12 CapitalPress.com Upstream CONTINUED from Page 1 the impaired waters listing pro- gram and those related to the public opinion research.” Wasserman declined to comment. The newly available re- cords, released in response to a Freedom of Information Act request by the Capital Press, reveal more details about EPA’s part in an advocacy campaign that some federal lawmakers have called an ille- gal lobbying effort that falsely portrayed farmers as unregu- lated polluters. EPA grants totaling some $655,000 over ive years were passed from the isheries com- mission to the tribe to support What’s Upstream. EPA ended its support in April after the complaints August 12, 2016 from lawmakers. The EPA’s Ofice of Inspector General is auditing how the money was used. EPA Paciic Northwest Re- gional Administrator Dennis McLerran has described the agency’s role in What’s Up- stream as “technical input.” An EPA spokesman conirmed this week that McLerran was referring to the agency’s de- tailed review of the What’s Upstream website. An email from Chang to the isheries commission last spring shows the EPA was concerned that what was in- tended to be a broad effort to educate the public about preventing Puget Sound pol- lution had turned into a media and political campaign to reg- ulate farmers. Later, the EPA questioned how the website presented the results of two public opinion Don Jenkins/Capital Press A What’s Upstream billboard in Olympia advertises a website that advocates for more strict regulations on farmers. The Environmen- tal Protection Agency went over the What’s Upstream website line- by-line last year, trying with mixed success to tone down the site’s attacks on agriculture, according to newly released EPA records. surveys conducted by Strat- egies 360, a Seattle lobbying irm hired by the tribe to de- velop the advocacy campaign. The surveys, linked to on the website, found that the public generally held farmers in high regard and that most respondents were satisied with water quality. The website’s summary of the surveys stressed respons- es that indicated high concern about agriculture’s impact on water and strong support for mandatory 100-foot buffers between farm ields and wa- terways. “There will be many ques- tions about the public opinion research. Intelligent consum- ers of the information on this website will need a basis for concluding that these claims are credible,” Chang wrote in an October email. The EPA did not comment on the images that What’s Upstream used to link agri- culture with water pollution. The images included photos of cows standing in streams. The photos were not taken in Washington. Strategies 360 Vice Presi- dent of Communications Jeff Reading said the photos were “tools in an information cam- paign.” “I don’t know that the imag- es one uses has to be somehow geographically associated with the issue in question,” he said. In February, a month be- fore the website drew wide- spread attention from law- makers, the EPA again urged What’s Upstream to subject its materials to an indepen- dent review. “As we have said in pre- vious comments, the deliv- erables produced under this project do need technical review,” the EPA comment- ed in a review of plans by What’s Upstream to advertise in newspapers and on radio and billboards. “The products generated under this award are highly visible and are in- tended to inluence public opinion.” What’s Upstream did remove from the website claims about agriculture’s contribution to water pollu- tion that EPA reviewers said were unsupported by current data. Eagles CONTINUED from Page 1 Three ranchers in the Wil- lamette Valley acknowledged having serious problems with eagles but did not want to talk on the record or give their names. Because ranchers don’t report the depredation, repre- sentatives of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Farm Service Agency and USDA Wildlife Services say they are unaware that eagles killing lambs are a widespread prob- lem. Lack of reporting Emily Ruckert, a sheep rancher in Tangent, Ore., said most producers don’t know how to report eagle depre- dation or that services or re- sources exist and don’t have time to go through the report- ing process so they choose to handle it themselves. “I’ve been dealing with ea- gles my whole life,” Ruckert said. “I’ve never even heard of reporting to Fish and Wild- life. There’s really nothing we can do.” Statistics are equally hard to ind. A USDA survey found that eagles killed 6,300 sheep and lambs in 2004, the last year those statistics were re- ported separately. The depart- ment stopped reporting spe- ciically on eagle depredation after that but in 2009 reported that predators killed 247,200 sheep and lambs. Dave Williams, Oregon state director of USDA Wild- life Services, said ranchers reported only three cases of eagle depredation on lambs to his agency between 2011 and 2015. Representatives at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said the agency has received no re- ports of eagle depredation in recent years. According to the agency, “depredation” is damage to property or a threat to human health and safety caused by eagles. Eagles are protected by the Bald and Golden Eagle Act and the Migratory Bird Act, which means ranchers are not allowed to scare, harass or take eagles predating on their livestock without obtaining a permit from the USFWS. In addition to being the na- tional bird, bald eagles were protected under the Endan- gered Species Act until 2007. Williams said eagles are doing well now and are not endangered but are still pro- tected. Rodger Ruckert, who is Emily Ruckert’s father and partner in her sheep operation, said he has seen the number of eagles killing lambs drastical- ly increase as their population has grown. “When I was a kid, if you saw one eagle it was quite a sight. Now there’s easily 15 to 20 eagles around the pastures Janae Sargent/Capital Press Issaiah Wahl tags lambs at Wahl Grazing. He said the farm is targeted more by bald eagles but that both golden and bald eagles attack their lambs. Courtesy of Kathy Munsel, ODFW A captive American Bald Eagle is shown. The bald eagle breeds in 32 of 36 Oregon counties and is found through- out the state. on any given day,” Ruckert said. Ruckert said most eagles don’t migrate anymore and that he has several native immature eagles that eat his lamb crop all summer long. Ruckert said he has lost 10 percent of his lock of 300 lambs to eagle depredation, which is a devastating loss to him and his family. “These producers basically have to watch their livestock getting eaten and they have to pay the bill,” said Carter Wil- ford, a licensed falconer and ranching advocate from Utah. Wahl explained that she has seen eagles grab small lambs and drop them from heights to kill them and has seen eagles pecking at the heads of larger lambs until they die. Emily Ruckert said she came out to her ield one day and saw two eagles on a month-old lamb pecking its brains out while it was still alive. The USFWS offers permits and resources for ranchers ex- periencing eagle depredation but Jason Holm, the assistant regional director of external affairs, said the agency has not received any applications for an eagle depredation per- mit for agricultural loss in re- cent memory. Because eagles are protect- ed by federal laws, ranchers need permits to disturb bald or golden eagles that attack their livestock. Hazing permits Federal Prices CONTINUED from Page 1 values following several years of “sky-high” commodity prices. Espe- cially in the Corn Belt, where the re- port shows land values have dropped by 1.9 percent on average, Eborn said buyers had been paying more than they could generate from their land. “I’d say the bubble is getting ready to burst and the land values will prob- ably go down for several years. That’s just my gut,” Eborn said. law prohibits wounding or killing eagles so the permits allow only hazing eagles, which means using nonlethal means to scare them away from livestock. Wilford said accessing re- sources is bureaucratic and complicated and ranchers are frustrated by the federal gov- ernment when it comes to ea- gle depredation. To apply for a permit to haze eagles, ranchers need to have someone from USDA Wildlife Services inspect the lamb carcass and declare that the animal was killed because of depredation. After a depredation is de- clared, Wilford said it is still up to the discretion of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service whether to grant a rancher a permit to haze the eagles. Williams said investigators examine the carcasses to look for talon marks and determine if the animal was killed by an eagle or died of other causes and was fed on by an eagle af- ter its death. Wilford said having a USDA Wildlife Services in- vestigation done can take up to two weeks, which causes further problems for ranchers. Between the time a report is made and when an investi- gator arrives to examine the carcass, it is vulnerable to be- ing eaten by other predators and draws other eagles and predators to the pasture look- ing for more lambs to kill. Holm said the Fish and Wildlife Service takes ap- proximately 30 to 90 days to process completed permit ap- plications once the investiga- tion is done and the depreda- tion order is declared. Williams, of USDA Wild- life Services, agreed it can be a problem for ranchers and suggested tarping carcasses to protect them from other ani- mals. They also recommended taking photos of the carcass and keeping as much evidence as possible for the application. Wahl said asking her to photograph a carcass or pro- tect it is unrealistic because she runs 6,000 sheep on 15 pastures and 3,000 acres and Eborn still receives phone calls from retirement funds and investment irms inquiring about the economics of Idaho farms, which offer diverse crop rotations and didn’t inlate in value as rapidly as Midwestern land. Many investors have been leasing the land back to the growers who former- ly owned it, Eborn said. Doug Robison, senior vice pres- ident for Western Idaho with North- west Farm Credit Services, said his employer’s internal data conirms Idaho land values have continued to strengthen, likely because the state can’t keep track of each inci- dent. An eagle depredation per- mit application requires a $100 fee in addition to docu- mentation and a depredation order from the USDA Wild- life Services. Wilford said he thinks ranchers don’t submit reports or eagle permit applications because the process is so dif- icult. “Most ranchers either have given up on the issue, don’t have hope or don’t know any help exists,” Wilford said. Permit experience Larry Ruckert, Emily Ruckert’s uncle and owner of a separate small sheep opera- tion, obtained an eagle depre- dation permit 15 years ago af- ter seeing a large golden eagle kill a 20-pound lamb. Ruckert said he had to call ive different people to igure out how to apply for a permit. It allowed him to use ire- cracker shells to scare eagles away. He said it gave him tem- porary relief but when he applied for a permit the next year, he never got a response and gave up. Federal law and USFWS regulations once allowed li- censed falconers to trap im- mature golden eagles attack- ing livestock but the agency stopped the practice in 2009, said Sterling Brown, vice president of public policy for the Utah Farm Bureau Feder- ation. “The (USFWS) does not believe livestock losses are signiicant and has ceased falconers’ access to eagles,” Brown said. Holm said it is up to state governors to issue depreda- tion orders and allow falcon- ers to come into an area to trap predatory golden eagles and keep them for the sport of fal- conry. In his time at the Fish and Wildlife Service, Holm said he has only seen depreda- tion orders used in Wyoming. Holm said ranchers should irst contact USDA Wildlife Services to assess if livestock damage was caused by eagles. remains appealing to investors who still can’t ind a better alternative to farm land. “We’re also seeing a decrease in the number of transactions on the marketplace, so supply remains ex- tremely tight,” Robison said, adding tight land supply has also held up ag- ricultural land values in “other parts of the Northwest.” Robison anticipates land values in Idaho’s core growing areas will remain strong in the near term, while marginal land will be the irst to de- cline in value. Courtesy of Laura Wahl To combat eagle depredation in the pastures, Laura Wahl brings young lambs to an indoor lambing facility for the irst ive days after they are born. The space is too small to hold a large number of lambs so she runs them outdoors once they are big enough to be less vulnerable to eagles. Compensation available There is also a compensa- tion program that was built into the 2014 Farm Bill that authorizes payments of up to 75 percent of the market value of livestock lost to federally protected animals for up to $125,000, but few ranchers aware of it. Taylor Murray, outreach specialist for the Oregon Farm Service Agency, said his ofice has never had an appli- cation for compensation for eagle depredation on lambs. He said that the Farm Service Livestock Disaster specialist has never heard of eagle dep- redation in Oregon. Ranchers must apply at their local Farm Service Agency ofice and submit a “Notice of Loss” form within 30 days of the loss. Wahl said she had never heard of a compensation pro- gram but will apply now that she knows. Wilford stressed that he be- lieves in protecting eagles but that there is now enough eagle protection to warrant giving falconers access to predatory golden eagles and inding oth- er resources for ranchers. Falconers cannot trap bald eagles. He said the system for ob- taining permits and compen- sation needs to be simpliied and that the USFWS needs to look at how to prevent dep- redation rather than dealing with it after it happens. Preventive measures Ranchers have found some preventive measures to be helpful. Wahl said the biggest help for her operation is to lamb in a barn while the lambs are smallest and most vulnerable. When a lamb is born in a pasture at Wahl Grazing, em- ployees immediately transport it into a large barn, where it is protected from eagles. Rexburg potato farmer Lynn Wil- cox has continued to see lofty sale prices of farms in his area. None- theless, he succeeded in lowering many of his rental agreements this season and intends to renegotiate the remainder of his agreements next season. “There’s no way you can farm as much out of the land as people are asking for it,” Wilcox said. “Outside of insurance companies and invest- ment groups, nobody has got money now.” McCammon rancher Jim Guthrie But because of space constrictions, Wahl said she has to turn out the lambs af- ter five days. Wahl also has guard dogs but said they don’t do much to protect lambs from ea- gles. Emily Ruckert said she has protection llamas to deal with other predators but that she hasn’t found them to be helpful against eagles. She also does lambing indoors when possible and stays with the lambs whenever they are outside. Williams said the biggest thing that draws eagles to a pasture is carcasses. He said an eagle will first be drawn to a field to feed off a dead lamb and may then associ- ate the field with easy food. He suggested being vig- ilant in cleaning up and disposing of carcasses be- fore eagles have a chance to associate lambs with food. Wilford stressed the im- portance of ranchers report- ing eagle depredation — even if they don’t receive a permit or compensation. “It would be so helpful if people reported more,” said Wilford. “It would help to validate that there is a prob- lem. The service is saying they don’t get reports of depredation so they can’t do anything.” Brown agreed that ranch- ers aren’t reporting in any of the Western states but that the Utah Farm Bureau and its Western counterparts want to do more and assist ranchers. “We want to protect ea- gles, migratory birds and predators but there also needs to be a program in place that is efficient enough to allow livestock producers to receive help when livestock is being depredated on,” Brown said. “Ranchers aren’t looking for handouts, just fair compensation for their losses.” blames “outside interests” for paying more than land is worth and skewing the market. Guthrie said pasture land in his area sells immediately, and he’s had to cut back on his herd, unable to buy or lease grazing ground. “I would expect prices to keep go- ing up, but it’s not relective of what producers can afford to pay,” Guthrie said. Oakley grower Randy Hardy be- lieves competition with dairies that “gobble up land” to support their herds has also kept Idaho land values high.