12 CapitalPress.com December 18, 2015 Some farmers say they can’t afford litigation or more regulation DAIRY from Page 1 ‘Not if, but when’ Oregon-based environ- mental lawyer Charlie Teb- butt, the lead attorney for the suing groups, said the ruling foreshadows higher environ- mental standards for dairies. “The question is, ‘When is the industry going to comply? Not if,’” he said. Seven months after the Cow Palace ruling, the Wash- ington Department of Ecology proposed regulating dairies under the assumption that all manure lagoons discharge pol- lutants into groundwater. The implication was that nearly all dairies would have to obtain a confi ned animal feeding operation permit. Un- der current Washington law, a CAFO permit is mandatory only if a livestock operation has discharged pollutants into surface water. Having a permit, theo- retically, can be a defense against lawsuits. But it would mean additional expenses, re- cord-keeping and restrictions on spreading manure on farm- land. Farmers statewide respond- ed to DOE’s proposal with plaintive comments. “I have read and re-read the verbiage,” wrote a dairywoman in Eastern Washington. “I have to say, the fi rst time, I just started crying.” Some farmers say they can’t afford litigation or more regulation. The uncertainty and expense would drive them out of business, or they would have to move from Washing- ton. The stakes are high. Wash- ington has 425 dairies with 277,000 cows that in 2014 produced $1.6 billion worth of milk, according to the U.S. De- partment of Agriculture. After apples, milk is the state’s most valuable farm commodity. “It’s not that we want to cry ‘wolf.’ But you can’t continue to erode the economic viabili- ty of an industry and expect it will stick around. It will even- tually die,” Appel said. Bottom line on lagoons DOE’s proposal wasn’t a direct response to the Cow Palace case, but it all tied to- gether, and dairy farmers say it felt like a noose. Many dairy farmers ob- served that lagoons were pushed on the industry by reg- ulators in the 1990s. Now la- goons were being called leaky sources of pollutants. “Is it too hard to under- stand then that we are not fans of ideas that come out of these government agencies?” a Whatcom County dairyman wrote DOE. DOE stressed that its pro- posal was a “tentative draft.” It plans to issue a formal propos- al sometime next year. Don Jenkins/Capital Press Mitch Moorlag, general manager of Edaleen Dairy in Whatcom County, Wash., stands in one of the dairy’s barns. Lining manure lagoons with synthetic material wouldn’t help the environment or the dairy industry’s fi nances, Moorlag says. 2,500 Washington state dairy operations 2,000 (All operations, herd sizes) 425 dairies: Down 83% from 1993 1,500 1,000 500 *Annual record keeping not available after 2007 0 1993 ’95 ’97 ’99 ’01 ’03 Sources: USDA NASS; University of Wisconson, Madison The DOE’s tentative pro- posal was simple: If you have a lagoon, you will need a per- mit. Dairy farmers saw the proposal as overkill because of insuffi cient proof that all la- goons leak. Since then, matters have become more complicated. DOE still holds to the posi- tion that all lagoons discharge pollutants. But it now con- cedes that in “rare” cases, the pollutants don’t reach ground- water. Where pollutants are likely to reach groundwater, howev- er, dairy farmers probably will be required to obtain a CAFO permit, according to the de- partment’s latest thinking. It may not matter whether the water is actually being pol- luted. The discharge of pollutants into groundwater — no matter its impact on water quality — would be enough to trigger the need for a permit. The manure produces ni- trates that naturally occur in surface water and ground- water, though at high levels nitrates can be hazardous to human health, especially for infants and pregnant women, according to the federal Cen- ters for Disease Control and Prevention. Under certain cir- cumstances, nitrates are con- verted to nitrogen gas through a process known as denitrifi ca- tion. The dairy industry contends that because of these natural processes the manure seeping from clay-lined lagoons large- ’05 ’07* ’12 2014 Alan Kenaga/Capital Press ly do not pose a threat to water quality. That position is supported by the King County Depart- ment of Natural Resources. “To date, King County’s regular water quality testing has not identifi ed signifi cant water quality problems associ- ated with dairies,” the depart- ment wrote to DOE. King County offi cials dis- agreed with the assumption that lagoons pollute groundwa- ter. “Such unproven assump- tions could lead to expensive fi xes or retrofi ts for dairies that may be neither necessary nor effective.” Environmental groups are pushing in the opposite di- rection, calling for clay-lined lagoons to be replaced by la- goons lined with two synthetic layers with a leak detector be- tween the layers. The linings are used by municipal landfi lls, but are unknown to the agricultural industry. Expensive proposal In the wake of the Cow Pal- ace ruling, Washington State University professor Joe Har- rison, of the school’s livestock nutrient management program, was asked to make a presenta- tion on synthetic liners at a regional conference hosted by the EPA. He sent an email to col- leagues nationwide asking about double-lined lagoons and didn’t get a single re- sponse. Based on talking with ge- otextile companies and a few dairies with single-lined la- goons, Harrison estimated double-lining lagoons would cost $339 a cow for materials and installation. Getting the lagoon ready — engineering, manure removal, dirt work — could add another $300 per cow, based on the experience of one dairy. Dairy farmers recoil at the expense, especially since they won’t be able to show lenders how the liners will increase revenue. “It’s just coming right off the bottom line,” said Mitch Moorlag, general manager of Edaleen Dairy in Whatcom County. The Natural Resources Conservation Service, which sets lagoon standards, favors clay-lined lagoons. The Cow Palace has agreed to install synthetic liners, but, in comments sent to DOE, NRCS said the court ruling didn’t change its advice to farmers. NRCS warned that synthetic liners can be worn or torn, leading to manure re- leases worse than any seepage through clay liners. Fertilizer to waste It’s unclear how far-reach- ing the Cow Palace case will be, which puts dairy farmers on edge. U.S. District Judge Thomas O. Rice based his ruling on the conditions at an 11,000-cow dairy, which produces 100 million gallons of manure a year. Rice found the dairy had become “untethered” from its state-approved dairy nutrient management plan. In one in- stance, the dairy spread 7.6 million gallons of manure on an already suffi ciently fertil- ized alfalfa fi eld, according to Rice’s written decision. Rice reasoned that once excess manure nutrients sank below plant roots, they are no longer a useful product, fer- tilizer. At that point, the nutri- ents become a discarded solid waste and subject to the Re- source Conservation and Re- covery Act. For the fi rst time, the nation’s fundamental law against dumping hazardous garbage was applied to uncon- tained cow manure. The ruling was not a sweep- ing condemnation of spreading manure on fi elds or storing it in lagoons. But it was a warn- ing that dairies may have to account for where every bit of manure ends up. The Cow Palace case makes dairy farmers nervous, par- ticularly in Whatcom County, which has about a quarter of the state’s dairies and has drawn Tebbut’s attention. The Washington State De- partment of Agriculture levied a total of eight fi nes against dairies for discharging pollu- tion in 2013 and 2014. Seven violations were in Whatcom County. “The farmers in Whatcom County area have had a lot of problems for a lot of years,” Tebbutt said. “We don’t want to litigate. But the only way action happens is when we have a seat at the table.” In Yakima County, Tebbutt represented a local group, the Community Association for the Restoration of the Envi- ronment, and the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Food Safety. The suit originally named fi ve diaries. One closed and two consolidated owner- ship, leaving Cow Palace, Bos- ma-Liberty Dairy, and George DeRuyter and Son Dairy. Rice issued his ruling to ad- dress several pre-trial motions. The ruling tilted the case in favor of the suing groups, and the dairies agreed to operation- al changes in an out-of-court settlement. At the very least, the Cow Palace case has created uncer- tainty, Washington State Dairy Federation policy director Jay Gordon said. “There’s a whole new federal statute that’s been applied to dairies. Everybody is going, ‘What if this gets ap- plied to my farm? What are the rules?’” Farmers in ‘crisis mode’ Gerald Baron’s background in public relations includes representing businesses faced with “organization-threatening events.” He’s written a book about emergency communica- tions in the age of instant news and social media. He’s now the executive director of Whatcom Family Farms, an offshoot of the coun- ty’s dairy federation formed this year with irrigation dis- tricts and other farmers. The group’s message is that farm- ers are responsible land stew- ards in perilous times. “I would say ‘crisis mode’ is an accurate description,” Baron said. In Yakima, groundwater pollution was a problem. In Whatcom County, the Nook- sack River fl ushes fecal coli- form bacteria onto Lummi Na- tion shellfi sh beds in Portage Bay. Fecal coliform lives in the digestive tracts of warm-blood- ed creatures, including humans, and is excreted in feces. A report by a county-level advisory group last year said the water fl owing past up- stream farms is cleaner than in the 1990s. There are fewer dairies, and the state’s 1998 Dairy Nutrient Management Act improved how farmers handle manure, according to the report. However, pollution from many sources continues to con- taminate shellfi sh beds. Baron said the county’s dairy farmers are braced for a lawsuit. In a recent newspaper com- mentary, the chairman of the Lummi Indian Business Coun- cil, Tim Ballew II, said agricul- tural producers should not seek to defeat or weaken DOE’s pro- posal. Efforts to obtain further comment from the tribe were not successful. In an interview, Tebbutt was noncommittal about whether farmers can expect a lawsuit. But he said the dairy industry has been “all talk and no ac- tion.” “Is it fair they pollute in or- der to profi t?” he asked. “Are you allowed to pollute at the expense of your neighbor? The answer is ‘no.’” Whatcom Family Farmers contend that water running past their farms is already tainted by a fast-growing area across the border in Canada. The water passes dairies and picks up more pollution in urban areas, according to the group. Whatcom Family Farmers warn that targeting dairies will lead to farms being converted into subdivisions. That will lead to more septic tanks and hobby farms and to greater use of lawn fertilizers. “The point is, it’s a com- plex picture,” Baron said. “All the fi ngers have been pointing at them (farmers). … What we’re saying is, ‘We’re not the primary contributor.’” DOE has not identifi ed the pollution’s main source, agen- cy spokeswoman Krista Ken- ner said. “We are looking at all of them.” Dairies in Yakima County also argued they shouldn’t be singled out for the region’s groundwater troubles. Judge Rice ruled that wasn’t the is- sue. Dairies were a “meaning- ful” contributor to pollution, but plaintiffs didn’t have to prove they were the primary polluters. The plaintiffs could pick their target. Rice also ruled that while experts may disagree about how much manure seeps from lagoons, the important point is that fl uids move through per- meable substances. The judge reasoned that the pollution will reach groundwater. The dairy argued that it might take decades, if ever, for that to happen. Rice said he wasn’t going to wait for people to get sick. Bill receives cool reaction from proponents of Klamath agreements APHIS authorized KBRA from Page 1 Congress’ inaction Bills to authorize removal of the dams have languished in Congress since 2011. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., a longtime opponent of dam removal, unveiled an eleventh-hour draft bill on Dec. 3 to move forward on other aspects of the agreements while putting approval of dam re- moval in the lap of the Federal Ener- gy Regulatory Commission. Walden’s bill won praise from Rep. Rob Bishop, R-Utah, chair- man of the House Natural Resources Committee, who said proposed fed- eral land transfers to the Klamath Tribes in exchange for waiving se- nior water rights “are ideas I could strongly support in order to move forward.” However, the bill received a cool reaction from proponents of the Klamath agreements, who have warned that water-sharing compo- nents of the pacts could crumble if Congress doesn’t authorize the package — including dam removal — before the end of the year. So far, no efforts have been made to merge Walden’s bill with one by Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., which in- cludes dam removal but has failed to advance beyond the upper cham- ber’s Energy and Natural Resources Committee. And lawmakers don’t appear to be in any hurry to get a bill passed. “We had hoped people would agree to remain at the table” into 2016, Walden spokesman Andrew Malcolm said. “We’re hoping that what will work for people on Dec. 31 will still work on Jan. 1 or Jan. 2.” House Speaker Paul Ryan’s offi ce did not return a call from the Capi- tal Press seeking comment about a timeline for moving Walden’s bill forward. The 42 signatories of the pacts that included the dam removals as well as water-sharing and numerous conservation efforts in the basin al- ready renewed the agreements once, in late 2012. However, looming deadlines lend more of a sense of ur- gency this time, proponents say. “I think this time is different,” said Glen Spain, northwest regional director for the Pacifi c Coast Feder- ation of Fishermen’s Associations. “We’re a short period of time … from deadlines when this is all sup- posed to happen. We’ve done every- thing that’s been required in this, in- cluding fi nding non-federal money for dam removal.” Contingency plans Already, regulatory agencies are resuming the task of reviewing PacifiCorp’s dam-relicensing ap- plication, which the company has estimated would cost at least $300 million and leave the company ex- posed to other costs from litigation and added water quality regula- tions. Under the Klamath Hydro- electric Settlement Agreement, the cost to PacifiCorp’s ratepayers would be capped at $200 million. Trust funds from surcharg- es to PacifiCorps customers for dam removal have amassed more than $100 million, which will ei- ther be refunded or used to meet relicensing conditions if the Klamath agreements die, Gravely said. The Karuk Tribe and other proponents of removing the dams have vowed to urge the state wa- ter boards to deny PacifiCorp’s relicensing applications under the Clean Water Act, which would force the dams to be removed any- way. But such a denial would be unprecedented, Gravely said. Meanwhile, local opposition to dam removal has become more entrenched in the Klamath Basin as opponents have been elected to majorities on the Klamath County Board of Commissioners and sev- eral irrigation district boards. “I’d like more time,” said Add- ington, whose KWUA represents irrigation districts in the Klamath Reclamation Project. “I, for one, and my organization would say we want to salvage this thing, and we’d be ready to have a conversa- tion about that. But the Yurok Tribe has made it clear that it wants to move in a different direction … and the Klamath Tribes have made a similar statement. “I just think we risk a harder-line element saying collaboration didn’t work” if the parties try to keep the agreements together, he said. Looming crises Without the water pacts in place, growers in the Upper Klamath Ba- sin could face another water crisis this spring like the one they en- countered in 2013, when a total shutoff of irrigation water prompt- ed landowners to begrudgingly work out their own water-sharing agreement with the tribes that was also contingent on the dams being removed. While project irrigators have a stipulated settlement with the tribes that will remain even if the KBRA dies, the lack of an agreement could put more pressure on those growers’ water supplies, too, as more water for fi sh is sought under the Endan- gered Species Act, Addington said. As to whether any future agree- ment could be salvaged from the wreckage, Addington said he’s un- sure. “Either … the KBRA is going to be a footnote in the interesting his- tory of water in the Klamath Basin, or it’ll be the next step to something bigger,” Addington said. “I think it’s too early to say. “I hate football analogies, but I feel like we got to the goal line and were just not able to punch it in,” he said. “We’ve got a House bill out there and a Senate bill out there … I just wish the folks in Con- gress would do what all the parties did, which is to lock themselves in a room and get it done. It’s the season of miracles, so who knows?” 572 crop fi eld trials in 2014 WHEAT from Page 1 Consumers in many Asian nations are leery of genetically engineered food, however, and Japan and Korea temporarily sus- pended wheat purchases after the GE wheat was discovered in Or- egon. The new APHIS permit re- quirement probably wouldn’t have made a difference in the Oregon case, however, and perhaps not in Montana. Monsanto field-tested a “Roundup Ready” wheat variety in 16 states, including Oregon, from 1998 to 2005, but the Oregon field where it was found was not one of the test sites. The Montana field was approved for GE wheat testing from 2000-2003, but the glypho- sate-resistant volunteers weren’t identified until 2014. Monsanto withdrew its application to have the GE variety approved in 2005. APHIS said it authorized 572 crop fi eld trials in 2014, 21 of them for wheat. Of those, authorizations went to six companies, four universi- ties and to USDA. Mallory-Smith, the OSU weed scientist, said growers are undoubted- ly interested in glyphosate resistance in addition to traits such as disease resistance and drought tolerance. GE wheat is likely to be deregulated “sooner or later,” she said.