April 10, 2015 CapitalPress.com 11 Washington Ecology urged to change Fertilizer removed from train bill drought well regulations Farm lobbyists happy By DON JENKINS Agency says conditions must get worse before groundwater tapped Capital Press By DON JENKINS Capital Press OLYMPIA — A Central Washington lawmaker April 1 said the Department of Ecology should immediately let farmers pump from emergency wells, a step the agency says it won’t consider unless the drought gets worse. Yakima County Rep. Da- vid Taylor said growers in his agriculture-rich district report already needing wells that were used with state approval in earli- er droughts. “That’s what I’m hearing from folks,” Taylor said after the initial meeting of the legislative drought committee. The committee has little direct control over the DOE’s drought response, but it pro- vides a forum for lawmakers to ask questions. DOE drought relief coordi- nator Jeff Marti said the state once had a “more lax posture toward drilling of emergen- cy wells, and a lot of people came to depend on them during drought.” But the agency now views emergency wells as a desper- ate measure. Groundwater and surface waters are connected, and drawing from emergency wells will eventually impact Don Jenkins/Capital Press Rep. David Taylor, R-Moxee, questions Washington Department of Ecology drought relief coordinator Jeff Marti at a legislative meeting April 1 in Olympia. Taylor challenged the agency’s policy of withhold for now permission to use emergency wells. streams, Marti said. To prevent other water users from being shortchanged, ev- ery extra gallon drawn from the ground will have to be matched by an another gallon put into streams, he said. “We want the impact to be essentially water-budget neutral, and, frankly, that’s the only poli- cy that’s going to keep us out of the courts,” Marti said. DOE has asked lawmakers for $4 million to buy water in the Yakima Basin for that purpose. But the agency won’t spend the money unless the drought deep- ens. DOE can’t say exactly how much worse the drought must be, though Marti said conditions will have to be “much more severe than what we’re looking at currently.” The U.S. Bureau of Recla- mation forecasts junior water right holders in the Yakima Basin will receive 73 percent of their normal summer water supply. DOE held two workshops this week in the Yakima Basin to explain how farmers can sell their water rights. Drought committee chair- man Sen. Jim Honeyford, R-Sunnyside, questioned whether water will be available to lease to let landowners use their emergency wells. “They have drilled those wells at considerable expense, and in a water short year, how do you find water?” Honeyford asked. “It’s a Catch-22. It’s a dry year. You don’t have any water to offset, and they can’t use the wells they have.” Marti agreed farmers could have trouble finding water rights to mitigate drawing from emer- gency wells. “You’re right. The water is more scarce and expen- sive,” he said. In response to a question from Taylor, Marti said DOE does not consider crop value when fielding requests to use emergency wells. “Our position is that re- gardless of crop type, unless the (groundwater) use is offset through mitigation, we’re not going to be approving those types of wells,” Marti said. Taylor said he will continue to press DOE on its policy on emergency wells. “It’s not ad- dressing the need,” he said. OLYMPIA — House Dem- ocrats have stricken anhydrous ammonia, a widely used nitro- gen fertilizer, from a bill moti- vated by the influx of rail tank- ers hauling Bakken crude oil to West Coast refineries. “I’m glad the House Envi- ronment Committee heard our concerns and amended the bill to minimize the impact on ag- riculture,” Washington Farm Bureau associate director of governmental relations Scott Dilley said. Lawmakers have been working on legislation to help fire departments and commu- nities respond to potentially explosive derailments. Senate Bill 5057’s provi- sions include mandating larger crews for trains carrying hazard- ous materials. Railroad unions say additional crew members would be in position to decouple burning rail cars, while railroad companies say larger crews are unnecessary and may conflict with federal rules. A Senate floor amendment extended the staffing require- ment to trains hauling anhy- drous ammonia. The amendment, which passed over the opposition of Senate Republican leaders, pulled agricultural groups into what had been a debate about regulating oil tankers. Farm lobbyists, concerned the bill would increase the cost of transporting fertilizer, argued anhydrous ammonia didn’t be- long in the bill. The chemical, though haz- Don Jenkins/Capital Press Rail cars roll past a crossing guard on the BNSF Railway mainline in southwest Washing- ton. A bill focused on tankers hauling crude oil was amended in the state Senate to cover anhydrous ammonia, a nitro- gen-based fertilizer. A House committee has now removed fertilizer cars from the bill. ardous, isn’t explosive. Accord- ing to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, leaking anhydrous ammonia rapidly expands into a heavier-than-air cloud that causes breathing dif- ficulties and burns. The House Environment Committee dropped anhydrous ammonia from the bill when it amended and then passed SB 5057 on March 30. The full House has yet to vote on bill. If it passes, the Senate will have to agree to the changes. The bill could apply to farm chemicals that are flammable. “Over the next couple of weeks, I expect more discus- sion will take place on the com- peting ideas from the House and Senate on how to address the bill’s central topic — trans- portation of crude oil,” Dilley said. “We’ll continue to work to ensure that any resulting leg- islation doesn’t increase costs for farmers. The House com- mittee’s actions were certainly a step in the right direction.” Don Jenkins/Capital Press A grain elevator at the Port of Kalama on the Columbia River in Washington is one of CHS Inc.’s global as- sets. Whatcom Farmers Cooperative in northwest Washington will merge with CHS in hopes of expanding. Wash. co-op, CHS merge By DON JENKINS Capital Press A northwest Washington farmers cooperative that has ambitions to grow has agreed to merge with global agribusi- ness giant CHS Inc. Whatcom Farmers Coop- erative, which has 205 voting producers, will join a compa- ny that reported a net income of $1.1 billion on revenue of $42.7 billion for the fiscal year ending Aug. 31. The Lynden-based WFC anticipates CHS’ resources, expertise and financial ser- vices will help it overcome barriers and expand outside its corner of the state. WFC has seven retail outlets in Whatcom County, distributes propane and petro- leum fuels, and sells agrono- my products and services di- rect to farmers. “We’re stuck up in the cor- ner (of the state). Our ability to grow is pretty limited right now,” said WFC board presi- dent Jeff Bedlington, a Lyn- den grower. WFC and CHS announced the merger in a press release April 6 Terms of the merger were not disclosed. WFC’s producers have approved the merger, which must get final approval from the CHS board of directors before becoming effective in July. Minnesota-based CHS has some 1,100 member cooper- atives and 84,500 individual members. The company an- nounced in February it was paying out $581 million in cash dividends to its members. Some 2,540 members shared $8.4 million in Wash- ington, while 1,701 members divided $4.7 million in Idaho and 427 members divvied up $3.3 million in Oregon. WFC was founded in 1941. Cooperative officials said they spent more than a year study- ing whether to merge with CHS. “The decision wasn’t made quickly,” said WFC General Manager Don Eucker, who will retain his position. Eucker said that with CHS’ help, the Whatcom coopera- tive may be able to expand its agronomy business into Cana- da and farther south in Wash- ington. WFC will maintain its re- tail outlets and will continue to have control over its assets, he said. “From an outside stand- point, the transition is going to be very seamless,” Eucker said. The merger will expand CHS’ presence in the West, company spokeswoman Lisa Graham-Peterson said. “We continue to look for expansion in that area of Washington to serve farmers,” she said. CHS was formed in 1998 by the merger of Cenex Inc. and Harvest States Coop- eratives. The company’s wide-ranging agriculture and energy enterprises include oil and ethanol refineries, grain terminals, convenience stores, and food processing and fertil- izer plants. CHS shares owner- ship with Cargill Inc. of grain elevators at the Portland, Taco- ma and Kalama, Wash., ports. Apple Blossom Festival honors Brunner WENATCHEE, Wash. — Jay Brunner, director of the Washington State Uni- versity Tree Fruit Research and Extension Center in Wenatchee, has been named Apple Citizen of the Year by the Washington State Apple Blossom Festival. Brunner has been an en- tomologist at the center for 36 years and is retiring in September. Among other accom- plishments, Brunner was instrumental in helping the tree fruit industry shift into integrated pest manage- ment, specifically phero- mone mating disruption as a biological means of com- bating codling moth, a ma- jor apple and pear pest. Brunner will be honored at the festival’s All Service Club Luncheon on April 29 and will ride in the Stemilt Growers Grand Parade on May 2. — Dan Wheat Dan Wheat/Capital Press Jay Brunner holds the Washing- ton State Horticultural Associa- tion’s Silver Apple Award given to him in 2005. He is being honored this year by the Washington State Apple Blossom Festival. 15-7/#7