WOLF SHOOTINGS: Criminal charges for Oregon man; No charges filed in Washington case FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2015 Mateusz Perkowski/Capital Press File  VOLUME 88, NUMBER 47 Page 4 WWW.CAPITALPRESS.COM $2.00 FIREFIGHTING Cargo containers are shown being loaded on ships at the Port of Portland. FUNDING Shippers haven’t abandoned hopes for port By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Severely diminished con- tainer service at the Port of Portland hasn’t yet irrevers- ibly changed shipping strat- egies, but that pattern won’t hold forever, according to a freight expert. Importers and exporters largely hope that ocean car- riers will eventually return to the port’s container ter- minal after Hanjin and Ha- pag-Lloyd pulled out earlier this year, eliminating almost all container service, said Dan Smith, principal of the Tioga Group transportation consul- tancy fi rm. So far, those hopes have prevented shippers from closing distribution centers or making other changes un- likely to be reversed if ocean carrier service returned to the container terminal, Smith said during a Nov. 17 legislative hearing in Salem. Hanjin and Hapag-Lloyd, which represented more than 90 percent of container traffi c at the port, said their decision was based on low produc- tivity, which the container terminal operator — ICTSI Oregon — blamed on work slowdowns by the longshore- men’s union. The International Long- shore and Warehouse Union, on the other hand, faulted in- adequate equipment and safe- ty practices as the cause of slowed container movements. A broader labor contract dispute between ILWU and terminal operators aggravated the situation, with West Coast slowdowns occurring in late 2014 and early 2015 before the issue was settled earlier this year. Companies that buy from importers and exporters are now using the unpredictabil- ity caused by the slowdowns as a negotiating lever, which may lead to some distribution centers becoming uneconom- ical — thus prompting ship- pers to close them and divert traffi c to other areas, said Smith of Tioga Group. Turn to PORT, Page 12 Courtesy of Jeremy Smith/USFS Tunk Block fi re northeast of Okanogan, Wash., burned to a road on Aug. 25. Thicker timber stands than this provide greater fi re fuels. Bill offers hope for forest fuel reduction Measure would change funding for fi refi ghting, and ease rules on logging and thinning By DAN WHEAT Capital Press A Courtesy of Roy Maglesson/USFS First Creek Fire fi eld work above Lake Chelan, Wash., in September. Wildfi res burned millions of acres in the West this year. A bill in Congress seeks to reduce forest fuel loads on federal lands. s ranchers throughout the West deal with the aftermath of catastrophic summer wildfi res, proponents of legislation to reduce fuel loads in federal forests say there’s a good chance it will pass Congress before the end of the year as part of funding the federal budget. The Resilient Federal Forest Act of 2015, HR 2647, was introduced by Rep. Bruce Westerman, R-Ark., a professional forester and engineer, on June 4. It was passed by 243 Republicans and 19 Demo- crats on July 9 and awaits a hearing before the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry. In short, the bill, at the urging of the Obama ad- ministration, allows the U.S. Forest Service to access funds through the Federal Emergency Management Agency for fi ghting fi res instead of depleting non-fi re- fi ghting funds within the Forest Service budget. The bill also allows the USFS and Bureau of Land Man- agement expedited environmental review of forest management projects — including logging, thinning and prescribed burns — in public forests at imminent risk of major wildfi re, insects and disease. “I probably give the bill in its current form a low chance of passing out of the Senate, but that Turn to FUNDING, Page 12 FDA produce safety rule introduces new standards By SEAN ELLIS Capital Press FDA’s new produce safety rule contains a slew of new standards and record-keep- ing requirements for fruit and vegetable farmers and will re- quire them to test their irriga- tion water regularly and make an effort to keep animals away from their fi elds. But people familiar with the rule say a lot of groups are gearing up to help farmers understand and comply with the standards and they will be manageable for most produc- ers. “There are lots of different private and public support sys- tems out there to help” grow- ers comply with the rules, said Trevor Suslow, an extension research specialist on produce safety at University of Cali- fornia, Davis. He said the standards are largely based on good ag- ricultural practices many farmers are already operating under. David Gombas, senior vice president of food safety for United Fresh, said that while some of the requirements could be burdensome and pro- vide an economic disadvan- tage to some operations if not changed, “I think long term it will be good for the produce industry. It’s just going to take some getting used to.” The rule includes pro- visions that require many farmers to regularly test their water, make an effort to keep wild and domesticated ani- mals away from fi elds, train Turn to FDA, Page 12 USFS photo Firefi ghter on Carpenter Road fi re in north- eastern Washington on Aug. 29.