and downloading times. “I am excited to know that last-mile fiber will be available to every residence in the city,” La Grande Mayor Steve Cle- ments said in the press release. “Not only will this infrastruc- ture improve internet speeds for entertainment and personal use, but it will also provide current and future businesses the connec- tivity they need for a strong web presence and active e-commerce trade. Having fiber available to home and business also allows the city to promote work-at-home opportunities, tapping into the trend of professionals moving to smaller communities away from urban centers.” The company is investing $500 million and building an advanced fiber network to smaller towns and rural communities across the Northwest that have been under- See, Ziply/Page 3B Food groups try to save program Groups strive to save one Trump program: Farmers to Families food boxes By SCOTT McFETRIDGE Associated Press DES MOINES, Iowa — As the Biden administration sets up shop, many policies initiated by its hard-right predecessor are being targeted for extinction. But agricultural groups and anti- hunger organizations are fighting to keep one they’ve come to depend on, which channels food that might otherwise be plowed under to people reeling under the coronavirus pandemic. The U.S. Department of Agri- culture began the Farmers to Families Food Box program last April after many people were shocked to see farmers destroy crops because restaurant and institutions abruptly cancelled orders due to the virus even as food banks were crushed by demand from people suddenly out of work. The USDA hurriedly paid roughly $3 billion to contractors who within weeks worked with food banks to begin handing out boxes filled with 20 pounds of produce to motorists who queued up in lines that would snake through stadium parking lots and down suburban streets. Photos of those lines became among the most emblematic images of the suffering inflicted by the virus. “Hunger is always with us, but it was more apparent with those photos,” said Mark Herrick, a USDA spokesperson. The food boxes proved well suited to quickly helping people Chelcee Mansfield/Contributed Photo Enterprise FFA Greenhand competitors are, from left, Sydney Hop- kins, Zach Farr-Roberts, Talia Aase, Harlie Stein, Codi Cunningham, Alex Rowley, Emily Love, Tanner Kesecker, Jessica Journigan, Lily Royes, Brandon Charlton (back) Trey Stewart and Zander Flores. Ag students mark FFA Week amid pandemic By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain Sierra Dawn McClain/Capital Press, File Agricultural groups and anti-hunger organizations are supporting the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Farmers to Families Food Box, which began under the Trump administration. who were suddenly in need, com- pared to the much larger food stamp program, which has eligi- bility requirements and paper- work. Officials say it offers lessons for how to respond to sig- nificant disruptions in the future. After getting the program started, the USDA under former President Donald Trump approved four more phases costing another $3 billion. After the final round ends in April, the USDA will reassess the program. If the USDA extends it, the program will be a rare example of the new administration retaining rather than dismantling a Trump initiative as Biden is seeking to do on issues ranging from immigra- tion to health care. Unlike some other programs, the food box ini- tiative was widely praised from the start, despite early concerns about contractors ability to handle the job. As the program continued through last summer, Trump capi- talized on its popularity by having a letter with his signature inserted into boxes, prompting Demo- crats to charge that officials were using it to influence elections. Some also were wary of Trump daughter Ivanka’s involvement in the program. See, Food/Page 3B WALLOWA COUNTY — FFA students in Wallowa County are celebrating National FFA Week this week by sharing the successes of their chap- ters and modifying their activi- ties to cope with the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a press release. A majority of the events during the Feb. 20-27 week have been forced to change during the past school year because of the pandemic. Those changes included how meetings are held, community service and career development events. Despite the changes, students in FFA — for- merly known as Future Farmers of America — have found ways to live and thrive in school and in the FFA events, the release stated. “We work to keep our stu- dents in their assigned cohorts, all students wear masks and we keep our distance,” the release stated. In the fall, FFA chapters held their soils competition, largely with the help of Stangel Bison Ranch providing a pit and Dave Yost for officiating. Also held were competitions in crops and weeds via Google Forms, rituals via Zoom and members partici- pated in virtual workshops with the state FFA officers. As winter approached, the students participated virtually in an agricultural sales competi- tion and the FFA district hosted the annual career development events, with the Enterprise and Joseph chapters excelling. Aside from competitions, another honor in FFA is to earn the highest award the state can bestow upon its members, the State FFA Degree. To receive this honor members must have earned or invested $1,500 or See, FFA/Page 3B