12 CapitalPress.com May 8, 2015 ‘Human interface’ will always be part of service ROLE from Page 1 Advising the advisers Behind the scenes, though, these private professionals often seek advice from Extension spe- cialists, West said. “The farmer doesn’t see that interaction.” Disseminating information through private agronomists — as well as nonprofi ts and other entities — is a cost-effective way of keeping university re- searchers and Extension agents relevant, said Scott Reed, direc- tor of the Oregon State Univer- sity Extension Service. “We don’t have to do the work the certifi ed crop advis- ers are doing, but we can help the CCAs be at the top of their game,” Reed said. Likewise, email and social media have made it easier for the Extension Service to com- municate with farmers, he said. Growers can also get training through online learning mod- ules instead of being instructed one-on-one. “The more we focus on ac- cess rather than delivery, the more effi cient we become,” he said. University representatives are careful to point out that “hu- man interface” will always be part of the Extension Service, but some say the increased re- liance on technology comes at a price. “They no longer have the presence or people on-farm that they once had. That link has weakened,” said Tom Peerbolt, who runs a crop consulting company for berry growers and works closely with Extension. The role of university re- searchers at agricultural exper- iment stations has also evolved as they’ve become more reliant on outside money for projects, he said. More of the reseachers’ time is spent applying for grants, and the studies tend to be more high-level rather than applied on-farm research, Peerbolt said. As farm companies have grown bigger and more verti- cally integrated, they’ve been investing in proprietary re- search, he said. Smaller grow- ers, however, don’t have this option. “The larger companies are doing their own research. They’re using knowledge as part of their corporate advan- tage,” Peerbolt said. Growers fund research Growers, through their crop commissions, are being asked to fund a larger share of the work done by university researchers in recent years, paying not only for projects but also for salaries, said Mike Omeg, a cherry farm- er near The Dalles, Ore., and Capital Press board member. As growers become more re- sponsible for basic funding, the university system begins to take on the role of a paid consultant, he said. The question then becomes whether it might be less expen- sive to conduct research pri- vately, as some cooperatives in Europe have done, Omeg said. “It’s defi nitely in the realm of reasonable possibilities,” he said. “You lose some control when you hand the funds over.” Realistically, though, re- search and Extension must diversify its funding base if it hopes to stay viable, according to university leaders. Government funding shrinks The Extension Service has traditionally been funded by the federal, state and county govern- ments, said Sonny Ramaswamy, director of the USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agricul- Courtesy of OSU Extension Robin Rosetta helped develop the new intelligent sprayer technology. Courtesy of OSU Extension Bernadine Strik, OSU Extension berry specialist shows off a variety of blueberries she helped bring to growers in Oregon. ture, which oversees and funds the system. After the 2008 fi nancial crisis and the recession that followed, states and counties slashed their budgets for Extension, which forced the federal government to reduce its support, he said. “If states aren’t able to match those numbers, we will with- hold our funds as well,” Ra- maswamy said. In 2010, state funding for Extension Services dropped nearly 16 percent, from $977 million to $823 million, and has still not recovered, accord- ing to USDA fi gures. Since then, the federal contribution has decreased about 18 per- cent, from $567 million to $465 million. Due to these cuts, as well as infl ation and the increasing cost of healthcare and pen- sions, the total “footprint” of Extension Services across the U.S. has shrunk by one-third since the recession began, Ra- maswamy said. Financial pressures are like- ly to continue unless Congress and state legislatures begin di- recting more revenue toward the system, he said. “Absent that kind of recognition, farm- ers are going to have to bear a bigger part of the burden.” The Heritage Foundation, a free-market think tank, argues that a thorough re-examina- tion of university agricultural research is preferable to in- creased funding. Universities should focus on studies that serve the pub- lic good but aren’t likely to be taken up by private research- ers, said Daren Bakst, agricul- tural policy fellow at the foun- dation. “There’s likely a benefi t to this research, and I don’t think that’s the problem. The question is whether or not the private sector would do it,” he said. Bakst said he’s “less sym- pathetic” toward the Extension Service’s role in disseminating information, as this function is more easily privatized. “There is a clear way to pro- vide a service to someone and make money doing it,” he said. Impartial research While Bakst argues that farmers can best decide for themselves whose advice to trust, others say the great advantage of the Extension Service is its reputation for even-handedness. University research and Extension is unlikely to be displaced by private compa- nies because growers see the public system as impartial, said West of the University of Tennessee. “I think our role will al- ways be to provide an unbi- ased source of information,” he said. Extension agents are well-positioned to guide farmers who are facing pol- icy predicaments regarding species, water, air quality and pesticides, said Barbara Al- len-Diaz, director of Cooper- ative Extension at the Univer- sity of California. “All of these types of is- sues, we have Cooperative Extension folks intimately involved in navigating the discourse,” she said. “That’s what a public university can bring to the table.” Particularly in the West, land grant universities serve niche regional crops that of- ten aren’t lucrative enough for many agribusiness fi rms to pursue, said Ryan Davis, Northwest regional technol- ogy specialist with Wilbur Ellis, an input supplier whose agronomists commonly ad- vise farmers. “It’s not something the private sector will jump on because it doesn’t appear to have that big payoff,” he said. University faculty also conduct fundamental research that doesn’t have an easy re- turn on investment, he said. For example, Wilbur Ellis employees are more likely to collect soil electroconduc- tivity data for an individual farm, while the university system will draw correlations between that information and crop yields, Davis said. “They do that baseline work and then we take it to the grower,” he said. Farmers benefi t In situations where the private and public sectors are rivals, that’s often benefi cial to farmers, said Jim Peterson, vice president of research at Limagrain Cereal Seeds, a crop breeding fi rm. “Everyone needs to ap- preciate that competition is a good thing, especially with plant breeding,” he said. On the other hand, it’s un- productive for university and private breeders to be overly duplicative of each other’s efforts, so in some instances, they’d best serve growers by joining forces, Peterson said. Limagrain, for example, is partnering with the University of Idaho on wheat breeding. It makes sense for univer- sity researchers to concentrate on basic research that’s more risky from the market per- spective, such as studying ba- sic genetics and biochemical pathways, he said. “We don’t want to run the public programs out, we want to work with them to bring the best product to market,” Pe- terson said. The university system al- ready has facilities and sci- entists at multiple locations, so it’s logical for private companies to use that “infra- structure” rather than build it themselves, said Paul Mc- Cawley, association director of Extension at the University of Idaho. “For them to replicate that would be far more expen- sive than for us to do it,” he said. Extension now concentrates on major crops such as small grains, tree fruit, vegetables WSU from Page 1 efforts by using the Internet. Other parts of Extension such as 4-H remain in place, Koe- nig said. Extension now concentrates on major crops such as small grains, tree fruit, vegetables and grapes, he said. “Personnel are now highly educated and accomplished faculty and spe- cialists.” Extension still supports for- ages, small fruits, small farms and other crops, but with less investment and fewer people, he said. Extension employees also rely on technology — including an array of specialized websites — to deliver information and decision-making tools to help farmers make better, more time- ly decisions, Koenig said. “De- cision-support tools represent a new frontier in Extension pro- gramming, and we are investing heavily in their development.” The web-based tools link real-time data from WSU’s Ag- WeatherNet stations, commodi- ty markets and the WSU Variety Testing Program to help farmers to predict disease and insect growth and forecast outbreaks, estimate wheat yields, calculate fertilizer rates, schedule irriga- tion and predict the potential for frost or cold damage, Koenig said. Smaller staff Today’s WSU Extension has fewer employees. Before the recession hit in 2008, WSU Ex- tension had 563 employees — 192 faculty members, 287 staff members and 74 students. Last year, Extension had 8 percent fewer employees overall, with the largest reduction in faculty. The number of staff and stu- dents remained about the same, at 284 and 79, respectively. “We have maintained staff and student positions, but have signifi cantly fewer permanent faculty positions now than in 2009,” Koenig said. This is a re- fl ection of Extension receiving more funds through grants for specifi c research projects. In 2008, WSU Extension had a total budget of $55 mil- lion, including $15 million in state funding through WSU, $10 million from counties, $5 million in federal funding and $25 million in grants and other forms of revenue. Six years later, the bud- get is larger but signifi cantly different. Less money comes from the state and counties, but funding from grants and other forms of revenue has jumped nearly 50 percent. Of Extension’s total $62 million 2014 budget, $12 mil- lion was state funding through WSU, $8 million was from the counties, $5 million was feder- al funding, and the remaining $37 million was grants and revenue, comprising 60 per- cent of the total budget. been fully assessed, he said. New York apple trees are about a week behind in blos- som development because of a cold winter and may not reach full bloom in the western part of the state until May 18 or 20, Allen said. “But I don’t get hung up on bloom dates. We tend to catch up. We have plenty of mois- ture. The trees haven’t had any winter damage and are full of energy,” he said. The weather is warming and should stay warm, he said. New York and Michigan each typically harvest about 30 million boxes of fresh and processing apples. Both are expanding acreage. Armock said the fruit ridge area of Michigan, where most of the apples grow in the west- ern central part of the state, appears to be headed for a nor- mal May 10 to 12 full bloom. The weather is warming and is forecast to stay warm, he said. “I would say without frost in play, we have the potential to have a good crop. Not a huge crop, but a good crop,” he said. Farmers have noted the dif- ferences. “We don’t have as much hand-holding as we did from Extension, but they still are the conduit for information coming directly from the re- searchers,” said Ron Jirava, a Ritzville, Wash., wheat farmer. “It’s a good thing somebody invented cell phones, because that’s pretty much the way I communicate with these guys now.” Extension provides a good channel for farmers who don’t have established relationships with WSU breeders or re- searchers, Jirava said. Extension is a valuable tool for farmers looking to change their practices and make the best decisions, said Tom Kammerzell, a Colfax, Wash., rancher. “Nobody wants to start out with a loss,” Kammerzell said. “If you’re trying to decide something that hasn’t been done before, they can set it up so you have less of a chance of a fail- ure.” Kammerzell has been work- ing with WSU Extension to research riparian areas for live- stock. Having Extension in- volved as a third party makes the information more credible, he said. Farmers can use technol- ogy to access research on- line, but that only goes so far, Kammerzell said. “Some- body in Ohio isn’t going to give you the same valid in- formation as somebody sit- ting in your own county.” Koenig said Extension is probably not entirely out of the woods fi nancially, but he remains optimistic, as com- modity groups such as wheat and tree fruit growers have increased their investments in Extension and research. Washington Grain Com- mission CEO Glen Squires WSU Extension funding changes While total overall funding increased by more than 14 percent in 2014 compared to 2008, state and county funding fell nearly 17 percent. The shift in funding from more stable government sources to less reliable grant funds affects the way Extension is staffed. Before state budget cuts ... $55 million Washington shipped 98 million boxes of 2014 apples for this time of year, he said. Shipments have been run- ning around 3 million boxes per week but will slow down when cherries and other fresh fruit and produce enter the market in June. The early spring may bring Washington’s cherry crop ear- ly, but there’s a lot of time and weather to go before apple harvest that could mitigate any earliness for apples, Matthews said. There hasn’t been spring frost damage but damage from last November’s freeze hasn’t Farmers’ reaction Groups’ investments $25 million APPLES from Page 1 grade and how much can be exported overseas will be the main factors determining the size of carryover, he said. “There is a price that mid- dle class consumers in Third World countries can afford and want to afford our apples. We’re probably at those pric- es,” Matthews said. Washington had shipped 98 million boxes of 2014 ap- ples by April 27 with 46 mil- lion left to go, Matthews said. That’s about 15 million boxes more left to go than normal said his organization gives funding directly to Extension, but there are also Extension components in a lot of other WSU research it funds. Squires said there has a been a “tremendous, positive” response to the small grains work done by WSU profes- sor and endowed chair Drew Lyon since the restructuring of Extension. His work includes integrated weed management in dryland small grain produc- tion. A few years ago, the Wash- ington tree fruit industry gave a $32 million endowment to WSU, including $12 million to Extension, $12 to research and $8 million to research and Extension centers. The Washington Tree Fruit Research Commission expects most research projects to also have an Extension component, said manager Jim McFerson. Research and Extension proj- ects are often blended to have meaningful outcomes that im- pact the industry, he said. “In the old days, Extension was like a bullhorn blaring out how-to instructions to farmers, but that model doesn’t work as well anymore,” he said, citing the industry’s shift to electron- ic and digital communication. “It doesn’t take away the im- portance of the human interac- tion — it’s not just about tell- ing us what to do and how to do it better, it’s about listening and fi guring out what the most important problems are, where our resources are and how to bring those resources to bear on whatever the priority might be.” ... and after cuts $62 million Funding sources $37 million Grants and revenue $5 million Federal $10 million Counties $15 million $5 million $8 million $12 million State through WSU 2008 2014 Employee makeup: then and now Employee type 2009 2014 Percent change Faculty Staff Students Total 192 287 74 563 155 284 79 518 -19.3% -1% 6.8% -8% Source: Rich Koenig, WSU Extension director Alan Kenaga/Capital Press