May 6, 2016 CapitalPress.com 3 What’s Upstream fi nally makes impression on Wash. lawmakers Senator: ‘Total waste of money’ By DON JENKINS Capital Press A campaign funded by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to sway Washington legislators apparently went unnoticed during the 2016 ses- sion, but it’s getting unfl atter- ing attention now. The chairmen of the Senate and House agriculture com- mittees Tuesday criticized the What’s Upstream advocacy campaign, saying it reinforced negative views of the EPA as an overreaching agency. “If they truly did agree to this lobbying, someone with the EPA needs to be held ac- countable, not just a slap on the wrist, but held accountable for violating the law,” said House Agriculture Committee Chairman Brian Blake, D-Ab- erdeen. What’s Upstream has an- gered some federal lawmakers, Don Jenkins/Capital Press Washington House Agriculture Committee Chairman Brian Blake says U.S. Environmental Protection Agency offi cials should be held accountable if they broke the law in supporting the What’s Upstream advocacy campaign directed at state lawmakers. who allege the EPA has broken laws related to lobbying and unauthorized spending. The campaign, however, was ostensibly directed at state lawmakers. The campaign’s lead organizer, the Swinom- ish Indian tribe, set a goal of changing state water-pollution 35,000 On average, there were more than 28,000 food manufactur- ing jobs statewide in 2015, up 3.7 percent from 2014. 25,000 Source: Oregon Employment Dept. Alan Kenaga/Capital Press 20,000 2009 2012 2015 Oregon’s food processing companies lead statewide manufacturing revival By ERIC MORTENSON Capital Press Oregon’s food process- ing jobs reached an all- time high in 2015 and led a statewide manufacturing re- bound that outpaced the rest of the country, according to a new report. Josh Lehner, an econo- mist with the state Office of Economic Analysis who tracks trends, said other states have regained only one-third of the manufac- turing jobs they lost in the recession. “Then there’s Oregon,” Lehner wrote in his most recent post, “Oregon Man- ufacturing in Perspective.” Oregon has regained nearly two-thirds of its lost manufacturing jobs, and is adding jobs at a 4 percent annual rate in recent years, Lehner said. Food processing has been a persistent bright spot in the state economy. It was the only Oregon manufacturing sector that didn’t leak jobs during the recession, and the only one to reach an all-time high during the recovery. Lehner said Oregon counted 28,019 food manu- facturing jobs in 2015, with an average wage of $39,463. More than a quarter of the jobs, 7,553, were in frozen food processing such as is done at plants operated by NORPAC Foods Inc. Lehner said Oregon food processing probably does well for a couple reasons. The state’s producers and plants are geographical- ly centered between major markets, and the state grows a wide variety of crops. “The mix we have local- ly is doing really well,” he said. In his post, Lehner not- Online To see the report, go to http:// bit.ly/24nYP0U “I’d like to see what the (jobs) graph looks like in three to fi ve years. I don’t see agricultural production dwindling, but there will not necessarily be more jobs.” Geoff Horning, executive director of Oregon Aglink ed some caution. He said the strong U.S. dollar and slower global economy may tamp down food processing and other manufacturing gains. Also, outside high- tech, manufacturing no longer pays wages that are substantially above other sectors, he said. Geoff Horning, executive director of Oregon Aglink, formerly the Agri-Business Council of Oregon, said the food manufacturing job numbers drive home the im- portant role of agriculture in the state’s economy. But Horning said a cou- ple factors cloud the hori- zon. The increase in Ore- gon’s minimum wage will make production more cost- ly, and labor is hard to find these days, he said. Auto- mation may become more prevalent. “I’d like to see what the (jobs) graph looks like in three to five years,” he said. “I don’t see agricultural production dwindling, but there will not necessarily be more jobs.” Grass Expertise closure Commission spokes- woman Lori Anderson said groups that organize grass- roots lobbying must register if they spend at least $700 in a month or $1,400 over three months. What’s Upstream did not register. “We haven’t heard about them before now,” An- derson said Wednesday. The Swinomish tribe hired a Seattle public relations fi rm in 2012 and formed a partner- ship with several environmen- tal groups. The campaign was begun by 2013, according to EPA records, but apparently had little impact. Longview Rep. Dean Tak- ko, the top-ranking Democrat on the Senate Agriculture Committee, took his fi rst look at the website Tuesday. “It looks like someone went out of their way to make farmers look like bad guys,” he said. “If you want to see water that color (brown), wait until a good rain, espe- cially on this (west) side of the mountains.” Capital Press 22,136 2006 “I don’t know if they were working on the What’s Up- stream campaign at that point. I hadn’t heard of that until much more recently. But, yeah, it would tie with what the goals are of protecting the salmon,” Stanford said. The bill was referred to the House Agriculture Committee, and Blake declined to give it a hearing. Blake said the bill would have undermined voluntary farmland preservation efforts by imposing uniform-sized buffers. “You may get 95 percent of the benefi t with 10 feet of buffer. Adding another 90 feet makes no sense. It’s taking land out of production with very little benefi t,” he said. Efforts to reach Wasserman were unsuccessful. By the time the Legisla- ture convened in January, the Swinomish tribe already had spent an estimated $570,000 on the campaign, according to EPA records. Washington Public Dis- By SEAN ELLIS 28,019 (Average annual employment) in their opinion,” she said. Visitors to the What’s Up- stream website were urged to “take action” by sending a form letter to state legislators asking for mandatory 100-foot buffers between farm fi elds and waterways. The link has been removed from the website. The EPA previously said the link did not violate prohibitions on using federal funds to lobby because the letter did not take a position on specifi c pending legislation. The Swinomish tribe, how- ever, had been involved in a proposal presented during the 2016 session to require buffers on some farmland. Rep. Derek Stanford, D-Bothell, introduced a bill to require property owners partic- ipating in a voluntary farmland preservation program to leave buffers along salmon-bearing waterways. Stanford said Tuesday that he worked for many months on the proposal with the tribe’s environmental policy director, Larry Wasserman. Idaho sheep video gets 262,000 YouTube views Oregon food manufacturing jobs 30,000 control laws by this year, ac- cording to EPA records. Blake and Senate Agricul- ture Committee Chairwom- an Judy Warnick, R-Moses Lake, said they learned about the EPA-funded campaign af- ter the Legislature adjourned March 10. “It was a total waste of time and money if they were trying to get my attention,” Warnick said. “The only attention they got from me was a negative impression. “I was angry about how it was paid for, how it came about and even more angry about where the actual picture of cows came from,” said War- nick, referring to a What’s Up- stream billboard photo of cows in a stream that was taken in Amish country. Warnick said she’s met constituents who see the EPA-funded campaign as more evidence government is hostile toward agriculture. “To have an agency like EPA come in and do some- thing like this is over-the-top, WILDER, Idaho — A 23-minute video about Ida- ho sheep has generated a lot of attention on YouTube and nobody is quite sure why. The video has been viewed more than 262,000 times since it was posted in June 2013. It features Wilder sheep rancher Frank Shirts and some of his 28,000 ewes and lambs. Shirts speaks openly about the love he has for the job and the challenges he faces. Shirts said though he’s “tickled to death over” the video’s success, he’s not sur- prised by it because a lot of people love sheep. “It wasn’t me,” he said. “The people that watched it won’t even remember my name. People love seeing those baby lambs.” Most of the 58 comments below the video are posi- tive, and it has received 568 “likes” and 33 “dislikes.” Shirts said he’s most hap- py that the video has shed some light on some of the positive aspects of the sheep industry. “If it can help our indus- try, that’s the main thing I’m happy to see,” he said. The video was produced by Steve Stuebner for Life on the Range, an Idaho Rangeland Resource Com- mission educational out- reach campaign that informs people about Idaho ranchers. Stuebner followed Shirts and his flock for an en- tire year as the sheep were moved from the low coun- try near the Snake River to higher country in the Boise and Payette national forests. “He just walked us through the whole process of raising lambs and graz- ing across public and private land to the point they are ready to get shipped to mar- ket,” Stuebner said. The 262,000 views is a lot for a simple farming video, said Jake Putnam, broadcast services manager for Idaho Farm Bureau Federation. “It just shows the Amer- ican people are very curi- ous about where their food comes,” he said. “They’re also very curious about farmers and ranchers and they like to put names and faces to their food.” The Shirts video is one of 30 in the Life on the Range series and is by far the most popular, with second place registering 47,000 views. Courtesy of Steve Stuebner Wilder, Idaho, sheep rancher Frank Shirts speaks to a fi lm crew while shooting footage for a video that has been viewed more than 262,000 times on YouTube. IRRC Executive Director Gretchen Hyde said she has no idea why the Shirts video is so popular. She said none of the vid- eos is scripted. “It’s really them talking from the heart, which is the most effective way to reach the public,” she said. “I think that comes through re- ally well.” The videos cover a wide variety of range-related top- ics, from how to get a BLM permit to photo monitoring to how ranchers are taking care of Idaho’s rangelands and managing them for mul- tiple uses. “We’re letting people know the positive stories going on on the rangeland; the diversity of ranches and rangeland issues and how people are individually han- dling them,” Hyde said. 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