February 19, 2016 CapitalPress.com Oregon wolf delisting bill draws Oregon farm wins questions in Senate committee radish seed dispute Favorable decision may affect other growers in lawsuit with bank Bill would ratify removal of wolves from endangered species list By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Courtesy of ODFW OR-3, a 3-year-old male wolf from the Imnaha pack, is seen in this image captured from video taken by an ODFW employee on May 10, 2011, in Wallowa County, Ore. in Oregon’s management plan for wolves, which does not re- quire the Legislature to ratify the commission’s decision, said Prozanski. “Why are we doing that, if it was never part of the plan?” Prozanski asked Sen. Bill Hansell, R-Athena, who tes- tiied in support of HB 4040. While the Legislature may not have previously ratiied a delisting, it’s not unprece- dented for lawmakers to ratify decisions by the state’s exec- utive branch, Hansell replied. The bill isn’t intended to preclude the environmental- ist lawsuit, which claims the wolf delisting was not based on the best available science, he said. “If people want to sue, they’ll have the ability to do that.” If the purpose of HB 4040 is simply to afirm that wild- life regulators have done a good job, then “it doesn’t seem like an appropriate use of our time,” Prozanski said. Dembrow said he dis- cussed the bill with the Of- ice of Legislative Counsel, which advises lawmakers on legal issues, and was told HB 4040 would effectively force a judge to dismiss the envi- ronmentalist lawsuit. Ratiication by the Legis- lature would cure any legal deiciency in the delisting de- cision, which Dembrow said Relaxed Oregon hemp rules pass House Bill would allow growers to use greenhouses, cuttings By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press SALEM — Oregon hemp growers would be free to propagate the crop from cut- tings and grow it in green- houses under a bill that’s won the approval of the House. Under current law, hemp can only be seeded directly outdoors in ields at least 2.5 acres in size, which was in- tended to facilitate industrial production but proved too in- lexible for growers. At the time Oregon law- makers originally legalized hemp production in 2009, they enacted these restrictions with the expectation the crop Capital Press ile photo Hemp growing in Oregon’s Willamette Valley in 2015. A bill in the Oregon Legislature would make indoor cultivation of hemp legal, and make other changes in rules regulating the crop. would be used for oilseed and iber instead of human con- sumption. Since then, the Oregon De- partment of Agriculture found that many hemp producers were more interested in grow- ing the crop for cannabidiol, a Saturday Feb. 27th • 9-4 Sunday Feb. 28th • 10-4 compound used for medicinal purposes, than for such tradi- tional products. To this end, they wanted to use greenhouses, clone de- sirable plants and produce the crop on a smaller scale. Under House Bill 4060, which was passed 54-4 by the House on Feb. 16, the min- imum 2.5 acre ield require- ment would be scrapped and hemp farmers would be given the same lexibility in produc- tion and propagation methods as growers of other crops. The Oregon Farm Bureau supports HB 4060 because it wants hemp treated like other crops. The bill includes an amendment approved by the House Committee on Agri- culture and Natural Resources that clariies hemp would be subject to the same Oregon Department of Agriculture water and pesticide regula- tions as other crops. he found troubling due to the scientiic issues involved. “Essentially, what we’re being asked to do is say the science is right, the process is right,” he said. “I don’t how many of us in the legislature can say that.” Dembrow also noted that he’s proposed an amendment to the bill clarifying that the legislature ratiies the delis- ting as long as the decision is in compliance with the law and administrative rules, which would cause HB 4040 to have no legal effect. If the bill’s purpose isn’t to void the lawsuit, then “per- haps this amendment would be in order,” Dembrow said. A favorable ruling won by an Oregon farm in a legal dispute over radish seed may have pos- itive consequences for other op- erations involved in the lawsuit. Several farms in Oregon are ighting a legal complaint iled by Northwest Bank of Warren, Pa., that claims it has a security interest in radish seed they grew in 2014. The bank claims the radish seed serves as collateral for a $7 million loan taken out by Cover Crop Solutions, a seed company that contracted with Oregon growers to produce a proprietary variety. Radish plants are used as a cover crop in the Midwest, but weather in 2014 reduced demand among farmers in that region and resulted in an over- supply. Northwest Bank’s lawsuit contends that its security interest in the radish seed has priority over that of the growers, but a federal judge in Portland has disagreed with that argument in regard to at least one farm. U.S. Chief District Judge Michael Mosman has found that Hawman Farms of Hermiston, Ore., agreed to grow roughly $180,000 worth of seed and has a “possessory lien” on the crop that takes precedence over the security interest held by the bank. Under a possessory lien, a party can retain possession of property until a debt has been paid. Northwest Bank claimed the contract between Hawman Farms and Cover Crop Solu- tions invalidated all such liens, but Mosman decided that it only barred liens against the licensed radish cultivar — which was owned by another company — and not the physical seed crop. Sanford Landress, attor- ney for Hawman Farms, said Mosman’s opinion may also be consequential for other farms, which claim they have posses- sory liens on the seed. Hawman Farms grew, cleaned and stored the radish seed, which puts the compa- ny in a different legal position than growers who had another irm clean and store the crop, Landress said. “People with continuous possession of the seed, like Hawman, are going to beat the bank,” he said. Several other farms that also possessed the radish seed with- out interruption have iled sim- ilar motions citing the Hawman Farms ruling and asking the judge to declare that their pos- sessory liens have priority. H-B SYSTEM 2000 HORIZONTAL BALE CUTTING SAW The heavy duty, hydraulically powered horizontal Bale Reclaim system, with “Vertical cut positioning” SALVAGE D BALES CONTAMINATE COST- QUICKLY AND EFFECTIVELY • The HB System 2000 comes complete with hydraulic cylinder and controls for powered cut depth adjustment through the cut. • Automatic bar oiler system is a standard feature on this unit. • This saw splits bales using an L-M DE-68 inch saw bar running .404 pitch chain designed for parallel cutting through any type of hay or straw. P.O. Box 82111, Portland, OR 97282 Phone (503) 235-3146 - Fax (503) 235-3916 1-800-228-0793 8-7#8 SALEM — A bill to ratify removing wolves from Ore- gon’s endangered species list came under sharp questioning Tuesday in a key Senate com- mittee. House Bill 4040, which declares that Oregon wildlife regulators followed the law when delisting wolves last year, was approved 33-23 in the House on Feb. 12 and is now under consideration by the Senate Committee on Environment and Natural Re- sources. Proponents of HB 4040 say it would buttress the cred- ibility of the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission’s deci- sion, while critics say the bill is intended to derail an envi- ronmentalist lawsuit against the delisting. During a Feb. 16 hear- ing, Sen. Michael Dem- brow, D-Portland, and Floyd Prozanski, D-Eugene, ex- pressed reservations about the purpose of the bill. The delisting was part of a three-step process described 3 Leasing available • Call for video y l i F un m a F ONLY Adults: $5 CASH Under 18: FREE FREE PARKING Polk County Fairgrounds and Event Center 520 S. 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