8 CapitalPress.com September 11, 2015 Canada opens borders to Northwest poultry The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has lifted import restrictricts on raw poultry, eggs, live birds and poultry manure from Washington, Oregon and California. The restrictions were imposed after bird flu was detected last winter in the three states. Bird flu sanctions in place for other states Capital Press Canadian food safety of- ficials Sept. 1 lifted import restrictions on uncooked poultry products from Wash- ington, Oregon and California that were imposed last winter during the early days of the U.S. bird flu outbreak. Import restrictions are still in place for raw poultry and eggs from Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Da- kota, South Dakota and Wiscon- sin, according to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency. The restrictions apply to live birds and poultry manure. Canadian officials say the poultry products do not pose a risk to humans. The restric- tions are meant to keep bird flu from spreading in Canada. Highly pathogenic bird flu was detected in a wild duck and captive falcon in Whatcom County in northwest Washing- ton in mid-December, alert- ing authorities that migratory waterfowl were introducing a strain of the disease never seen in the U.S. before. The virus appeared in a backyard mixed-bird flock in Douglas County in South- ern Oregon, triggering bans Don Jenkins/Capital Press on U.S. poultry by several countries. The bans were later lifted or narrowed to specific states or counties. A non-commercial flock in Benton County in Central Washington was infected Jan. 9. The first commercial opera- tion to be infected was a turkey farm in Stanislaus County in California in late January. New cases in the West dropped off after February, but the virus spread rapid- ly among Midwest poultry farms in the spring. Nation- wide, there were 223 bird flu cases. More than 48 million birds were killed or eutha- nized. The U.S. Department of Agriculture has solicited pro- posals from manufacturers for bird flu vaccines. The USDA says it wants to have a stock- pile of doses if it decides to approve vaccinations. Bird flu infected 11 poultry farms and three non-commer- cial flocks in British Colum- bia, Canada, in December. The virus also hit three poultry farms in Ontario in April. Idaho tour highlights voluntary range improvements for cutthroat By JOHN O’CONNELL Capital Press George Brich/Associated Press This 1965 file photo shows Cesar Chavez, farm worker labor organizer and leader of the California grape strike, in an office in California. On Labor Day weekend of 2015, hundreds of former and current labor activists, both Filipino and Mexican American, flowed into the Central Valley town of Delano where 50 years ago, they launched the Delano grape strike. Activists remember the 1965 Delano grape strike DELANO, Calif. (AP) — Hundreds of former and current labor activists, both Filipino and Mexican-American, flowed last weekend into the Central Valley town of Delano where 50 years ago, they launched the Delano grape strike that altered the course of American history. Among them was Lorraine Agtang, who On Sept. 8, 1965, along with her family and other Filipino grape pickers, walked out of their fields to protest a pay cut from $1.40 to $1.25 an hour, the Sacramento Bee re- ported Monday. “I was a kid, only 13,” re- called Agtang, who was born and raised in a labor camp 2 miles east of Delano. “It was midmorning when picketers showed up where we were picking grapes for Giumarra growers and my dad, Platon Agtang, said there’s a strike and we should leave.” When Agtang saw Filipi- nos on the picket lines, she said, “that affected my life story — I knew the Filipinos were hard-working people not bent on civil disobedience, but it was pretty amazing when I learned they were standing up for what they wanted.” Some were beaten and evicted from their homes; oth- ers clashed with law enforce- ment and Mexican strikebreak- ers brought in by the growers, but they stood strong. On Sunday, the efforts of the largely Filipino and Mexican workers were commemorated with a Mass, bus tours of the historically relevant sites, films and a discussion panel. Agtang, whose dad was Ilo- cano, a Filipino ethnic group, and whose mother was Mexi- can, said that before the strike, “the growers would pit Filipi- nos against Mexicans, saying the other group was working harder, so there was always this kind of competitiveness.” By 1966, Filipinos and Mex- icans had formed the still-pow- erful United Farm Workers. The table grape strike succeeded where others had failed when Chavez, who led a well-publicized march from Delano to Sacramento in the spring of 1966, came up with a stroke of genius — the 1968- 1970 grape boycott that spread worldwide. “It showed powerless peo- ple they could do something,” said Philip Martin, professor of agricultural and resource eco- nomics at the University of Cal- ifornia-Davis. “It is considered one of the most successful union boycotts ever — 12 percent of Americans said they avoided eating grapes during the boycott, and by 1970, most major grape growers had UFW contracts.” The workers also won med- ical and retirement benefits as well as laws banning the use of pesticides that cause skin disorders and other maladies, Agtang said. Before she drove to Delano, Agtang stopped at the bronze Cesar Chavez memorial across from Sacramento City Hall depicting Chavez leading two dozen protesters on a march for justice. One of them is a 13-year-old girl. “That’s me on the statue,” Agtang said proudly, “and I’m not even dead yet.” 37-2/#4X SODA SPRINGS, Idaho — Bear Lake Grazing Association ranchers have agreed to reduce grazing densities, remove cat- tle from restored stream banks and adjust grazing rotations on their private land for the sake of conservation. Thus far, however, they’ve come out ahead, they assured participants in a Sept. 2 tour of habitat improvements throughout their range, aimed at benefiting Yellowstone cut- throat trout. The Upper Blackfoot Con- fluence — a partnership in- volving mining companies, Trout Unlimited and the Idaho Conservation League — has already completed several trout habitat improvements within the association’s territory and has additional projects in plan- ning stages that would involve other nearby grazing entities. “We have developed a real- ly great relationship (with land owners) here, and the trust is building,” said Matt Woodard, with Trout Unlimited. The Upper Blackfoot wa- tershed — historically a cut- throat stronghold but depleted of trout in recent years — en- compasses several phosphate mines, in addition to expansive rangeland. The unlikely group of allies has managed to fast-track proj- ects, leveraging federal grants through EPA and other sourc- es with funds from Monsanto, Agrium and J.R. Simplot and expertise from the conservation organizations. Participants also enroll in weed management and grazing rotation programs administered by USDA’s Nat- ural Resources Conservation Service. Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, and several top ex- ecutives from Monsanto’s St. Louis office made the tour, which highlighted off-stream water troughs, stream-bank restorations and new irrigation diversions intended to help both trout and ranchers’ bot- tom lines. “It’s a combination of pri- vate, government and corpo- rate work trying to get the job done,” Simpson said, adding similar stream-health projects should be prioritized through- out the country. “It avoids a lot of the controversies and things that come up when govern- ment tries to do things by itself when voluntary groups like this come together and try to solve problems.” Glen Kurowski, Monsan- to’s director of environmental affairs, was impressed esti- mates that the Lane’s Creek stream restoration has removed hundreds of truckloads of eroded sediment from the wa- tershed. “To see the progress that has been made, it’s why all of the companies are involved in this, including Monsanto,” Kurows- ki said. The partnership restored 2.5 miles of Lane’s Creek through Bret King’s property. In ex- change King has reduced graz- ing density, kept cattle away from the stream and adjusted his grazing rotation. King ad- mits it’s taken some work to get his ranch manager to buy into the changes. But he now has consistent and evenly dis- tributed water from eight new program-funded off-stream troughs, and he’s optimistic greater attention to grazing rota- tion and an elevated water table surrounding the restored stream will improve forage. “Fish haven’t been a priori- ty for the last 100 years, and I think we can benefit them and still do what we want to do,” King said. Lynn Keetch, with Bear Lake Cattle Co., has been pleasantly surprised that cattle seem to prefer water troughs installed with partnership fund- ing. The partnership restored a reach of Sheep Creek through the company’s land — which the company views as a pilot project that could lead to future stream restorations if the water table rises and improves forage growth, as anticipated. “We haven’t had any prob- lems,” Keetch said, advising other ranchers to weigh the pros and cons of such partnerships and to make certain their oper- ations stand to gain. Ecology to EPA: Don’t OSU researchers experimenting with count dust storms emerging soil moisture Online sensing system By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press The Washington State De- partment of Ecology is asking the Environmental Protection Agency to exclude several 2013 dust storms from calcula- tions used to determine wheth- er the area exceeded particle pollution standards. When standards are ex- ceeded more than three times in a three-year period, local and state air quality agencies are required to take steps to reduce air pollution, accord- ing to Ecology. The violations may also affect federal trans- portation funding. Ecology will submit a report to the EPA asking the federal agency to exclude high parti- cle pollution levels from three Kennewick, Wash., dust storms in 2013. Agricultural land in Washington and Oregon were the main source of the dust. The report found that the storms were “uncontrollable events.” Ecology determined in the report that “reasonable and appropriate controls” were in place, but the wind from the three storms overwhelmed them. http://www.ecy.wa.gov/pro- grams/air/other/Windblown_ dust_information.htm “The agriculture controls in place are enough and they’re doing the job,” said Camille St. Onge, communications manag- er for Ecology. “We decided what they’re doing was adequate at the time,” said Laurie Hulse-Moyer, air quality planner for Ecology. If the storms are counted, the total number of events will exceed the three-time limit, Hulse-Moyer said. There have been two other similar occurrences since 2013, she said, both of which could also qualify as “excep- tional events,” with little or no human cause. It’s unclear what the im- pact would be for agriculture if the air quality agencies would have to take further steps, Hulse-Moyer said. “They would ask us to look at all sources of air pol- lution to see what could be done,” she said. 37-2/#4 By SEAN ELLIS Capital Press ONTARIO, Ore. — Or- egon State University re- searchers in Malheur Coun- ty are testing emerging soil sensor technology to try to help farmers in this drought-stricken area make better use of their sparse wa- ter supplies. Researchers at the OSU experiment station and ex- tension office in Ontario are using soil sensors and a wireless sensor web system to monitor soil moisture lev- els and provide usable data that farmers can view from a computer, smart phone, tab- let or other device. As Malheur County farm- ers suffer through the third straight year of significantly reduced water supplies, that type of information can be critical, said OSU cropping systems extension agent Bill Buhrig. “If you are planning on watering every four days and your sensor’s telling you wa- tering every six days is fine, you’re going to save a lot of water over the course of a year,” he said. In the past, farmers have had to go to a central point in a field to download or ac- cess soil moisture data, Buh- rig said. This system allows them to view it anywhere they have an Internet con- nection. “Properly installed mois- ture sensors can tell you a lot about what’s going on in your field and ... it keeps you from having to stand on site to get your moisture data,” he said. “Remote sensing technology is really kind of the next frontier.” The system includes poles with sensors planted in the soil nearby. The poles gather the sensor information and relay it back to a main base station in the field, which sends it to a web-based plat- form that updates the data every 30 minutes. The system can send a grower an email if soil is too wet or dry. The data is presented to farmers in a usable format that allows them to increase the accuracy of irrigation scheduling and manage soil moisture quicker and more effectively, Buhrig said. Buhrig is experimenting with the system in multiple crops grown in the region, including sugar beets, on- ions, potatoes, pumpkins and alfalfa seed. This type of remote sens- ing technology is relatively new to the area, he said. “I don’t know of a lot of producers who are (using it),” Buhrig said. “Part of the purpose of these demonstra- tions is to try to show it to producers and to try to get them to adapt the technolo- gy.” Snake River Sugar Co- op Chairman Duane Grant, a farmer in Rupert, Idaho, said sugar beet growers are keeping track of the OSU experiments because “we are interested in using re- mote sensing as a platform that allows us to more ef- fectively track soil moisture and more effectively manage crop health.” The technology doesn’t replace anything but it does bring growers a new set of additional data points that is important as water gets tighter, he said. “The water supply in all of our growing area is re- stricted,” Grant said. “The days of being able to count on a full available supply of water are over.”