July 31, 2015 CapitalPress.com 3 WDFW: One more kill will Cranberry harvest put Dirty Shirt wolves at risk hinges on fall rain Capital Press Hozomeen Border pack* Bellingham Vancouver NOTE: Polygons Island represent estimated ranges for known wolf packs with radio-collared animals. Circles represent generic ranges for packs that have no collared wolves. * Dens 20 Lookout 5 Seattle Whitestone 97 Teanaway 90 2 2 Huckleberry Wenatchee Tacoma Wenatchee 90 195 C Yakima m olu b 395 River WASHINGTON 5 82 er Tucannon Walla Walla bia River C o l um Source: Washington Dept. of Fish and Wildlife “It shouldn’t be the responsibil- ity of the livestock producer to manage problem wolves. “It’s just a tough, tough situa- tion and at the end of the day, the Department of Fish and Wildlife is the responsible party,” Field said. “Let’s have the profession- als come in and do this.” It’s unclear what WDFW will do if depredations continue and producers decline a permit to take matters into their own hands. Efforts to reach Martorel- lo for further comment were un- successful. Defenders of Wildlife’s Northwest director, Shawn Cantrell, who’s also on the wolf advisory group, said WDFW should continue to seek out non-lethal means to prevent depredations. “We’re really pleased with the approach the department has taken,” he said. Cantrell said that if another depredation occurs, he hopes the WDFW will pause to con- sider whether other non-lethal R iv nake Pasco N Vancouver Spokane 90 Olympia 20 miles Diamond Carpenter Ridge Nc’icn 2 outside of Washington 101 Smackout Salmo Wedge Goodman Profanity Meadows 20 Strawberry Dirty Shirt Okanogan ia If a northeast Washington wolf pack kills anymore live- stock, state wildlife managers will offer ranchers a permit to shoot two wolves, according to the Department of Fish and Wildlife’s wolf policy coordina- tor, Donny Martorello. The permit to kill would be limited to the producer’s fami- ly and employees, who would not be allowed to hunt or bait wolves. The wolves would have to be seen near the cows. WDFW staff working with the producer also could shoot if they encounter wolves. Martorello outlined the per- mit’s conditions in an email Tuesday to WDFW’s wolf advi- sory group. The Dirty Shirt pack, which has at least six members, killed three adult cows and a calf grazing on U.S. Forest Service land between July 5 and 10 in Stevens County, according to WDFW. There are two ranchers with cattle grazing in the area. The Stevens County Cattle- men’s Association has called for WDFW to lethally remove wolves in response to the dep- redations. Washington Cattlemen’s Association Executive Vice President Jack Field, a member of the wolf advisory group, said Wednesday that some ranchers may accept a permit to kill, but others may be wary of drawing unwanted attention from wolf advocates. “It’s certainly a tool, but it puts the requirement right on the back of the producer,” he said. Confirmed pack (As of March 6) Alan Kenaga/Capital Press measures can be tried before following through on offering a permit to shoot wolves. The Dirty Shirt pack has one of the state’s few known breed- ing pairs, Cantrell noted. “For us, that’s a compelling reason to say, ‘OK, let’s make sure we have exhausted all the options,’” he said. In his email, Martorello said WDFW was continuing to help producers protect livestock with range riders. WDFW describes the ground as rugged, with steep canyons, brushy draws and forested areas. The next step described by Martorello falls short of measures WDFW eventual- ly took in 2012 and 2014 to stop other packs in Stevens County from attacking cattle and sheep. Most recently, WDFW con- tracted last September with the USDA Wildlife Services to shoot a wolf in the Huckleberry pack. The Dirty Shirt pack roams in the eastern one-third of Wash- ington, where wolves are not a federally endangered species. The wolves are a state-protect- ed species, but the state’s wolf plan allows for shooting wolves when non-lethal measures fail to stop depredations. Elsewhere in the state, a yearling Angus killed by wolves was found dead July 16 in Cen- tral Washington, where wolves are protected by the federal En- dangered Species Act. Wolves there are not candi- dates for lethal removal, accord- ing to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The Angus was in a herd grazing on Washington Depart- ment of Natural Resources land in Kittitas County. Conservation Northwest was helping fund a range rider hired by the rancher. The organization issued a state- ment saying its range-rider pro- gram has been successful over the past three years. For now, berries are enjoying the sun By DON JENKINS Capital Press LONG BEACH, Wash. — A cranberry crop ripening in the sun could be Washington’s best in years, but growers are anxious for rain to resume before bogs need to be fl ooded for the harvest. “It’ll be a major concern by the middle of September,” Long Beach Peninsula cranberry farmer Steve Gray said. “There better be a rain.” Cranberries illustrate that there’s an upside and downside to the unusually hot and dry weather this summer in Western Washington. Clouds usually hold yields along Washington’s southwest coast below other cranberry pro- ducing states, such as Wiscon- sin, Massachusetts, New Jersey and Oregon. Washington’s cranberry bogs in 2014 yielded 975 pounds per acre, while Wisconsin yielded 2,395 pounds, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Oregon’s harvest average 1,628 pounds per acre. Washington State University research scientist Kim Patten, stationed in Long Beach, called recent harvests “embarrassingly low.” This year, however, Wash- ington cranberries were set up for high yields by an excellent pollination season as bees were active during a warm and dry late spring and early summer, Patten said. “This will be the best year, theoretically, we’ll have in my Don Jenkins/Capital Press Washington State University research scientist Kim Patten stands July 28 in a cranberry fi eld tinged reddish-brown by the heat at the WSU cranberry research center in Long Beach. Cranberry growers hope fall rains will supply enough water to fl ood bogs for the harvest. lifetime,” he said “If we could get weather like this every year, we wouldn’t give Wisconsin a run for their money, but at least we could make a living.” The downside, so far, has been the potential for heat damage. At WSU’s cranberry research bogs, an irrigation valve malfunctioned on a hot day, and some vines died, turning a reddish-brown in an oth- erwise green fi eld. “You see a lot of heat-stress damage out there (on peninsula bogs). Not every farm, but more than I’d like to see,” Patten said. A bigger concern is how much rain the region will re- ceive by the time the harvest begins in late September. Outlook murky for port productivity proposals By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Key port productivity lan- guage has been removed from legislation pending before Con- gress, casting doubt on the out- look for other bills intended to prevent shipping slowdowns. Initially proposed as the standalone “Port Transparency Bill” — S. 1298 — the legisla- tion was recently folded into a broader transportation funding package the Senate is expected to vote on imminently. Under the original language, the bill would have required ports to submit monthly pro- ductivity reports during labor negotiations between terminal operators and the longshore- men’s union. The goal was to document whether longshoremen were engaging in work slowdowns, as they were accused of doing during recent labor talks on the West Coast. Elaine Thompson/Associated Press Loaded container trucks line up at a gate at the Port of Seattle in this fi le photo from on Feb. 17. Port productivity language was re- moved from legislation pending before Congress, casting doubt on the outlook for other bills intended to prevent shipping slowdowns. Agricultural shippers report- ed sustaining millions of dollars in losses due to port congestion, which they blamed in part on the longshoremen’s alleged tactics. While other aspects of the Port Transparency Bill were included in the latest version of the transportation funding leg- islation, provisions requiring monthly reports during labor negotiations were left out. Two more stringent bills geared toward preventing port slowdowns have also been pro- posed in Congress, but the fail- ure of the productivity tracking proposal raises questions about their chances of success. “If the most modest of the three bills encountered such op- position, can these bills pass?” asked Peter Friedmann, exec- utive director of the Agricul- tural Transportation Coalition, which represents farm export- ers. Another bill introduced in the Senate, the Preventing La- bor Union Slowdowns Act — S. 1630 — would prohibit slow- downs under the National Labor Relations Act. The third bill, the Protecting 15-5/16 x 10 x 2 18-3/4 x 14-3/8 x 3 CALL FOR PRICING AND AVAILABILITY. Delivery Available 503-588-8313 2561 Pringle Rd. SE Salem, OR rop-6-26-5/#17 Key provision left out of pending federal legislation Orderly and Responsible Transit Shipments Act — S. 1519 — would give state governors the authority under the Taft-Hart- ley Act to order unions back to work in the event of a slowdown or strike, if the U.S. president doesn’t take action. These proposals face a tough road ahead, but the National Re- tail Federation and other groups that depend on ports will con- tinue pushing for reform, said Jonathan Gold, vice president of supply chain and customs policy for the organization. “We think something needs to change when it comes to these labor negotiations,” he said. “These issues are not going away on the congestion.” The International Longshore and Warehouse Union point- ed out that it was joined by the U.S. Maritime Alliance, which represents East Coast terminal operators, and U.S. Labor Sec- retary Thomas Perez in object- ing to the proposals. 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