COFFEE BREAK B8 — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD THuRSDAY, DECEmBER 23, 2021 Friend’s death cloaked in secrecy and silence DEAR ABBY: A dear friend of mine, “Dirk,” died by suicide a couple of years ago. We were very close when we were young but saw each other only occasionally as adults. However, on the occa- sions we did get together, it always felt like we picked up where we left off. I found out about my friend’s death from a family member after I discovered his phone number was no longer working and his Facebook and Messenger accounts DIRT Continued from Page B1 land attractive. Then the recession hit. As stock prices plum- meted and financial insti- tutions teetered toward collapse, Fairbairn said, “farmland, along with other ‘real assets,’ took on a new luster in the eyes of investors.” The financial sector’s appetite for farmland took off and hasn’t slowed since. Land use experts say other factors, including concerns about climate change and dwindling water supplies, have intensified the land rush. Tracking buyers Uncovering who’s investing isn’t easy. That’s because, according to Andrew Gunnoe, a pro- fessor of rural sociology at Maryville College, in the U.S., “no comprehensive database of landownership exists at the federal level.” USDA tracks purchases by foreign investors but not domestic buyers. States, too, rarely track farmland ownership, so tax parcel data are scattered across counties. Jim Johnson, land use and water planning coordi- nator at the Oregon Depart- ment of Agriculture, said capturing a true picture of investment would demand data from every county in the West. Experts say no one has undertaken that mammoth project in its entirety, but indi- vidual organizations and researchers have compiled pieces. Megan Horst, a Portland State University professor who studies food systems, is a leader in this field. Stringing together data had been deleted. He had died a few months earlier. Dirk’s family asked me not to tell anyone that the death was a suicide. They didn’t want his memory to be about that final decision. Because there was no obituary in the news- paper (they didn’t want one), it feels as though my friend has been erased with no trace. I’m still having a hard time with his death. I feel like I should put an in-memoriam obituary in the paper. I also feel a need to talk about it with others (both for myself and as a warning to others). My mother thinks I should abide by the wishes of the family. What do you think? — MISSING MY FRIEND IN OHIO from Oregon’s 36 counties, she recently analyzed farm- land sales from 2010 to 2015 in an effort to uncover investment patterns. “I think it’s important for people to know who owns our land,” she said. Building on Horst’s work, the Capital Press requested data from county assessors’ offices on farm- land sales from 2015 through 2021, focusing on three major regions: the Columbia Gorge, Central Oregon and the Willamette Valley. Big picture The datasets reveal that while the majority of farm- land sales are still associ- ated with family farming, more properties are being sold to investors and corporations. Between 2010 and 2015, there were, on average, 1,656 sales of Oregon farm- land each year. Seventy-nine percent of these properties were sold to individuals or sim- ilar entities, accounting for 54% of the acreage. In contrast, 12% of farms were bought by corporations, but they accounted for more than 40% of the acreage pur- chased. In other words, corporations bought larger properties. Of the 1,853 corporate buyers, less than half had clear connections to agri- culture and instead were involved with real estate and property development, investing, manufacturing, renewable energy and other industries. Only 10% of the farms were purchased by out- of-state buyers, but they bought 26% of the total acreage. Who is buying farm- land is only half the story DEAR MISSING: When someone takes their own life, there are usually a range of emo- tions experienced by the survi- vors. These can include shame, guilt and anger. Fortunately, there are mental health programs that can help with these if the family is aware they are available. A call to the National Suicide Preven- tion Lifeline (800-273-8255) could guide them if they reach out. I sin- cerely hope you will listen to your mother and respect the wishes of the deceased’s family, even though you do not agree. If you do what you are contemplating, it could cause the family even more pain. DEAR ABBY: Our 26-year-old — some would say the less important half. “Who owns the property is not really relevant,” said Greg Holmes, food sys- tems program director and Southern Oregon advocate at 1,000 Friends of Oregon, a land use watchdog non- profit. “What’s relevant is: What are they going to do with it?” Columbia Gorge From 2010 to 2015, the Columbia Gorge region had the highest percentage of properties purchased by out-of-state buyers, at 14%, and one-quarter of all buyers were corporations. The region has con- tinued to be a popular investment location. From January 2015 to November 2021, in Hood River County, 413 farm prop- erties representing 9,760 acres were sold. The database, cross-ref- erenced with business fil- ings, reveals that top areas of investment were in tourism, real estate and high-value perennial crops. “The biggest threat to farming in the Hood River area is mostly tourism-re- lated,” said Mike McCarthy, whose family grows pears in the area. McCarthy is a board member of Thrive Hood River, a land use organiza- tion. He became interested in protecting farmland after, in the 1970s, a resort developer offered to convert his parents’ land into a golf course. According to an agri- cultural lender who spoke on condition of anonymity, there’s also “huge insti- tutional interest” in land near the Columbia River because of the valuable water rights. In some pockets along the Gorge, growers have married son currently lives with us. His wife of three years (close in age) was raised in a different culture and has recently started living with her parents in a city four hours away. My son has a stable, well-paying job and cannot relocate. They talk on the phone many times a day and night, and both say their marriage is “fine.” She doesn’t work and doesn’t finish anything she starts. She contributes to her fami- ly’s household by using the car and money our son provides. She says she became depressed when she lived in our town but is happy with her parents and really doesn’t see moving out. We feel she is immature, con- banded together to hold out against corporate invest- ment pressure, leasing properties to one another or forming partnerships. New business growth is soaring in Oregon And federal pandemic aid, in the form of busi- ness grants and personal SALEM — New busi- stimulus payments, may ness formation climbed have provided capital for sharply in Oregon as people to set out on their the pandemic recession own. eased, with entrepreneurs Other metrics tell sim- ilar stories. leaping in to start new The share of self-em- companies this year at an ployed Oregonians fell unprecedented rate. sharply in March and Oregonians started April but rebounded an average of 4,100 busi- nesses each month over almost immediately to the past year, an increase pre-pandemic levels, of more than 25% from according to data from the same period in the the Oregon Employment 12 months before Department. A sim- ilar picture played the pandemic, out nationally. according to U.S. And venture Census Bureau capital, the money data. That’s the entrepreneurs use fastest pace in the to pursue especially 17 years for which Oborne ambitious ideas, is the government has soaring to its highest level Oregon numbers. since the dot-com era. It might seem sur- prising that people Oregon startups raised just over $1 billion in choose to take a big risk the first nine months of — starting a new busi- ness — during a time of the year, nearly double upheaval. Some Oregon the amount they raised businesses, especially during the same period bars and restaurants that in 2020, according to the endured intermittent shut- quarterly report from the downs during the pan- National Venture Cap- demic’s first year, have ital Association and now closed permanently. PitchBook. Oregon had But entrepreneurs 132 startups funded, up recognize recessions as 25% from the same nine opportunities, too, when months in 2020. old business models are New businesses rarely under stress and new ones have it easy, of course. emerge. And the pandemic con- tinues to present enor- “Entrepreneurs have mous challenges, from always thrived in the the omicron variant to unknown,” said Amanda supply-chain snarls and Oborne, president of the historic inflation. Oregon Entrepreneurs “It’s a challenging Network. “These massive time to start a company disruptions are just an incredible time to rethink, because the future is less certain, I think, than it reinvest, to start some- thing, to look at some- ever has been,” Osborne thing with fresh eyes.” said. By MIKE ROGOWAY Central Oregon From 2015 to 2021, the number of farmland trans- fers in Deschutes County was 568, representing 35,196 acres. In Central Oregon as a whole, one-quarter of investors from 2010 to 2015 were corporations that bought a whopping 59% of the total acreage sold. Horst, of PSU, said the big trend in Central Oregon has been conversion of farmland into develop- ments, in part because the city of Bend is a fast- growing population center. “Things are changing rapidly in Central Oregon,” said Horst. Experts say the popula- tion upswing has put pres- sure on land and water supplies. “We’re seeing inch-by- inch erosion of farmland,” said Nellie McAdams, executive director of the Oregon Agricultural Trust. Deschutes County data from 2015 to 2021 show a few major themes. Top buyers included real estate and land development com- panies, investment firms and companies, including water utilities, buying land for the water rights. Farther east, in Grant County, investments have taken on a different flavor. Here, said Shaun Rob- ertson, president of Grant County Farm Bureau, two big themes have emerged: wealthy individuals or families moving to the country for its amenities, and people or companies buying land for hunting purposes. trolling and taking advantage of our son. We have told him as much. He understands he has a situation but seems too weak to change it. What more can we do? — FLUSTERED PARENTS IN TEXAS DEAR PARENTS: Your son knows your opinion. You can — and should — do nothing more than you already have. Because he and his wife say they are happy with the situation, keep your mouths shut and refrain from stirring the pot. At some point, one of them will want to make changes, which may mean your son will have to relocate. But this is his problem, and one he must resolve on his own. The Oregonian