January 1, 2016 CapitalPress.com 13 Idaho’s AG defends state’s handling of flood control issue By SEAN ELLIS Capital Press BOISE — In a letter to 11 Treasure Valley lawmakers, Idaho Attorney General Law- rence Wasden defended the state’s handling of the con- troversial issue of how flood control releases are accounted for on the Boise River system. Responding to claims made in a Nov. 13 letter from five state senators and six rep- resentatives, Wasden said his office and the Idaho Depart- ment of Water Resources are “not engaged in ‘reckless and unfounded attacks’ on” the water rights of Treasure Val- ley water users. Those legislators who re- ceived Wasden’s Dec. 8 let- ter side with Treasure Valley water users who have been at odds with the IDWR and AG’s office over how flood control releases are accounted for. The irrigators say water re- leased from Boise River sys- tem reservoirs for flood con- trol should not count against their storage rights, while the state says it does. Wasden defended IDWR Director Gary Spackman’s handling of the issue. Spack- man ruled in October that flood control releases should count against reservoir stor- age rights. His ruling was contrary to a decision by a special master of the Snake River Basin Ad- judication court six days ear- lier. Irrigators claim Spack- man’s ruling is trumped by the district court decision. The letter from lawmakers said Spackman’s ruling was biased and predetermined. Wasden said Spackman is charged by law with distribut- ing water in accordance with the state’s prior appropriation doctrine. “Part and parcel of this duty is determining when the Boise River storage water rights are satisfied,” he wrote. “Thus, rather than engaging in an attack on the Treasure Valley water users’ storage rights, Director Spackman is fulfilling his statutory duty.” Sen. Jim Rice, R-Caldwell, one of the lawmakers who re- ceived Wasden’s letter, said the IDWR director is not sim- ply performing his statutory duties. “The statutory duty of the director of the (IDWR) is not to take away people’s water rights,” said Rice, chairman of the Senate Agricultural Af- fairs Committee. “Trying to change how all this works ... is not his stat- utory duty. It is an attack on Treasure Valley water rights,” he said. Rice and other Treasure Valley irrigators defended their Nov. 13 letter’s call for the AG’s office and IDWR to “cease their coordinated at- tacks on Treasure Valley stor- age rights.” “You can’t leave irrigators the choice of having their wa- ter or avoiding flooding the cities of the Boise River val- ley,” Rice said. “The path to a solution is very, very clear but that means the director gets told he can’t do what he’s trying to do.” Some of Idaho’s other wa- ter districts, including Water District 1, the state’s largest, have sided with the IDWR on this issue. Ron Shurtleff, watermaster for the Payette River system, said he’s in complete align- ment with the IDWR’s stance. “I ... determined early in this issue (that) the department has gotten it right,” he said. “I admire Director Spackman and his staff for holding tight to their conviction.” Sen. Grant Burgoyne, D-Boise, stood by legislators’ Nov. 13 letter and said law- makers need to weigh in on the issue of how much discre- tion the IDWR director has to determine when a water right is fulfilled. “The legislature ... must address this policy question of how much discretion the director has,” he said. Author, scientist inspired by Martian spud research Producers and rural landowners can tap federal conservation grant funding By JOHN O’CONNELL Capital Press IDAHO FALLS, Idaho — As a retired potato seed pa- thologist who also writes sci- ence fiction novels, Phil Nolte will pay close attention when NASA and the International Potato Center seek to prove the plausibility of growing po- tatoes on Mars. The experiment could help validate a central theme in one of Nolte’s favorite books, “The Martian,” by Andy Weir, which brought the concept of raising spuds on the Red Planet to the world’s consciousness. Nolte, who retired in early 2015 from University of Idaho and released his fourth nov- el, “The Deimos Artifact,” on Dec. 15, understands authors must sometimes stretch the truth for the sake of a good story. With a few plot tweaks, Nolte believes the crop pro- duction system described in “The Martian,” now a major motion picture, could be made “good enough.” Stretching the truth, how- ever, won’t be an option when a team of scientists seeks to raise potatoes in Peru, in con- ditions simulating the grow- ing environment of a hypo- thetical climate-controlled dome on Mars. Without artistic license at their disposal, Nolte has no idea if the simulation will suc- ceed, but he sees value in the effort. “I’m one of those people who at least hopes we man- age to colonize other places besides just the planet we’re on now,” Nolte said. “A first step to try to make things like that happen is to try to create environments like this and see how your food source would do.” Nolte said sunlight would have to travel much farther to reach spuds on Mars, and researchers will have to find contingencies for extreme By ERIC MORTENSON Capital Press File photo Phil Nolte, a retired potato seed pathologist who writes science fiction novels, speaks prior to his re- tirement from University of Idaho during a tour of potato research plots at the UI’s Aberdeen Research and Extension Center. Nolte has offered an assessment of the science behind potato production on Mars included in the book and movie “The Martian,” and is intrigued by proposed research to test potato production in a simulated Martian environment. temperature fluctuations. According to a press re- lease, the joint research proj- ect aims to “raise awareness of the incredible resilience of potatoes” and should demon- strate that farming is possible in the most challenging of environments on Earth. The researchers also believe the project will provide valuable insight into production possi- bilities in the face of climate change. Soil from the Pampas de La Joya Desert in Peru will be used to simulate Martian dirt, and the atmosphere will be manipulated in a laboratory to have 95 percent carbon diox- ide, as on Mars. “We need people to under- stand that if we can grow pota- toes in extreme conditions like those on Mars, we can save lives on Earth,” Joel Ranck, an International Potato Center spokesman, said in the press release. In Weir’s story, stranded NASA astronaut Mark Watney plants spuds, originally packed for a holiday meal, using his own excrement as fertilizer. Nolte’s major criticism of the science in the book is that spuds would either have to be treated with a sprout inhibitor, which would hinder growth, or they would break dorman- cy much too soon during the roughly 10-month journey to Mars. Furthermore, Watney immediately replanted the seed tubers he raised, though Nolte notes potato seed re- quires a dormancy period be- fore sprouting. To fix the discrepancies, Nolte suggests the author could have explained the pres- ence of the potatoes as part of a science experiment, perhaps proposed by a major chemical manufacturer testing a new sprout inhibitor. Watney could then break dormancy in both the initial seed supply and the seed saved for replanting with a chemical included for the company’s experiment. Nolte noted seed potato certification programs in Ida- ho and other major spud states use chemicals, such as gibber- illic acid or rindite, to induce sprouting of seeds harvested during fall and planted shortly thereafter in winter trial plots in warmer climates. Nolte has also read reviews by critics who doubt Watney could have produced enough “fertilizer.” However, Nolte approves of the author’s choice of using a potato as the astronaut’s sta- ple food. “The potato is short a cou- ple of amino acids from being a perfect food,” Nolte said, noting researchers tried sever- al years ago to introduce those missing amino acids to the po- tato through biotechnology. Nolte acknowledges he may be nitpicking, but he be- lieves attention to detail is the key to helping readers sus- pend their disbelief. He’s sold roughly 13,000 copies of his first three space odysseys. Co- incidentally, his latest book is named after a moon of Mars. Oregon farmers, ranchers and other rural landowners can apply for federal money intend- ed to help reduce wildfire threat, update irrigation systems, take care of rangeland and improve private woodlands, wildlife hab- itat and stream flows. Grants are available through the USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service. Filing deadlines are Jan. 15. Local NRCS service centers have more information, or applicants can visit www.or.nrcs.usda.gov for more information. The funding, which comes from the 2014 Farm Bill, is part of an NRCS effort to target and apply a quick money fix to spe- cific areas. In Eastern Oregon, for example, multiple grants are available for work in Union County, neighboring Baker County and the Grande Ronde River region. Wasco County, in the Columbia River Gorge, is another focus area. Federal agencies spent $705,000 in 2015 and about $1.3 million in 2014 for pre-com- mercial thinning and other fire hazard reduction work as part of its ongoing East Face of the Elkhorn Mountains project in Union and Baker counties. That money came from the “Joint Chiefs Landscape Initia- tive” from NRCS and the U.S. Forest Service, and the Elkhorns between La Grande and Baker City were among 13 sites cho- sen nationally for the work. The Ashland watershed in South- west Oregon also was selected for the program. With destructive wildfires of recent years in mind, La Grande NRCS District Conservationist Mike Burton said private land- owners were quick to sign on. “It hasn’t been a tough sell at all,” he said. More money is available this year, as the agencies continue a three- to five-year project along 20 miles of shared boundary between private land, state land and the Wallowa-Whitman Na- tional Forest. The filing dead- line is Jan. 15; another round of funding will come with an April 15 application. The past two years, NRCS funding helped landowners reduce the fire fuel load on more than 4,700 acres. The grant program pays half the cost. In Ashland, agencies have spent $2.3 million for thinning and slash removal on private, non-industrial forest lands. Funding is available in 2016 as well, and the same filing dead- lines apply. Other grant opportunities in- clude: • $250,000 to help Union County farmers improve irriga- tion systems and reduce water use. • $375,000 for private wood- land owners in Union County to reduce fire risk by pre-commer- cial thinning or slash disposal. • $290,000 for Union Coun- ty ranchers improve range and forest health by changing live- stock grazing and management practices in the Upper Grande Ronde. • Wasco County farmers in the White River and Tygh Creek watersheds can apply for money intended to increase irrigation efficiency, stream flows and salmon habitat. Funding will pay for removing six barriers that block fish passage, install- ing irrigation pipes and sprinkler systems, and building struc- tures for water control and wells. The idea is to conserve 7,300 acre-feet of water annu- ally by making systems more efficient, and to restore stream flows in about 22 miles of the river and creek. The filing deadline is Jan. 15. Oregon State University students form a cattlewomen club By ERIC MORTENSON Capital Press Women studying agricul- ture at Oregon State Univer- sity have out-numbered men since 1998, and now they have another avenue to find their footing in the industry. Students Bailey Jenksand Jena Ozenna went through the university process to form the OSU Collegiate Cattlewomen club. Officially recognized by the university in November, the club has 15 members and hopes to double membership in 2016, Jenks said. Jenks, a junior from North- ern California with a keen in- terest in ag communication, said she and Ozenna, the club president, wanted to highlight women’s involvement in the cattle industry. The club is af- filiated with the Oregon Cat- tleWomen. Jenks said men dominate the beef cattle industry but women’s voices are emerging in it as in other sectors of ag- riculture. The club is intended to introduce female students to the industry and help them gain professional skills, con- tacts and experience that will help them succeed in the busi- ness. “Now women are having a louder voice in the industry, and maybe we bring a little bit different perspective,” Jenks said. OSU already has a cat- tlemen’s club, she said, and the two clubs hope to work together on such things as professional development and industry tours. Jenks said peo- ple seeking more information may visit the OSU Collegiate Cattlewomen’s Facebook page. Women’s enrollment at OSU’s College of Agricul- tural Sciences has been on the rise for the past couple decades, and women stu- dents have outnumbered men every year since 1998. As of fall term 2015, they made up 58 percent of ag students at OSU, according to statistics furnished by Penny Diebel, assistant dean of academic programs for the College of Agricultural Sciences. The university counted 1,319 fe- male undergrads and 218 female graduate students, compared to 894 male under- grads and 179 male graduate students. The highest percentages of female students, well over 50 percent in each category, are in the fisheries and wildlife, botany and plant pathology, ag education and environmen- tal and molecular toxicology programs, according to OSU enrollment statistics. Women account for 86 percent of students in the an- imal and rangeland scienc- es program, but Diebel said that’s probably because it is one of the options for entering OSU’s College of Veterinary Medicine. Of the vet school’s 230 students, 194 are women, or 84 percent. Oregon Food Bank credits farmers with contribution surge By ERIC MORTENSON Capital Press PORTLAND — Hunger in Oregon is leveling off thanks in part to a growing collabo- ration with the state’s farmers and their donations of surplus fruit and produce, the Oregon Food Bank’s chief executive said, That’s not to say the prob- lem is solved. Food Bank CEO Susannah Morgan said 800,000 people in Oregon and Southwest Washington, one- in-five residents, go hungry at times. “If this was a disease we would call it an epidemic,” Morgan said. “This is a cri- sis.” But for now the hunger numbers don’t appear to be increasing, Morgan said in speech this month to the Ore- gon Board of Agriculture. The board toured the Food Bank’s operations in Portland and helped pack some food for distribution. In her speech to the board and in a followup interview, Morgan said Oregon’s farm- ers have greatly increased their contributions of fresh fruit and produce. The Or- egon Food Bank and others nationally primarily received and distributed canned and boxed food in the past, but the state organization set a goal of increasing vegetable and fruit distribution by 50 percent over multiple years. Instead, with farmers pour- ing in an additional 2 million pounds of potatoes, carrots, onions, pears, apples and oth- er crops, the Food Bank blew that goal out of the water in one year, Morgan said. The Food Bank takes in produce that is surplus, blem- ished or otherwise not suit- able for commercial markets. Food is distributed through a network of four bank branch- es and 17 independent re- gional food banks serving Oregon and Clark County, Washington. While the food bank can’t afford to pay farmers much for food — or anything in many cases — state and fed- eral legislation now encour- age crop donation. The 2014 Oregon Leg- islature passed a law giving farmers a 15 percent tax cred- it on the wholesale price of their donation. As part of a federal spending bill passed in mid-December, Congress permanently extended an enhanced tax deduction for charitable contributions of food by businesses. Morgan said the possibility of no one in the region miss- ing a meal is “doable in my lifetime.” “It’s partly in our grasp be- cause of our new and growing relationship with farmers,” she said. In her talk to the ag board, Morgan said low income is the single biggest reason peo- ple ask for food assistance. About 72 percent of recipi- ents live at or below the fed- eral poverty line. More than a third of them are retired or disabled. “Hunger hurts the most vulnerable,” Morgan told the ag board. She said 52 per- cent of recipient households have children, 20 percent are elderly and 20 percent have a veteran in the household makeup. “This is the population that we continue to try and serve,” Morgan said. “Hunger re- mains a steady, persistent and excruciating large problem in our state and in our region.” Eric Mortenson/Capital Press Susannah Morgan, CEO of the Oregon Food Bank, delivered her first “State of Hunger” address to the Oregon Board of Agriculture in mid-December.