12 CapitalPress.com July 3, 2015 Hundreds of residences and some hotels were evacuated FIRE from Page 1 in there, including a new $10 million cherry line we just completed a month ago,” Gonsalves said. Stemilt Growers Inc. sus- tained major losses to its pear and Rainier cherry packing plant. Northwest Wholesale Inc., at 1567 N. Wenatchee Ave., was gutted, and nearby Michelsen Packaging Co.’s stack of apple trays and pads and pallets was reduced to large mounds of ash. Company president Dan Beddeson estimated the loss at $200,000. All four businesses were located in a triangular area bor- dered by North Wenatchee Av- enue, Hawley Street and Miller Street. The wind apparently blew embers over a wide por- tion of town from Broadview and Horse Lake Road downhill and across North Wenatchee Avenue to ignite the pallets, pads and trays and then spread the fire to the plants, said Mike Burnett, chief of Chelan County Fire District No. 1. The Sleepy Hollow fire start- ed about two miles northwest of town near the Sleepy Hollow Heights subdivision, Burnett said. The fire was reported at 2:15 p.m. By 8 p.m. it had trav- eled eastward along hillsides south of the Wenatchee River to reach Broadview and Horse Lake Road. Hundreds of residences and some hotels at the north end of town were evacuated and more were under temporary evacua- tion the next morning because of an ammonia leak at one of the burning warehouses, Moore said. “Wenatchee Fire Depart- ment was spread pretty thin. Tax relief available for fire victims OLYMPIA — Businesses in Wenatchee impacted by the June 28 Sleepy Hollow Fire can receive tax relief, the state Department of Rev- enue says. Businesses may ask for: more time to file and pay tax- es; waiver of a late payment penalty; extension on expiring reseller permits, business li- censes and registrations; and rescheduling of audits. Taxes are due on July 25 for businesses that report monthly. Quarterly filers must file and pay by July 31. Individuals and businesses that own property in declared disaster areas may be eligible for property tax relief. Proper- They had no assets to prevent our fire from taking off,” Gon- salves said. “We waited until 11 p.m. for a response. It was too much for the city to handle.” Burnett estimated about 300 firefighters came from as far away as Leavenworth, Tonas- ket and Moses Lake. Fire trucks and personnel arrived during the night from Seattle, Bellevue and South King County. A couple of firefighters ex- perienced some heat and smoke issues but there were no injuries, Burnett said. It was still 90 degrees at Wenatchee’s Pangborn Memo- rial Airport at midnight after a 2:55 p.m. high of 108 degrees. Burnett said the state Depart- ment of Natural Resources will investigate the cause. The fire was 3,000 acres and still growing in the hills west of Wenatchee the afternoon of Dan Wheat/Capital Press The state is offering businesses in Wenatchee impacted by the June 28 Sleepy Hollow Fire tax relief. The ash is the remains of apple trays and pallets owned by Michelsen Packaging Co. The gutted buidling is Northwest Wholesale Inc. ty owners may visit Revenue’s disaster relief page for links to forms to file with county as- sessors. Businesses may request June 29, Moore said. Skies were clear of smoke over town the morning of June 30. Firefight- ers were working to tie fire lines together in the hills on the west and southern edges, said Rick Scriven, a fire spokesman. Fire- fighters were working with the state Department of Ecology to “tear walls apart” to get into the Stemilt packing plant for final containment there, he said. The warehouse fires were knocked down by 8 a.m. June 29 but were not under control, said Glen Widener, a Wenatchee Fire Department battalion chief. “Stemilt lost a lot of cher- ries,” he said. Firefighters were still pour- ing water on Stemilt’s Miller Street plant. The roof was in danger of caving in, Widener said. “We’re in a defensive mode,” he said. extensions or penalty waiv- ers by sending secure emails or calling the department at 1-800-647-7706. — Dan Wheat The fire at the Stemilt plant burned through the next day, making it impossible for com- pany personnel to get inside and assess damage to packing lines, said Brianna Shales, compa- ny spokesperson. The roof and structure were damaged, she said. The buildings and packing lines are insured, she said. The Stemilt plant is on the west side of Miller Street. The company’s red cherry plant, east of the street, was not damaged, Shales said. “We will be fully operation- al by Wednesday or Thursday (July 1 or 2) morning, getting help from our neighbors. It im- pacts less than 2.5 percent of our packing plan on cherries,” said West Mathison, company pres- ident. The Rainier crop is about done and Stemilt was down to packing 10 to 20 tons per day Dan Wheat/Capital Press A helicopter fights the wildfire on a ridge at the north end of Wenatchee, Wash., at 8:18 p.m. June 28. A dozen homes and several agriculture-related businesses were lost to the fire. compared to hundreds of tons of red cherries elsewhere, said Roger Pepperl, Stemilt mar- keting director. The balance of Rainiers will be packed else- where and the workers will be moved with them, he said. Mathison declined to com- ment on the fate of his home in Broadview and those next door of his vice president of sales and marketing, Mike Taylor, and Pepperl. Aeri- al photos published by The Wenatchee World newspaper showed Mathison’s and Pep- perl’s houses standing but Taylor’s destroyed. Gonsalves said Blue Bird’s buildings and lines are fully insured. The remaining 50 percent of the company’s cherry crop yet to be picked, packed and shipped will be packed at Monson Fruit Co. in Selah. Monson and Blue Bird are co-owners of the Washington Cherry Growers packing company. “We will get organized, continue on harvest, get ready for apples and pears and strategize on rebuild- ing,” Gonsalves said. About 300 cherry packing employees are displaced and organic apple packers will be in the fall, he said. A representative North- west Wholesale Inc., an ag-chemical and orchard equipment supplier, de- clined to talk to the media. Its warehouse was gutted. The company also has of- fices in Cashmere and Tonasket. Michelsen Packaging Co., 1105 Hawley St., lost its trays, pads and pallets but its building, rented from Northwest Whole- sale, was OK, Beddeson said. The trays, pads and pallets were insured and will be replaced from the company’s headquarters plant in Yakima, he said. The company makes apple packing trays and other packaging from recycled paper. It also has facili- ties in Auburn and Fresno, Calif. Latest order affects 16 water rights held by 11 owners SHUTOFF from Page 1 Eric Mortenson/Capital Press Hospital cooks Ramiro Gonzalez, left, and Julieta Capuia fry tofu in four production kitchens at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland. ‘We want to buy everything regionally’ LOCAL from Page 1 rounds, 100 pounds of steaks and 200 pounds of bones for soup and broth. Cory Carman, a fourth generation cattle rancher, said the relationship has been “phenomenal.” OHSU ac- counts for 20 to 25 percent of the ranch’s annual sales and is by far the ranch’s biggest ac- count, she said. The business would be “much smaller” without OHSU’s consistent demand for quality and quan- tity. She said producers pursu- ing such relationships must understand they require pa- tience, collaboration and flex- ibility on both ends. “The biggest lesson is hav- ing that anchor customer,” Carman said. Carman said OHSU ap- proached her out of the blue when it was looking for grass- fed beef to serve the thou- sands who are at “Pill Hill,” as the campus overlooking Portland is known, every day. Complex system Fernando Divina, OHSU’s executive chef, said the com- plex counts about 10,000 food transactions a day at nine out- lets within the facility, includ- ing cafe and snack kiosk sales and 1,200 meals delivered to patients’ rooms. OHSU’s an- nual budget for food and bev- erages is about $5 million, and the hospital made a conscious decision to walk its health talk by seeking out local produc- ers, preferably organic. “We want to buy every- thing regionally, if possible,” Divina said. “That’s our goal.” It isn’t a simple process. Scott Cochrane, OHSU’s food purchasing agent, said large institutions such as schools often have tight bud- gets. It’s often cheaper for them to buy the volume they need from large distributors. To purchase in bulk locally at a competitive price point, institutions may have to ask multiple growers to aggregate their production. “I know they all want to, but there’s a point where they can’t cut their own throat,” Cochrane said. “There’s a lot of willing participants on the outside of the circle who can’t get in.” Eecole Copen, OHSU’s sustainable foods program coordinator, acknowledged it takes more work to buy food from smaller producers. “You have to commit to being OK with dealing with multiple vendors,” she said. “The whole system is based on willingness.” She and others refer to this type of purchasing as a larger version of Community Sup- ported Agriculture, or CSA. It’s ISA in this case: Institu- tional Supported Agriculture. Copen said the payoff is a strengthened regional food system. “We need more farmers,” she said. “That’s about food security, growing the local economy, jobs, income.” OHSU’s first foray into the local food scene was estab- lishing a farmers’ market on campus. It’s now in its ninth year and serves as an incuba- tor for growers who eventual- ly reach the point where they can sell wholesale to OHSU’s food services department. The idea isn’t just a Port- land foodie thing. Good Shep- herd Medical Center in Herm- iston, about 180 miles east of Portland, buys vegetables from Finley’s Fresh Produce, berries from another local grower, and pork and chick- en from suppliers across the border in Washington. All of the beef purchased by the hospital is raised within 50 miles. Nancy Gummer, Good Shepherd’s nutrition services and diabetes education direc- tor, said she began buying lo- cally about 10 years ago. Gummer said she wanted to quit buying meat from an- imals treated with antibiotics or raised in confined feeding operations. It took 10 years to find chicken she felt com- fortable feeding hospital pa- tients, staff and visitors. In addition to buying lo- cal, Gummer avoids purchas- ing products that contain arti- ficial colors, flavors or other additives. Her food budget is about $500,000 annually. “We feel what you eat has the biggest impact on your health,” she said. “Food that’s really healthy for humans is going to be grown in health- ier soil, and handled and pro- cessed in a way that has less impact on the environment.” Gummer said. Flexible partnerships Increased institutional buying of locally grown and processed food can reshape the food system, said Aman- da Oborne, vice president of food and farms for Ecotrust and the lead author of the “Ag of the Middle” report. Producer and buyer have to make some adjustments, however, Oborne said. Institutions have to be flexible enough to partner with farmers and “take what they’ve got when they’ve got it” and pay promptly, she said. They also should increase their frozen storage space so they can buy in bulk when things are in season and use them over time. Farmers “have to be able to think like a bigger operation,” she said. They need proper insurance coverage and must comply with food safety reg- ulations. “Those are barriers for in- stitutional buyers,” Oborne said. “That liability related stuff has to be in order.” Institutions can’t afford to have employees standing around chopping, slicing and dicing vegetables, she added, and producers should look for creative ways to provide some of that minimal processing. To fill big institutional or- ders, farmers can coordinate crop planning and combine production with neighbors, she said. “This is a partnership and we problem solve together,” she said. “That’s the mindset to bring to it.” water board issued curtailment notices June 26 for the city’s four appropriative water rights on the Tuolumne River dating back to 1903, though the order represents only a small portion of San Francisco’s water sup- ply. The city’s rights were in- cluded as the state curtailed pre- and post-1914 appropria- tive water rights on the upper San Joaquin River as well as se- nior rights on the Merced River dating back to 1858. The latest order affects 16 water rights held by 11 owners, bringing the total number of senior right holders to receive shutoff notices to 297. No more curtailment orders were im- minent as of June 30, but that could change quickly, water board spokesman Tim Moran said. Workers in the board’s Di- vision of Water Rights “are analyzing water conditions in watersheds throughout the state, and when they determine there is not enough water in a stream or river to protect more senior water rights, they issue the curtailment notices,” Mo- ran said in an email. In all, 8,721 junior right holders throughout the Sac- ramento and San Joaquin val- leys have been told there is insufficient water to serve their rights, according to the water board. “The need for further cur- tailment of more senior rights and curtailments in other wa- tersheds is being assessed weekly” by the water board, the Almond Board of Califor- nia advised growers in a news- letter. State officials said the wa- ter board uses monthly diver- sion data in each watershed to determine availability as well as daily natural flow data from the Department of Water Re- sources. As supplies continue to decline through the summer, more senior right holders will be affected, the water board cautioned. The state issued its first widespread curtailment orders to senior right holders since 1977 on June 12, affecting 277 rights held by 114 right hold- ers. As of last week, less than one-third of the farmers, wa- ter districts and communities affected by the shutoffs had met a deadline to confirm they stopped pumping, the water board reported. The Banta-Carbona Ir- rigation District in Tracy is challenging the curtailment order in court, arguing the water board overstepped its authority. The board’s chair, Felicia Marcus, has said she welcomes litigation to solve longstanding questions over the board’s powers, The Asso- ciated Press reported. State officials have main- tained they have the author- ity to restrict water use in a drought under a state consti- tutional amendment passed by voters in 1928 requiring all water use to be “reasonable and beneficial.” The water board issued two letters earlier this year warning all water right holders that wa- ter may be unavailable to them this year because of drought conditions. Last year, the board issued curtailment notic- es to more than 5,000 diverters in five watersheds, nearly all of whom have junior rights. In May, the board approved a plan for senior right hold- ers in the Delta to voluntarily cut their water use by 25 per- cent from 2013 levels to avoid more drastic cuts later. In all, 229 applications from farmers to participate in the plan were received by a June 1 deadline. Still, a consortium of mostly urban water districts called the State Water Contractors com- plain that Delta farmers are di- verting too much. “These landowners in the Delta have long-standing wa- ter rights that entitle them to water when nature provides it, but those rights do not entitle them to stored water paid for by others and intended for the environment,” said Stephanie Morris, the State Water Con- tractors’ acting general man- ager. “If nature ran its course, the Delta (water) would not be suitable for drinking or farming this summer,” Morris said in a statement. The complaint drew a sharp rebuke from Barbara Barrig- an-Parilla, executive director of Restore the Delta, who argued the water contractors are only concerned with having enough water to export and are uncon- cerned about the environment.