B2 — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD BUSINESS & AG LIFE THURSDAY, AUGUST 18, 2022 What new tax, health care and climate bill means for the agriculture industry By SIERRA DAWN McCLAIN Capital Press WASHINGTON — The U.S. House on Friday, Aug. 12, passed a sweeping bill that will raise corporate taxes and spend hundreds of billions of dollars on climate and health care programs. The package includes major provisions involving water and agriculture. The House voted 220- 207 along party lines. The measure had passed the Senate in similar fashion: 51-50 with Democrats in support, Republicans opposed and a tiebreaking vote cast by Vice President Kamala Harris. President Joe Biden plans to sign the bill into law this week. Democrats passed the bill using a process called reconciliation, which allows bills to advance with a simple majority rather than the 60 votes typi- cally needed. Bills passed via reconciliation must be budget-related. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., called the legislation “historic” and “transformative.” The bill’s main compo- nent is $369 billion to be spent over 10 years on cli- mate and energy programs. The legislation also gives Medicare administrators the power to negotiate drug rates and extends expanded Aff ordable Care Act subsi- dies through 2025. To fund the measures, the bill would set a 15% minimum tax on large cor- porations, create a 1% excise tax on companies’ stock buybacks and fund the Internal Revenue Service to audit more taxpayers. According to numbers released by Senate Dem- ocrats, the measure would raise $739 billion in revenue. Supporters have dubbed the bill the Infl ation Reduc- tion Act, saying it will tackle infl ation by lowering the defi cit and costs for Amer- ican families. The nonpar- tisan Congressional Budget Offi ce, however, said the bill’s eff ect on infl ation will be “negligible.” Republican lawmakers are concerned about the Yasser Marte/East Oregonian The sun rises Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2022, as fi refi ghters battle the fl ames on the west side of the Grain Craft fl our mill in Pendleton. Farmers, customers scramble to make new plans after fl our mill fi re By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press PENDLETON — Pacifi c Northwest wheat farmers are beginning to cope with the fallout from a massive fi re Aug. 10 that left the Grain Craft fl our mill in Pendleton a “total loss.” The company is working with farmers to handle the excess supply, said Natalie Faulkner, director of com- munications for Grain Craft, based in Chatta- nooga, Tenn. The building was more than 100 years old, Faukner said. Twenty-two employees worked in the mill. There were no injuries in the fi re. Pendleton Police Chief Chuck Byram said the mill was a “total loss.” The company does not disclose the production capacity of the building, Faulkner said. The extent of the damage and possi- bility of rebuilding are not yet known, she added. “It’s still an active situa- tion, we are still evaluating everything, just trying to understand the cause and circumstances,” Faulkner told the Capital Press. Ben Maney, president of Oregon Wheat Growers League, farms north of Pendleton. He doesn’t take his grain to the facility, but “a sub- stantial amount of farmers” in the area do, he told the Capital Press. “It’s been a staple for the Pendleton community for an awfully long time, gen- erations, and it’s always been a central location (in) town,” he said. The fi re is the latest hit for growers, after experi- encing severe drought last year, Maney said. Many crops had rebounded this year with spring rains. “A lot of farmers don’t have home storage, and they can’t store that grain on their farm,” he said. “For this heartbreaking event to happen today, it puts the community and a lot of the farmers in a tough situation. It hits the com- munity hard.” Jeremy Bunch, CEO of Shepherd’s Grain, a farm- er-owned fl our company, sent an email to customers about the fi re. “We are working on a contingency plan now and getting wheat staged for movement to another Grain Craft mill,” Bunch said. “Unfortunately, there will be an interruption in fl our supply as we work through these details. We apologize for the inconvenience this causes. We are working hard to minimize this fl our supply interruption and will provide a timeline update very soon.” The cause of the fi re was “mechanical failure,” Byram, the police chief, told the Capital Press. On Aug. 9, dispatchers received a report of black smoke coming from the mills, “with no visible fl ames,” according to a police department press release. The fi re depart- ment responded, extin- guished the small fi re and remained on fi re watch. The fi re subsequently reignited at about 4 a.m. Aug. 10 and became fully engulfed due to the dry grain and the wooden structure, Byram said. Employees identifi ed the source of the fi re, Byram said. “It happened in the mill itself, with one of the pieces of equipment, with a rubber bushing or housing that obviously got too hot and started the fi re,” he said. There were no injuries, he said. It’s the middle of har- vest, Byram said, so the mill was processing a lot of fl our. He didn’t have an exact fi gure, but said Grain Craft employees estimated there were “hundreds of thousands of pounds of pro- cessed fl our in the bins.” There is no estimated cost of damage yet, he said. “We can’t even get into the building, we can’t do anything right now, this is strictly defensive ... right now. They’re just trying to keep (the fi re) away from other structures,” he said the afternoon of Aug. 10. Some surrounding buildings have been dam- aged by water and smoke, Byram said. The Pendleton Fire Department, Umatilla Tribal Fire Department, Umatilla County Fire Dis- trict No. 1 and other agen- cies responded to the scene, at 501 S.E. Emigrant Ave. The mill plays a “huge” role in the Pendleton com- munity, Byram said. “They’re a major employer; we are obvi- ously an agricultural com- munity that does a lot of dryland wheat farming,” he said. “Wheat farmers from the surrounding area bring their wheat in here to the Pendleton fl our mill. It’s yet to be determined what the impact is, but I can gauge it’s going to be signifi cant.” Pendleton Assistant Fire Chief Tony Pierotti told the East Oregonian newspaper the silos were full of fi n- ished grain, so the fuel load was “extreme.” bill’s increased taxation and spending. In his speech on the fl oor ahead of the vote, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said that “passing this bill today means more expensive bills for Ameri- cans tomorrow.” Farm groups took mixed stances on the bill. Some, including the American Farm Bureau Federation, raised concerns over tax increases, while others, including the National Milk Producers Federation, praised its approximately $40 billion investment in USDA. The bill includes $3.1 billion in relief funds for “distressed” borrowers of USDA loans and $2.2 bil- lion in aid for farmers who have experienced discrimi- nation from USDA. The bill will pour $20 billion into existing USDA conservation pro- grams, including $8.45 bil- lion for the Environmental Quality Incentives Pro- gram (EQIP), $6.75 billion for the Regional Conserva- tion Partnership Program (RCPP), $3.25 billion for the Conservation Steward- ship Program (CSP) and $1.4 billion of the Agricul- tural Conservation Ease- ment Program (ACEP). The package will spend about $14 billion on rural clean energy programs, including $9.7 billion to rural electric cooperatives for renewable energy proj- ects, $1.97 billion to the Rural Energy for American Program (REAP) and $1 billion for Section 317 loans related to renewable energy. The bill creates tax incentives aimed at chan- neling billions of dollars to wind, solar and bat- tery development. It also includes subsidies for elec- tric vehicles. The package would direct $500 million to bio- fuels infrastructure. It also includes $5 bil- lion for fi ghting wild- fi res and boosting carbon sequestration. Finally, it includes $4 billion for the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation to improve drought resilience across the West. Did looser liquor laws boost problem drinking? By ELAINE S. POVICH Stateline.org SALEM — Oregon has joined nearly three dozen states that plan to extend pandemic-related liquor laws allowing curbside pickup or home delivery of alcohol to help restaurants, bars and liquor stores survive COVID-19 closures. But some research shows that the states’ desire to boost the hospitality industry might be fueling binge drinking and higher overall alcohol consumption. Of the 35 states (plus the District of Columbia) that loosened their cocktails to-go laws during the pan- demic, 18 plus D.C. have made the rules permanent, and 14 have extended them, according to the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States. Many factors have prompted some people to drink more during the pan- demic. Some drank to deal with their anxiety, stress or grief. Those working at home had easier access to alcohol and spent less time commuting in their cars. Many normal social inter- actions were canceled or curtailed. But researchers say looser state liquor laws also contributed to a rise in binge drinking and overall con- sumption, with all the atten- dant health harms. A May 2020 study by researchers from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health found that people who had alcohol delivered reported consuming more drinks and drinking on more days than people who obtained it through other methods. “With the increase in availability, we see exces- sive use,” said Alicia Sparks, chair of the non- profi t U.S. Alcohol Policy Alliance, which lobbied against looser state laws. “There’s really strong sci- ence around increased avail- ability leading to increased consumption and increased harm.” ‘Rethink the drink’ Oregon, which touts its wineries and breweries in state advertising, is one of the states where the debate between public health advo- cates and the hospitality industry ended with relaxed laws being made perma- nent. Democratic Gov. Kate Brown signed a measure last year that allows licensed establishments to sell “mixed drinks and single servings of wine in sealed containers for off -premises consumption.” Mike Marshall, executive director of Oregon Recovers, a nonprofi t that works to increase access to treatment and recovery programs to fi ght addiction, said the deci- sion to ease access to alcohol is likely to exacerbate an already problematic situa- tion in the state. According to the Oregon State Med- ical Examiner’s offi ce, alco- hol-related deaths surged 73% from 2019 to 2020. “Increased access leads to increased consump- tion, especially with binge drinkers and underage drinkers,” Marshall said in an interview. “In the face of increased harm and damage caused by alcohol, the Oregon Legislature and gov- ernor thought the best thing to do was to increase (paths) for alcohol consumption.” However, Oregon offi cials recently launched a “Rethink the Drink” campaign to per- suade state residents to take stock of how much alcohol they are consuming. Using public service announce- ments on various media plat- forms, the state is trying to educate Oregonians on how much alcohol is contained in diff erent kinds of drinks and how much it might take someone to become impaired. Erica Heartquist, spokes- woman for the public health division of the Oregon Health Authority, said the program was not especially timed to coincide with the increased drinking during the pandemic, but the timing is fortuitous. “Alcohol is the third- leading cause of death in Oregon,” she said. “We love our beer and our wine in the Pacifi c Northwest, so we want to put the brakes on excessive drinking.” Harmful impacts A study by RTI Inter- national of North Carolina found an overall increase in alcohol consumption that began with the onset of the pandemic and con- tinued throughout 2020. In terms of drinks per month, alcohol consumption was 39% higher in November 2020 than it was in February 2020, the month before the pandemic began, according to the study. Binge drinking increased by 30% during the same period. There were especially large increases in consumption during that time frame among Black and Hispanic women (173% and 148%, respectively) and Black men (173%). Carolina Barbosa, a health economist at RTI, said to-go alcohol sales and expanded delivery services probably played a role in the increases. Barbosa said states are loosening the rules without regard to the data on increased alcohol con- sumption, which can lead Are you running an outdated Windows Operating System? We’ll help you avoid critical issues by installing Windows 11! to numerous public health consequences such as alco- holism and liver disease. “Yes, the problem is in many states (looser laws) are becoming permanent,” Bar- bosa said. “For sure, they should be rethought.” But others question the connection between looser laws and increased con- sumption — or even that people drank more during the pandemic. The Distilled Spirits Council, a trade association, pointed to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, issued by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. In the most recent report, which covers 2020, only 15.4% of people 12 or older said they drank “a little more or much more” than they did before the pandemic. Computer not running as fast as when it was new? Let us install lightning-fast solid state drive!