June 5, 2015 CapitalPress.com 7 Idaho governor announces fi rst-ever AgriTech summit By SEAN ELLIS Capital Press BOISE — Gov. Butch Ot- ter has announced a fi rst-ev- er AgriTech summit, where leaders of Idaho’s agricultural and technology sectors will explore ways to work togeth- er to innovate and create jobs. The Governor’s AgriTech Summit will take place June 16 from 1-4 p.m. at the Boise Center in downtown Boise. The event is the initial step in Idaho Department of Com- merce Director Jeff Sayer’s vision to make Idaho a Silicon Valley of agricultural tech- nology by bringing the two leading sectors of the state’s economy together. Sayer said Idaho is already a leader in the ag tech market- place but he believes the state has a chance to take that posi- tion to the next level. The venture capital market is starting to pour billions of dollars into agricultural tech- nology and it’s important for Idaho to position itself so it can capitalize on that invest- ment, he said. “This summit is an oppor- tunity for Idaho to initiate the conversation around the state on how we can solidify a lead- ership position in the ag tech- nology marketplace,” he said. The summit will allow the state’s technology sector to learn what agriculture’s chal- lenges are and for the technol- ogy sector to educate agricul- ture about its capabilities to solve those challenges, Otter said. “By bringing the two sides together, it’s going to answer some questions the ag sector has never thought of and it’s going to raise some questions the technology sector has nev- er thought to ask the ag sec- tor,” Otter said. “I think it’s a huge opportunity.” Chanel Tewalt, assistant to the Idaho State Department of Agriculture director, said many summit attendees may not even know what the other side does or is capable of. “We want to start the con- versation and get them talking to each other,” said Tewalt, who is helping organize the event. “We want to see if there’s an opportunity for the two sides to work together.” ISDA Director Celia Gould will moderate a panel discussion on agriculture that will address topics such as unmanned aerial systems, ge- netic engineering and on-farm production technology. A technology panel dis- cussion will address data col- lection and analysis, mobile technology, sensors and stor- age technology. Donn Thill, associate dean of research for University of Idaho’s College of Agricul- tural and Life Sciences, will be part of a research panel discussion about bio-sciences, computer sciences and engi- neering. “This is the fi rst time I’ve ever been involved in this kind of endeavor and I’m pretty ex- cited about it,” he said. The cost to attend the sum- mit is $30 before June 9 and $35 after that date, including on-site registration. People can register online at https://www.accessidaho. org/ai/payport/online/ag/in- dex.html For more information about the summit, contact Tewalt at chanel.tewalt@agri. idaho.gov or Kallen Hayes at kallen.hayes@commerce.ida- ho.gov Grazing battle fl ares up in Oregon New lawsuit challenges cattle in Fremont-Winema National Forest Area in detail 97 138 FREMONT- WINEMA NATIONAL Capital Press Sean Ellis/Capital Press Treasure Valley Seed Co. employees inspect black turtle beans in Homedale, Idaho, in April. Dry bean industry representatives and researchers from Idaho, Colorado and Wyoming have agreed to work together on a regional bean research program. Effort to create multi-state dry bean program picks up steam By SEAN ELLIS Capital Press BOISE — People involved in an effort to create a multi- state bean research consor- tium say the idea is starting to come together quickly. “It’s defi nitely going to happen,” said Jerry Haynes, secretary of the Colorado Dry Bean Administrative Com- mittee. The land-grant universities of Idaho, Colorado and Wy- oming are in the fi nal stages of signing a memorandum of understanding outlining their intentions to work jointly on projects that benefi t all three states’ dry bean industries, he said. A 15-member steering committee that includes dry bean industry members from multiple states has been meet- ing periodically since last year. It includes representa- tives of bean commissions, land grant universities and the bean processing industry. When Capital Press spoke with Haynes about the idea in December, he thought it was moving too slowly. But industry representatives and researchers from all three states agreed to work together during meetings in February and April and Haynes is much more optimistic about the ef- fort now. “It’s happening quicker than I thought it would and it’s stronger than I thought it would be,” he said. Colorado has pledged $10,000 a year for three years toward the effort, Idaho is ex- pected to provide $30,000 a year for three years and Wy- oming, which recently created a bean commission and will start collecting assessments in July, will contribute as well, Haynes said. “We’re looking at about $50,000 a year in seed money and then we can start going after some grants,” he said. Haynes said each state has something to offer the others. Colorado State University has a bean breeding program, something the University of Idaho and University of Wy- oming lack, while UI and UW have plant pathologists and CSU will lose its plant pathol- ogist at the end of June. Idaho has the largest bean industry of the three states and will be able to offer the most fi nancial support. Haynes said other states are interested in the idea but haven’t yet committed. The benefi t of a regional bean program is allowing the three states to pool their re- sources and avoid duplicating efforts, said Donn Thill, asso- ciate dean of research at UI’s College of Agricultural and Life Sciences. Thill was involved in the effort that created a tri-state potato research consortium between Idaho, Oregon and Washington, and is advising the bean industry in its region- al effort. “There’s an opportuni- ty for those states that grow beans but have limited re- search dollars to pool some of their funds and do something that will contribute positively to all three states without hav- ing to duplicate things,” he said. “I think it’s a great idea.” The steering committee will meet again July 16-17 in Wyoming, said Idaho Bean Commission Administrator Andi Woolf, who said the ef- fort can save grower dollars by ensuring the states don’t duplicate research efforts. With university budgets getting tighter, “If we can each contribute a piece to that puzzle and work together, it’s a lot better way to leverage our dollars,” Woolf said. 23-7/#5 New lawsuit over grazing rights on public land La Pine 58 By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI The legal battle over graz- ing on public lands has fl ared up in southern Oregon with a new lawsuit over the Fre- mont-Winema National Forest. Environmentalists are ac- cusing the U.S. Forest Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Ser- vice of signing off on grazing in the forest despite “incomplete and inaccurate information” about harms to the Sprague and Sycan river basins. The plaintiffs — Oregon Wild, Friends of Living Oregon Waters and the Western Water- sheds Project — claim cattle are trampling streambanks, widening channels and raising water temperatures to the detri- ment of fi sh. Negative impacts to the threatened bull trout have re- sulted in violations of the En- dangered Species Act, while the degradation in water qual- ity contravenes the Clean Wa- ter Act and National Forest Management Act, the lawsuit claims. Damage to the “scenic val- ue” of the area also breeches the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act, according to the plaintiffs. 20 140 Falls 97 N 25 miles Ore. Calif. Lakeview 139 395 Capital Press graphic The complaint alleges re- peated problems with over- grazing, poor fence conditions and unauthorized cattle in at least 10 grazing allotments are within the bull trout’s “critical habitat.” Some allotments also hav- en’t been monitored for grass stubble height and other param- eters of rangeland health, the complaint said. The Forest Service’s own data shows that water tempera- tures in the streams exceeded Clean Water Act standards in “multiple years,” but despite these issues the government concluded “livestock grazing was not likely to adversely af- fect newly designated bull trout critical habitat,” the plaintiffs claim. The environmental groups have asked a federal judge to declare the government’s graz- ing authorizations to be un- lawful and issue “temporary, preliminary or permanent in- junctive relief” as necessary. The Forest Service had no comment and a representative of the Fish and Wildlife Service said the agency doesn’t com- ment on pending litigation. Jerome Rosa, executive director of the Oregon Cattle- men’s Association, said he was disappointed that ranchers in the area will be subject to litigation at a time they’re already con- tending with water shortages. The OCA will look into the situation and seek to assist ranchers in the area, said John O’Keefe, the group’s presi- dent-elect. “We’re defi nitely con- cerned,” he said. The recent lawsuit comes after a couple years of relative calm in the controversy over grazing on public land in Ore- gon. In 2012, several consolidat- ed complaints over grazing in the Malheur National Forest came to an end after the fed- eral government established new conditions for ranchers to follow. In 2013, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals refused to block grazing in the U.S. Bu- reau of Land Management’s half-million-acre “Louse Can- yon” area while the agency re-evaluated grazing authori- zations. 23-7/#4N