12 CapitalPress.com July 15, 2016 Mayor CONTINUED from Page 1 “Because of his experi- ence, he has that statewide perspective,” she said. “He’s very sensitive to the fact that Portland does have a big infl u- ence on the rest of the state.” Coba knows Wheeler; among other encounters, he stood in for then-Gov. Ted Kulongoski to accompany Coba on an Oregon ag trade mission to Asia several years ago. “He hasn’t consulted me (on ag issues),” Coba said, “but if he had a question I think he would be very com- fortable calling on me.” For his part, Wheeler said he’s fully aware of both the urban-rural divide and ur- ban-rural interdependence. “You can’t talk about suc- cess in the agricultural in- dustry without talking about the role urban areas play,” he said. “Urban communities in America are increasingly clueless about the challenges facing rural communities.” But he said urban and rural areas also have issues in com- mon. During a visit to Rose- burg, he heard people express concern about the homeless, just as they do in Portland. In Klamath Falls, there was worry about escalating hous- ing costs, another Portland concern. “If we just assume urban and rural communities are so different that we have nothing in common, then we’re losing an opportunity to collaborate, share ideas and fi nd common solutions,” he said. Wheeler said he has inter- acted with the Oregon Farm Bureau, Oregon Cattlemen’s Association and nursery groups in the past. “The urban-rural divide has been around a long time,” Wheeler said. “It’s not new, and it’s not unique to Oregon. There’s always been people who exploit it for political gain. You won’t see me do that.” He’ll take office in a city that decides every election and can swamp statewide discussions of pesticides, labor, GMOs, wages or reg- ulatory issues. Its land-use, water use and traffic pat- terns can affect what farm- ers grow, how they grow it, how they get it to market and how they use and move equipment. “Land and transportation are the two things he can make a difference in,” said Jeff Fairchild, produce di- rector for 18 New Seasons grocery stores in the Port- land area. He deals with about 50 growers who sell to New Seasons, and must find ways to deliver their prod- ucts to the city. Dan Arp, dean of Oregon State University’s College of Sales CONTINUED from Page 1 Dealers already have large inventories of used, high-quality tractors and combines, so many are reluctant to accept more trade-ins of used machinery, O’Brien said. Fleets purchased new several years are coming up for auction at a time when demand has dried up for late-model, high-tech tractors and combines, said Steve Sparks, sales manager of Nyssa Tractor and Imple- ment in Nyssa, Ore. “Some people are selling that stuff at a serious loss,” he said. Meanwhile, farmers who need additional machinery are still looking for older, reliable machinery that’s less sophisticated, Sparks said. “It may not be as fast and it may not be as fancy, but at the end of the day, it still does the same job.” Through the first half of 2016, unit sales have de- Photos by Eric Mortenson/Capital Press Rural producers sometimes see Portland as a distant place that doesn’t understand agriculture, but mayor-elect Ted Wheeler has rural roots. Riders line up to board one of the twin Portland Aerial Tram cars that will carry them up to “Pill Hill,” Oregon Health & Science University. Portland’s growth patterns are a concern to the state’s farmers. State Treasurer Ted Wheeler will take offi ce in January as Portland mayor. Wheeler said he brings an appreciation of Oregon agricul- ture and rural communities to the position. Agricultural Sciences, said he would remind Wheeler that agriculture is the state’s second largest economic driver. Oregon ag produces $5 billion in annual farm- gate value and is a major source of jobs, Arp said. The state produces more than 200 commodities and is equally diverse in terms of acreage and farming meth- ods, he said. Portland’s celebrated “foodie” culture is supported by an agricul- tural sector that provides high-quality foods and bev- erages, with an emphasis on U.S. ag machinery sales down since 2013 4WD Combine 2WD (100 HP+) 60 (Thousands of units sold) 50 6.9 40 4.4 8.5 30 20 3.7 7.1 20.9 Overall sales down 40.9% from 2013 6.9 *Through mid-year 4.5 5.8 6 10.7 9.9 9.7 5.1 9.8 8 37.2 32.1 31.7 27 26.3 10.8 27.4 3.1 5.4 23.9 22.9 1.1 1.8 10 9.8 Source: Association of Equipment Manufacturers Mateusz Perkowski and Alan Kenaga/Capital Press 0 2007 ’09 ’11 creased 23 percent for new self-propelled combines, 31 percent for four-wheel drive tractors, and 24 percent for two-wheel drive tractors over 100 horsepower, ac- cording to AEM. Equipment manufactur- ers have experienced dou- ble-digit annual declines in Broken CONTINUED from Page 1 process, including state law re- quirements and an “internal com- ponent” that is not working. “I have pulled my hair out try- ’13 ’15 2016* these categories since 2013, prompting lay-offs, shift reductions and factory clo- sures, said O’Brien. The upside is that manu- facturers are now better pre- pared financially than they were a couple years ago, when sales were expected to stay strong, he said. ing to get this to move forward for two years,” she said of Dashiell’s case. “All it’s done is destroy rela- tionships. ... It’s paperwork after paperwork. The process is broken, at least for the direct-loss side of it. It needs a lot of work in all of those aspects.” sustainability, Arp said. Coba, the state ag direc- tor, said development of the proposed James Beard Pub- lic Market, named for a re- nowned chef from the city, could showcase Oregon ag- riculture in downtown Port- land. “Clearly there’s a passion around food in Portland, we all know that,” she said. Others in agriculture note Portland’s influence on issues ranging from gas taxes to the minimum wage. Another said Portland ought to take greater advantage of nearby agricultural produc- tion to eliminate the city’s food “deserts,” the areas where poor people don’t have ready access to fresh, healthy food. Many in ag hope the new mayor realizes the Port of Portland and Portland In- ternational Airport are ag- riculture’s pipeline to world markets, whether it’s hazel- nuts to China, wheat to Ja- pan or blueberries to South Korea. Port delays, labor strife and an inadequate transportation infrastruc- ture cost producers time and money, and they believe fix- ing those problems should be a priority. Wheeler agrees, and said it is a statewide issue. “A lot of the future suc- cess of the agricultural in- dustry hinges on partnering with the urban area and the Port of Portland,” he said. “I think there’s a general lack of understanding about what it takes to make agri- cultural enterprises success- ful from an economic stand- point,” he said. “That’s an area where I have a lot to learn and to share with my constituents, and I look for- ward to those opportuni- ties.” “A lot of these very dif- ficult adjustments have now been made,” O’Brien said. Farmers were spending an average of 22 to 23 per- cent of their crop revenue on farm machinery during the boom years leading up to 2013, after which sales began to drop, said Michael Swanson, chief agricultural economist for Wells Fargo Bank. They’re now spending about 13 to 14 percent of crop revenues at a time when total U.S. crop reve- nues have fallen to roughly $180 billion from $220 bil- lion in 2013, he said. Machinery sales still ar- en’t as depressed as during the farm downturn of the 1980s, when growers de- voted as little as 8 percent of crop revenues to equip- ment purchases, Swanson said. The decline should have been predictable after sev- eral years of surging sales, Swanson said. “It’s amazing how peo- ple hit all-time records and don’t expect retrench- ment,” he said. Among row crop farm- ers, there’s a “huge gap” between strong financial performers and weak ones, so some farmers are still in a position to take advan- tage of good deals for ma- chinery, Swanson said. Meanwhile, financially troubled growers may be compelled to sell off ma- chinery purchased during the boom years to meet cash flow needs, said Mi- chael Langemeier, an ag- ricultural economist at Purdue University who has studied machinery. However, commodity prices are expected to re- main low for several years, likely suppressing large in- vestments, he said. “Many farmers are very leery of using that working capital to buy machinery.” Farmers in the North- west who grow small grains, hay and potatoes haven’t escaped the finan- cial downturn experienced by those in the Midwest, where incomes are often tied to corn prices, said Bob Boyle, regional vice president for Northwest Farm Credit Services. Cattle and dairy produc- ers are also under stress, he said. “We’re seeing com- pressed profits in ag across the board.” Some sectors, like nurs- ery and grass seed, are nonetheless performing ad- equately, Boyle said. Machinery manufactur- ers also have a bright spot in their business: Sales of small tractors under 40 horsepower are up near- ly 13 percent in 2016 and demand has grown steadily after plummeting during the recession, according to AEM. These smaller machines are often bought by spe- cialty crop producers, and while they don’t generate as much revenue per unit, their impact shouldn’t be discounted, said O’Brien. “It’s still an important sec- tor overall.” WDFW wolf policy manager Donny Martorello said the com- pensation process ignores other costs to the rancher beyond mar- ket value, including gas, trucks and extra hay to move the sheep out of a wolf-affected area. “I don’t know that we’ve met the timeframe we’ve hoped for on any claims we’ve paid,” he said. Martorello made plans to meet with Field and Tom Davis, direc- tor of governmental affairs for the Washington State Farm Bureau, to go over existing language to begin speeding things up. The meeting is slated to happen within a week to 10 days. “This cannot take three months,” Field said. “We just need to go in with a red marker, line out a few things and make it quicker.”