 November 6, 2015 CapitalPress.com 5 OFB seeks changes to paid sick rules By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press The Oregon Farm Bureau fears that growers will be forced to track the hours of farmworkers hired by labor contractors under proposed paid sick leave rules. Earlier this year, state leg- islators passed a law requiring companies to provide em- ployees with paid sick leave, depending on how many work hours they’d accrued. The Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries is now crafting regulations to imple- ment the statute. Under the agency’s pro- posed rules, “employees of a temporary agency, staff- ing agency, employee leas- ing company, professional employer organization or in another similar employment arrangement are consid- ered to be jointly employed by both the agency and the client entity contract- ing for the employee’s ser- vices” and subject to accrual record-keeping requirements. This joint liability is du- plicative and expensive for farmers, since the rule is very unclear about when they must begin tracking workers as they move from property to property, said Jenny Dresler, director of state public policy for the Oregon Farm Bureau. “The farmers doesn’t know how many hours the worker has worked before they got to the farm,” she said. Under the law, employers with fewer than 10 employ- ees must provide sick leave, but don’t have to compensate workers for that time. A troubling aspect of the proposed rules is that farmers will have to count workers hired by a labor contractor as their own employees when calculating whether they must pay for sick leave, Dresler said. Counting such temporary workers twice — as employ- ees of the farmer and the con- tractor — goes against legis- lative intent, she said. The rules should also clar- ify that co-owner spouses do not qualify toward the 10-em- ployee limit, Dresler said. The Oregon Farm Bureau also recommended several other revisions to the pro- posed rules to BOLI, which Hundreds pack gym to oppose monument proposal Capital Press Sean Ellis/Capital Press A Malheur County resident speaks in opposition to a proposal that would set aside 2.5 million acres of Malheur County as a national conservation or wilderness area. About 500 people packed the Adrian High School gymnasium to learn more about the proposal and comment on it. Ore. Idaho Area in detail Ore. BAKER 26 Proposed national Ontario conservation area Nyssa 20 O Jordan Valley Burns Junction Idaho Ore. and organizations across the state and country, said Brent Fenty, executive director of the Oregon Natural Desert Association, which is spear- heading the effort. “We all care about the Owyhee and want to keep it the way it is today, we just may disagree on how we do that,” he said. “I sin- cerely hope the future of the Owyhee is not oil and gas drilling.” Fenty said livestock graz- ing and mining activities would be grandfathered into any monument or wilderness designation and allowed to continue where it’s occurring now. But opponents doubt- ed that, and Jordan Valley rancher Bob Skinner, who is leading the opposition ef- fort, received a standing ova- tion when he told the crowd, “Don’t believe that stuff. The proponents of this (proposal) are professional litigators. Once this gets to court, all 95 Ore. McDermitt Nev. N 95 20 miles Alan Kenaga/Capital Press bets are off.” Many proposal supporters said it would result in a lot of tourism dollars from the na- tion’s large outdoor industry but locals weren’t convinced. Opponents also expressed doubt that the federal gov- ernment could care for the place better than their fami- lies have for generations. The meeting, which was organized by Rep. Cliff Bentz, R-Ontario, was vid- eotaped and will be shown on the internet and presented to President Barack Obama, Bentz said. He said opponents are concerned the president may act on the proposal without being aware of how much lo- cal opposition there is to it. Commissioners and judg- es from fi ve other Eastern Oregon counties and Owyhee County, Idaho, were at the meeting and spoke against the proposal. “We will continue to stand with each other in East- ern Oregon and protect our home,” said Grant County Court Judge Scott Myers. for the “undue hardship” provision is the handling of perishable materials. Oregon Farm Bureau wants the rules clarifi ed to include perishable crops in this defi nition. “As a farmer, the harvest period is seen as an ‘all hands on deck’ period requiring all employees to be present,” said Launa Frahm, an Ontar- io, Ore., farmer, in comments to BOLI. “Providing paid sick leave time in small increments during this period would be an undue hardship to my business, as would fi nding re- placement employees during this critical time,” Frahm said. Walden asks Interior Department where it stands on Malheur monument proposal By SEAN ELLIS Capital Press By SEAN ELLIS ADRIAN, Ore. — Ranch- ers, farmers and other Mal- heur County residents packed Adrian High School’s gym- nasium Oct. 29 to oppose a proposal that would desig- nate 2.5 million acres of the county as a national conser- vation or wilderness area. The 500-person crowd was mostly against the Owyhee Canyonlands Con- servation Proposal but in- cluded a contingent of people from other parts of the state who support it. Loud applause and stand- ing ovations greeted those who spoke against the pro- posal, while mostly silence followed after people who support it spoke. “We live here and pay taxes here and I’m hoping what we say has a little more weight than what somebody from across the state says,” said Adrian area farmer Brent Ishida. Ranchers and farmers be- lieve locking up that much land — it would equal 43 percent of the entire county — would devastate ranching, which is the county’s main agricultural commodity and brings in about $130 million in farm-gate receipts annual- ly. Most ranching operations in southeastern Oregon are tied to federal grazing per- mits and the proposal would negatively impact that indus- try, states a Harney County resolution opposing the pro- posal. The resolution says the proposal would also cause a “loss of direct jobs and jobs within the supply chain of the agriculture and cattle in- dustries.” The proposal is backed by the Owyhee Coalition, which includes thousands of people is reviewing submitted com- ments before fi nalizing the regulations. Most employers would have to provide workers with sick leave in one-hour incre- ments unless this arrangement creates an undue hardship for the company, in which it could require workers to schedule sick leave in four- hour increments. During harvest, allowing pickers to suddenly leave an hour or two early would effectively prevent growers from fi nding replacements, said Dresler. Among the factors that make an employer eligible ADRIAN, Ore. — Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., has asked Department of Interior Secretary Sally Jewell to for- mally outline where the federal government stands on a pro- posal to designate 2.5 million acres in Malheur County as a national monument or wilder- ness area. The Owyhee Canyonlands Conservation Proposal, which would impact about 33 percent of the county’s total grazing land, is strongly opposed by the county’s ranchers and farmers. Walden hopes to receive a response to that Oct. 28 request soon and will keep pushing until he gets one, said Andrew Malcolm, Walden’s communi- cations director. “We want them to make clear what their intentions are on this proposal,” he said. In his letter to Jewell, Walden said locking up that much land, which is equal to 43 percent of the county, is “understandably concerning to local communities.” “These hard-working local residents deserve to know where the federal government stands on the proposal that would af- fect their daily lives far beyond anyone else’s,” Walden stated. He also said the proposal could harm agriculture, which “provides the economic base for Malheur County.” Agriculture generates $370 million annually in farm gate receipts in the county, and $134 million of that total comes from the livestock industry. Because the U.S. Bureau of Land Management and other federal agencies manage 73 per- cent of the county’s lands, “pub- lic lands grazing (is) an integral part of most local family ranch operations,” Walden stated. “Greatly restricting use of that land through a monument des- ignation could have disastrous economic impacts to the county and the surrounding region.” Walden told Jewell that “it’s very important that you ... out- line formally to Malheur Coun- ty (residents) where the DOI stands on this proposal....” Oregon Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, both Demo- crats, have also weighed in on the issue and, in a joint state- ment, said any proposal needs to protect ranching families as well as other existing rights in the area. “Malheur County has been home to ranch families for gen- erations,” their Oct. 29 letter states. “We want to ensure that agriculture, ranching and other uses of this landscape continue into Oregon’s future.” Five other Eastern Oregon counties also support Malheur County in its opposition to the proposal. A Harney County Court res- olution opposing the plan said it could reduce ranching oper- ations in Southeastern Oregon, “as the majority of ranches are tied to federal grazing.” The proposal is being spear- headed by the Oregon Nat- ural Desert Association and the group’s executive director, Brent Fenty, said the plan’s sup- porters would be happy to work with Malheur County residents to help craft a proposal palatable to both sides. “We’re certainly ready and willing to have those conversa- tions,” he said. According to Fenty, 100 Oregon businesses have signed letters urging Wyden to support the proposal and more than 10,500 petition sig- natures favoring the plan have been collected. Fenty said proposal propo- nents support congressional action to approve the plan but opponents say they anticipate supporters will ask President Barack Obama to use his powers under the Antiquities Act to designate the land as a national monument or wilder- ness area. 45-2/#8 Bureau opposes joint liability for farmers and labor contractors