May 22, 2015 CapitalPress.com 9 Oregon West Coast Beet Seed marks 75 years in business By MITCH LIES For the Capital Press On the surface, the idea of four competing companies jointly owning a company sounds like a recipe for disas- ter. In fact, it may be exactly why West Coast Beet Seed Co. has operated as long as it has, celebrating its 75th anni- versary this year. Company Manager Greg Loberg said the formula has allowed the company to sur- vive the sometimes turbulent world of agribusiness. “If one of the owner mem- bers of West Coast Beet Seed goes bankrupt, and this has happened,” Loberg said, “somebody else is probably picking up the pieces and car- rying on a program. “With multiple owners that are competitors, the loss of one owner is probably the gain of another owner,” Loberg said. “The company, in spite of a shifting ownership, has been incredibly stable for 75 years.” Generating roughly half the U.S. beet seed production in any one year, West Coast Beet Seed is a model of con- sistency in the Willamette Valley’s shifting agricultural climate. The company, which start- ed in 1940 with nine share- holders, has had only four managers in its history, and the first lasted only two years. George Burt, who still comes around the office on occa- sion, ran the company from 1980 until Loberg took over in 2007. Before Burt, Sam Campbell ran the company from 1942 to 1980. The company also boasts minimal turnover among non-managerial employees. Its 17 permanent staff have been with the company an average of 15 years, provid- ing a level of experience that Loberg described as invalu- able in a production regime as complex as beet seed. In a typical year, staff will start by overseeing transplant operations in January and Feb- ruary, a time when the com- pany’s employment swells to between 150 and 200. During March and April, staff will walk production fields looking Mitch Lies/For the Capital Press Greg Loberg, manager of West Coast Beet Seed Co., discusses the history of the 75-year-old compa- ny, depicted in these pictures at the company’s Salem headquarters. for off-types and monitoring past production fields for vol- unteers. In June they will be separating male plants from females to eventually remove the males and maximize yield. In July and August, they will be harvesting seed and plant- ing the next crop. And in the fall they will be processing seed. “It’s hard to find that kind of experience in beet-seed production,” Loberg said of his staff. “They are multi-task- ing people.” Another competitive ad- vantage the company enjoys is it consolidates expenses for the four owners. “What we do is consoli- date overhead expenses into a place where they are shared by multiple companies,” Loberg said. “No one else has that.” West Coast Beet Seed is owned by American Crystal Sugar, Syngenta, Holly Seed and SES VanderHave. Combined, it and its main competitor, Betaseed, annual- ly supply seed for between 1.1 million and 1.2 million acres of sugar beet production. Beet seed production av- erages about 3,000 pounds to the acre, but much of that is removed during processing. “We may take out 30 per- cent here,” Loberg said, re- ferring to West Coast’s Salem plant. “Then the owners fur- ther process it, and they may take out another 50 percent.” The owner-companies es- timate their annual needs and contract for growers to pro- duce the seed. Seed produc- tion contracts can range from less than 10 acres to more than 50 acres, with an average field size of 20 acres. The company contracts with a steady base of around 75 growers. Production is spread out throughout the val- ley to avoid issues with cross pollination. Legislative roundup: How ag bills have fared this session By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Mitch Lies/For the Capital Press Andy Hulting, speaking at last year’s Hyslop Farm Field Day, is back at work after suffering a stroke Jan. 31. He will be presenting a talk on weed control in grass seed at this year’s Hyslop Farm Field Day, May 27 in Corvallis. Hyslop field day marks Extension specialist’s return By MITCH LIES For the Capital Press From the surface, all will appear normal when Andy Hulting gives his presentation on weed control in grass seed at Oregon State University’s Hys- lop Farm Field Day May 27 in Corvallis. The OSU Extension weed specialist has been a regular on the field day’s agenda during the past nine years. But this year’s appearance likely will mean a little more to Hulting and those close to him. It will be one his first grower presentations since he suffered a stroke on Jan. 31 that sidelined him for most of three months. “It is good to be back,” he said. “It beats a hospital room. I can tell you that much.” Life is slowly returning to normal for Hulting, who spent two weeks in a drug induced coma and another month in pro- fessional medical care. Hulting said he still doesn’t have full range of feeling in his right leg, but he has no memory loss, no cognitive impairment and no issue with concentrating. He returned to work part-time in mid-April and started back full- time on May 11. Hulting suffered the stroke while delivering a talk on weed control at an extension meeting in Prineville. Five minutes into his presentation, Hulting report- edly sat in a chair, announced he didn’t feel well and passed out. Paramedics transported Hulting from Prineville to the St. Charles Medical Center in Bend, then airlifted him to Oregon Health and Science University. “I have nothing but good things to say about OHSU,” Hulting said. “And I want to thank the Prineville Fire and Rescue, because they were the first ones there.” At OHSU, doctors placed Hulting in the coma to stabilize him, identify the cause of the stroke and operate on him. They brought Hulting out of the coma in mid-February, with his family gathered around his bedside. “My parents were there and everybody,” said Hulting, who is married and has three chil- dren. “It was a pretty surreal experience.” Hulting spent another two weeks in recovery at OHSU, then two weeks at a rehabili- tation center in Eugene before returning home in mid-March. “It was pretty tough for a while,” Hulting said, “but once I got home, things started im- proving.” Hulting, 40, said he had no sign that anything was wrong until the moment he suffered the stroke. “I drove over (from Cor- vallis) in the morning, had lunch, and everything was fine,” he said. Hulting said there is no history of stroke in his family. Also, he said, doctors were un- able to explain why the stroke struck when it did. “It is probably a birth de- fect, and it just picked that day to happen,” he said. Hulting, who has been at OSU nine years, wanted to thank the many people who have supported him over the past few months. “I just got tons of emails from growers and industry peo- ple,” he said. “I want to thank them for all of their support. “To be missed and be thought of is a pretty neat ex- perience,” he said. With just over a month re- maining in Oregon’s legislative session, lawmakers have acted on several bills related to agri- culture and natural resources. Controversial proposals that would increase the regulation of pesticides and genetically engineered crops have died in committee, while others — such as restrictions on antibi- otics in livestock — are still awaiting committee action. Following is a summary of bills that have either passed the legislature or crossed signifi- cant hurdles on the way to be- coming law: Biotech mediation A mechanism for resolv- ing potential disputes over cross-pollination between or- ganic, conventional and genet- ically modified crops has made headway in the legislature. House Bill 2509 creates a mediation system in which the Oregon Department of Agricul- ture would seek voluntary reso- lutions to coexistence conflicts. After winning support from proponents and critics of ge- netic engineering, the bill was approved 57-1 in the House. The lone dissenter was Rep. Paul Holvey, D-Eugene, who introduced legislation restrict- ing where biotech crops are cultivated. That proposal died in committee. The mediation bill is now being considered by the Senate Committee on Environment and Natural Resources, which is scheduled to hold a hearing and possible work session on HB 2509 on May 20. Predator control A proposal to increase fund- ing for predator control by as- sessing rural landowners up to $1 per acre in special tax districts was approved by the House 56-2 and is now before the Senate Committee on Environment and Natural Resources. While House Bill 3188 won by a strong mar- gin, it is opposed by animal wel- fare and environmental groups that object to lethal methods and local management of wildlife. The legislation was supported by ranchers, who say that such add- ed money is necessary in rural counties facing budget shortfalls and pressure from cougars, coy- otes and other predators. with an amendment to the bill. Proponents hope that greater clarity on agritourism liability will convince more insurance companies to provide coverage for such operations. Nursery shipping Urban farm tax relief A proposal to give farm regulators the authority to re- voke nursery shipping permits is making its way through the legislative process. Senate Bill 256, aimed at stopping nurseries from ship- ping if they don’t abide by san- itary standards for plants, will be up for a vote before the Joint Committee on Ways and Means. A subcommittee on natural resources recently decided to move the measure out to the full committee at a May 18 work session. The Oregon Association of Nurseries supports SB 256 be- cause a disease outbreak tied to an Oregon producer could have serious export implications for the entire industry. The legislation would also raise the nursery license fee cap from $20,000 to $40,000 and the “millage rate” — a mill is one- tenth of a percent — on their rev- enues from five to 10 mills, A new method of reducing property taxes for urban farm- ers was approved 50-10 in the Oregon House, but House Bill 2723 will likely face changes on the Senate side. The bill allows local gov- ernments to create agriculture incentive zones within urban growth boundaries where prop- erties would be taxed at a lower rate if they’re devoted to farm- ing for five years. While HB 2723 appears to have momentum behind it, questions over its potential im- pact on urban growth bound- aries still need to be answered. Supporters are also likely to amend the bill to include a 2023 sunset date and exclude marijua- na from the tax relief proposal. Agritourism liability Legal protections for Ore- gon agritourism operators have passed muster in the Senate, which approved Senate Bill 341 unanimously. The legisla- tion would shield growers from liability for visitor mishaps providing they post warnings, among other conditions. The proposal got off to a rocky start due to opposition from trial lawyers, but man- aged to overcome that obstacle Raw milk advertising Oregon’s prohibition against raw milk advertising, which hadn’t been enforced for more than a year, is officially no longer a state law. Gov. Kate Brown recently signed House Bill 2446, which removes the longstanding ban from statute but doesn’t other- wise change restrictions on raw milk sales. The bill was introduced as part of a legal settlement be- tween the Oregon Department of Agriculture and Christine Anderson, a raw milk producer who sued the agency for violat- ing her free speech rights. During hearings and work sessions, HB 2446 faced no op- position and sailed through the legislative process without so much as an amendment. Aggie bonds Northwest Farm Credit Services, a major agricultur- al lender in the region, will be able to participate in Oregon’s “Aggie Bond” program, which is aimed at providing loans to beginning farmers under House Bill 3239. The bill was signed into law by Brown recently and expands the definition of lenders who qualify for the pro- gram, which provides compa- nies with a federal tax credit for lending to new growers. Drone hunting A ban against using drones for hunting and angling was also approved by the legislature and Brown without encoun- tering any objections, though lawmakers did make some ad- justments to clarify that such devices can be used for manag- ing wildlife with the approval of state regulators. House Bill 2534 passed both chambers unanimously. The bill was supported by lobbyists rep- resenting hunters and fishermen, who feel that drones threaten the concept of “fair chase.” Bird control House Bill 2432, which expands the use of fireworks for bird control, was another non-controversial measure that was recently signed into law. The legislation allows managers of golf courses, airports, landfills and similar facilities to use fire- works to repel birds. Before the bill was passed, such uses were limited to farms and forests. Bag needs? Bag solutions! SMITH PACKAGING YOUR MAIN SUPPLIER FOR: • Polyethylene Bags • Polypropylene Bags • Paper Bags • Bulk Bags • Stretch Films • Hay Sleeves • Mesh Produce Bags • Plastic Pallet Covers • Bag Closure Products • General Warehouse Supplies Competitive pricing! Great quality products! Service you expect and trust! • Halsey, Oregon: 541-369-2850 • Eastern Washington, Ed Kropf: 509-936-2652 or ed@smith-packaging.com www.smithpackagingservices.com 21-2/#04X 21-2/#5