10 CapitalPress.com April 15, 2016 Oregon Flurry of water Oregon research projects awarded grants complaints under investigation By ERIC MORTENSON Capital Press Farmer files 26 allegations of rule violations in Polk County By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Farm regulators are inves- tigating a flurry of complaints about water quality problems from agricultural activities in Oregon’s Polk County. The Oregon Department of Agriculture received 26 complaints about alleged vi- olations of water regulations in the county over the winter, which is a high volume over a relatively short time period in one area, said John Byers, manager of the agency’s agri- cultural water quality program. “That’s certainly not the norm,” he said. The situation is also un- usual because all of the com- plaints were filed by a farmer who serves as a director of the Polk Soil & Water Conserva- tion District, which aims to mitigate water quality prob- lems, Byers said during a re- cent meeting of the Oregon Board of Agriculture. “As a private citizen, he has the ability to do that,” Byers said. However, the concern is that Polk County residents may think the complaints were brought on behalf of the district, which could dissuade them from inquiring about wa- ter quality questions due to a fear of enforcement, he said. Creating that perception wasn’t the intent of the farmer, who was concerned about pro- spective violations in his area, Byers said. “I don’t think it was mali- cious,” he said. The goal of ODA’s agricul- tural water quality program is to ensure compliance with the rules, rather than take enforce- ment actions such as issuing penalties, Byers said. Landowners who have water quality violations are assisted by the local soil and water conservation district, so the recent complaints in Polk County raised questions about straining that district’s capaci- ty, he said. “It becomes a bigger bur- den on them,” Byers said. Even so, the complaints have invigorated discussions about water quality in the re- gion, which may ultimately help further the program’s goals, he said. Investigations of the com- plaints are ongoing, though some have been closed with- out finding any violations, he said. The vast majority of the complaints pertain to erosion from a lack of vegetation or crops being planted up and down a slope, though several relate to livestock and manure piles. Kelly Gordon, a farmer from Monmouth and direc- tor of the Polk S&WCD, said he was prompted to file the complaints due to worries about the effect of heavy rains, which likely caught farmers off guard. Gordon said he did not file the complaints as a representa- tive of the district and doesn’t believe water quality problems have gotten worse in the coun- ty. The district’s manager and another director suggested that Gordon first approach the Polk S&WCD before filing a complaint with ODA, which he plans to do in the future, he said. “I don’t think it’s a perva- sive thing. It just pops up now and again,” Gordon said. Senators to subpoena EPA chief in Colorado mine spill By MATTHEW DALY Associated Press WASHINGTON — Sen- ate Republicans vowed April 13 to issue a subpoena to force the head of the Envi- ronmental Protection Agency to appear at a field hearing in Phoenix next week on a toxic mine spill that fouled rivers in three Western states and on lands belonging to two Native American tribes. Wyoming Sen. John Bar- rasso said the Senate Indian Affairs Committee would vote on a plan to subpoena EPA Ad- ministrator Gina McCarthy. Barrasso chairs the Indian Affairs panel, which is con- ducting an April 22 hearing on the 3 million-gallon spill at Colorado’s abandoned Gold King Mine. The Aug. 5 spill contami- nated rivers in Colorado, New Mexico and Utah, as well as in the Navajo Nation and South- ern Ute Reservation. If approved, the subpoe- na would be the first issued by the Indian Affairs panel since 2004, during the Jack Abramoff lobbying scandal. Abramoff was a prominent Republican lobbyist who pleaded guilty to charges in- cluding conspiracy, fraud and tax evasion in the purchase of gambling cruise boats. He spent 3 1/2 years in prison. A federal investigation blamed the EPA for the Col- orado spill, saying an agency cleanup crew rushed its work, failed to consider the com- plex engineering involved and ended up triggering the very blowout it hoped to avoid. Oregon research projects were awarded nine of 37 grants announced April 7 by the Western Sustainable Ag- riculture Research and Educa- tion program. Nearly $2.9 million in grants were awarded for proj- ects in 11 Western states and territories, with Oregon pro- posals awarded $754,721. The Oregon projects in- clude: • Extending the winter squash season, Oregon State University, $49,958. • Evaluating hazelnut or- chard cover crops, OSU, $49,997. • Restoring rangeland soil health, Crooked River Weed Management, $44,450. • The impact of wheat chaff collection on weed con- trol, OSU, $250,000. • Soil solarization for weed control, OSU, $247,329. • Building Integrated Pest Management networks, OSU, $67,802. • Sustainable grazing in wetland pastures, Coos Coun- ty Soil and Water Conserva- tion District, $15,237. • On-farm production costs, farmer Sarah Brown, $9,400. • Improving water-saving techniques in vineyards and orchards, A to Z Wine Works, $20,548. Western SARE is funded by USDA and the National Institute of Food and Agri- culture, and is hosted by Utah State University. Online http://www.west- ernsare.org/Projects/Funded- Projects-by-Year/2016-Proj- ects Researchers develop an app to protect bees By DIANE DIETZ Eugene Register-Guard Researchers want to help farmers “bee responsible” by providing a smartphone app with everything farmers need to know about protecting bees while in the field. The app provides toxicity ratings for 150 farm chemi- cals from Abamectin to Zi- ram, how-tos on avoiding poi- soning and symptoms of bee poisoning. “We looked at the crops grown in the Northwest,” said Oregon State University toxi- cologist Louisa Hooven, “and then at all the products that are likely to be used when the crop is flowering — which is when the bees will be forag- ing. Those were the pesticides we included.” It’s critical information because Oregon beekeepers manage about 70,000 com- mercial honeybee hives, ento- mologist Ramesh Sagili said in a prepared statement. The bees pollinate about 50 Oregon crops, including blueberries, cherries, pears, Associated Press file In this Jan. 28, 2014, file photo, a hive of honeybees is on display. Researchers have developed a smart phone app to help farmers when honeybees are foraging. apples, clover, meadowfoam and vegetable seed worth a half billion dollars annually, he said. The app warns farmers about the circumstances when most bee poisonings happen, including: • Insecticides are applied when bees are foraging. • Insecticides are applied to bee-pollinated crops during bloom. • Insecticides are applied to blooming weeds in or- chards or field margins. • Insecticides drift onto blooming plants adjacent to the target crop. • Bees collect insecti- cide-contaminated pollen (such as corn), nectar (such as cotton or mint), or other ma- terials from treated crops that do not require bee pollination. • Bees collect insecti- cide-contaminated nectar from plants treated with sys- temic pesticides. • Bees collect insecti- cide-contaminated nesting materials, such as leaf pieces collected by alfalfa leafcut- ting bees. • Bees collect insecti- cide-contaminated water (from drip tape or chemiga- tion, for example). • Beekeepers and growers do not adequately communi- cate. The app is meant to help farmers protect honeybees, but also native ground-dwell- ing species such as squash bees, long-horned bees, sweat bees, mining bees and bum- blebees. “How to Reduce Bee Poi- soning” was produced jointly by OSU, the University of Idaho and Washington State University. Its cost was under- written by beekeeper associa- tions in Oregon, Idaho, Wash- ington and California, and by the Oregon Department of Agriculture. Oregon standoff defendant Jake Ryan detained until trial By STEVEN DUBOIS Associated Press PORTLAND, Ore. — Ref- uge occupier Jake Ryan will re- main in a Portland jail pending trial despite assurances from a Montana sheriff that he would keep an eye on him if returned to that state. U.S. Magistrate Judge Paul Papak said April 7 he might have granted pre-trial release had Ryan surrendered last month after learning that a grand jury had returned an in- dictment against him. Instead, Ryan became a fugitive un- til his arrest April 5 in Clark County, Washington. “The fact that you went into hiding — into hiding armed — causes me great concern,” Pa- pak said. Ryan, 27, of Plains, Mon- tana, was one of more than two dozen people charged because of their involvement in the 41- day takeover of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in Oregon. The men and women were protesting U.S. land re- strictions and the imprisonment of two ranchers who started fires. Ryan traveled to Oregon in January with four firearms and served as a guard. His attorney, Jesse Mer- rithew, asked the judge to let Ryan return to Montana pend- ing trial. He stressed that Ryan has no criminal record, and Sheriff Tom Rummel of Sand- ers County fully supported having Ryan return to Plains, something he wouldn’t want if Ryan were a problem. Merrithew said the sheriff told him that if Ryan ran, “he would track him down him- self.” Assistant U.S. Attorney Craig Gabriel countered that Rummel is a friend of Ryan’s family, failed to find him during the month he went into hiding and is not entirely cooperative with federal law enforcement. “If he’s released, law enforce- ment is unlikely to find him again,” Gabriel said. Ryan was arrested after a landowner called to report a trespasser in rural Clark Coun- ty, Wash. An officer found the young man sleeping in a shed, a loaded gun nearby. Merrithew said Ryan ran because of fear, because others were giving him bad advice and because he wasn’t getting clear information about what he was facing. “He is moti- vated to fight this case and does not want to run,” Mer- rithew said. DRIFT PROBLEMS? 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