October 9, 2015 CapitalPress.com 7 Proposal seeks to keep ports open during labor disputes By DAN WHEAT Capital Press Dan Wheat/Capital Press Maribel Zuniga packs Gala apples at Northern Fruit Co. in East Wenatchee, Wash., on Oct. 5, while David Allen, quality control manager, makes a point to Scotty Lee and Gordon Zou of Kingo Fruit, Guangzhou, China. Chinese fruit importers YLVLW3DFL¿F1RUWKZHVW included Duckwall Fruit and Diamond Fruit Growers. They were to end the week on Oct. 9 WENATCHEE, Wash. — at the The Pear Bureau in Port- The Washington Apple Com- land and visiting downtown mission and The Pear Bureau retail markets of Fred Meyer, Northwest hosted a delegation Zupan’s and Whole Foods. of Chinese fruit importers this “We think China could be week in an effort to boost apple the third-largest market for and pear sales. Washington apples in the near The nine importers — from future,” said Todd Fryhover, the Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou apple commission president. and Dalian — visited orchards Mexico, Canada and Taiwan and apple and pear packing traditionally have been the top facilities in Wenatchee and Ya- three markets. Washington nor- kima, Wash., and Hood River, mally exports 30 percent of its Ore. apples. “The new crop Gala com- Red and Golden Delicious ing in is very soft, not crunchy apples from Washington, Or- enough. They say it’s from the egon and Idaho were allowed KHDW \RX KDG LQ -XQH , KRSH into China in 1993. Other quality improves to compete Washington varieties entered with our (China’s domestic) Fuji from Hong Kong via “gray” and Gala that starts at the end markets. of October,” said Qian Yinjun, Reds and Goldens were general manager of Shanghai banned from August 2012 to Guowang Produce Co., Shang- Oct. 31, 2014, after disease was hai. found in some shipments. When Yinjun and the other eight shipments resumed, they were importers received an industry immediately hindered by work overview at the apple commis- slowdowns at U.S. ports. VLRQRI¿FHLQ:HQDWFKHHRQ2FW Full-varietal access in both 5 before watching apples being directions was announced by packed at Northern Fruit Co. the U.S. and Chinese govern- in East Wenatchee and visiting PHQWVRQ-DQ3DSHUZRUNWR nearby Banning Orchards. PDNHLWKDSSHQZDV¿QLVKHGLQ They toured McDougall & -XQH'RPH[6XSHUIUHVK*URZ- Sons Inc. and Custom Apple ers, Yakima, apparently was Packers in Wenatchee before WKH ¿UVW 86 PDUNHWHU WR VHOO heading to Zirkle-Rainier Fruit varieties other than Reds and in Yakima on Tuesday. Evans Goldens into China, shipping a Fruit Co. in Cowiche, CPC In- couple hundred 40-pound boxes ternational Apple Co. in Tieton RI*DODLQWR*XDQJ]KRXRQ-XQH and Legacy Fruit Packers in 20. Wapato were on their schedule From Aug. 17 through Sept. in the Yakima area. 30, 155,445 boxes of Washing- Their Hood River itinerary ton apples have been shipped to By DAN WHEAT Capital Press China, according to the Wash- ington State Tree Fruit Associ- ation. Shippers hope to top a 3 mil- lion box peak to China-Hong Kong in 2010-2011. Fryhover and others envision 10 million boxes — about $200 million — in sales annually in a few years. Desmond O’Rourke, a re- tired Washington State Univer- sity agricultural economist and an apple and China expert, has warned China can be an unreli- able trading partner. He has said devaluation of the Chinese yuan by 2 percent in August is small enough that it shouldn’t hurt ex- ports early this season. A bigger concern is if more devaluations follow, he said. Chelan Fresh Marketing, Oneonta Starr Ranch Grow- ers and Evans Fruit Co. have shipped the most apples to Chi- na. “A lot of us have core cus- tomers (in China) we’ve devel- oped over years but that doesn’t mean these guys aren’t import- ant,” Tom Riggan, general man- ager of Chelan Fresh, said of the delegation. “We always try to meet anybody new. They could help us reach outlying Chinese cit- ies. There’s ton of opportunity. There’s a lot of online direct sales into homes,” Riggan said. China bought 8,600 boxes of 2015 crop Northwest pears so far through Sept. 30, up 8.8 percent from the same period last year despite devaluation of the yuan, said Lynsey Kennedy, international marketing manag- er at The Pear Bureau. PASCO, Wash. — A bill setting up automatic triggers to start the Taft-Hartley Act pro- cess in the event of future labor or management disruptions at U.S. ports is being proposed by Rep. Dan Newhouse, R-Wash. Newhouse announced his Ensuring Continued Opera- tions and No Other Major Inci- dents, Closures or Slowdowns (ECONOMICS) Act at Easter- day Farms in Pasco on Oct. 5. Easterday, a family potato farm and packing operation, is one of thousands of farms through- out the West that were impact- ed by the slowdown of cargo at 29 West Coast ports from May 2014 through February 2015. It was caused by conten- tious contract negotiations be- WZHHQWKH3DFL¿F0DULWLPH$V- sociation and the International Longshore and Warehouse Union. Newhouse was joined for his announcement by Wash- ington Farm Bureau President Mike LaPlant and Matt Harris, assistant executive director of the Washington State Potato Commission. The bill would mandate mediation in labor disputes and require a board of inqui- ry be convened when certain economic triggers are met. The board would be required to report to the president and the public to recommend whether a Taft-Hartley judicial injunc- tion should be sought to order an end to a dispute. The pres- ident or state governors would still have to seek the injunction. The triggers are: • When four or more ports are involved. • When 6,000 or more port workers are affected. AP Photo/Ben Margot File Container ships wait at the dock to be unloaded at the Port of Oakland Feb. 12 in Oakland, Calif. A months-long work slow- GRZQFORJJHGH[SRUWWUDI¿FWKURXJK:HVW&RDVWSRUWV/HJLV- lation under consideration in Congress is aimed at preventing a replay of the slowdown. • When U.S. exports drop 15 percent or more in one month or 5 percent or more in two consecutive months. Any single trigger could start the process, but the bill is still in draft stage and New- house is seeking feedback for improvements, he told Capital Press. He said he hopes to in- troduce the bill within a couple of months. 7KH GH¿QLWLRQ RI VWULNH would be broadened through- out U.S. labor law to include slowdowns, lockouts or threat- ened strikes or lockouts. A board of inquiry could be trig- gered for any of those. The bill is meant to comple- ment HR3398, the Protecting Orderly and Responsible Tran- sit of Shipment (PORTS) Act, authored by Newhouse and Rep. Dave Reichert, R-Wash. The PORTS Act, and a com- panion measure in the Sen- ate, would allow governors of seaport states and territories to invoke the Taft-Hartley Act to order dock workers to work. The PORTS Act includes slowdowns, not just strikes or lockouts, in the Taft-Hartley process. “There is a lot of interest in preventing the kind of eco- nomic losses we experienced this past season,” Newhouse said. “We still haven’t regained (the markets of) some of the commodities that were lost so it’s still costing producers to- day.” The slowdown cost up to $2.5 billion per day and con- tributed to an anemic 0.2 per- cent annualized growth rate in WKH ¿UVW TXDUWHU RI 6HQ -RKQ 7KXQH 56' VDLG LQ introducing a bill last May that would set up an early warning system of abnormal port oper- ations. Exports and imports of many commodities through the West Coast were impacted by last year’s slowdown. The Washington apple industry lost $100 million in sales, accord- ing to the Northwest Horticul- tural Council. More California winemakers using less water to grow grapes By ELLEN KNICKMEYER Associated Press RUTHERFORD, Calif. (AP) — The grape vines that grower Frank Leeds tends in Napa Valley stand among the unheralded heroes of Califor- nia’s drought, producing de- cade after decade of respected Cabernets and other wines without a drop of added water. In a state where farms and dairies take the biggest gulp of the water supply, Leeds and the owners of his Frog’s Leap Winery are among a minority — but a growing minority — of California growers and wine- makers who believe that when it comes to wine grapes, the less irrigation, the better. “This is not struggling, skinny, tiny grapevines, right?” Leeds asked proudly earlier this growing season while leading a tour through the dry-farmed rows of wine grapes. Frog’s Leap’s vines stood several feet apart from each other, giving the roots plenty of room to plunge into the soil and ¿QGPRLVWXUH-XVWDFURVVDQDU- row country road, black tubing of drip irrigation laced through another vineyard’s grape vines, more crowded but looking no less bountiful than their un-wa- tered neighbors at Frog’s Leap. Wine grapes, California’s No. 3 cash crop, in general are far less thirsty than the state’s No. 2 cash crop, almonds. But with 615,000 acres of wine grapes in production in Califor- nia, wine industry trends in wa- ter use clearly have an impact on the overall water supply. As wine growers close out harvest this month, California is ending a fourth year of se- vere drought, with mandatory cutbacks in water for cities and towns statewide, and for many farms. Overwhelmingly, the debate in California’s wine industry over water use is driven by what’s best for the quantity and quality of the grape crop, more so than conservation. All sides — the irrigated, the unirrigated, and the in-be- tween — feel strongly that their way is the right way. For Marc Mondavi, a third-generation producer in one of California’s most in- ÀXHQWLDO ZLQH IDPLOLHV LW RQO\ makes sense that grapes thrive best with an occasional sip of running water. “I always tell people, I give them a little scenario: They put you and I in the middle of the Mojave Desert,” in a foot race, Mondavi said. “Who’s gonna run the distance? More than likely the person who’s had some water” to drink along the way. 41-2/#4x 41-7/#7