October 21, 2016 Rain leaves farmers in rush By ERIC MORTENSON Capital Press The heavy rain accompa- nying October’s storms mud- died ields, hampered harvests and delayed plantings in some cases, and skewed reports from government precipitation monitors while it was at it. Automated monitoring equipment maintained by the USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service in Port- land showed precipitation off the charts in Oregon basins compared to average for this time of year. In the Coast Range moun- tains, precipitation was mea- sured at 643 percent of average as of Oct. 17, while Willamette basin sites measured snow and rain at 509 percent of average. Monitoring equipment in other basins recorded precipitation at more than 300 and 400 per- cent of average. In Portland, October rain- fall reached 5.86 inches as of Oct. 19. The average for the entire month is about 3 inch- es, according to the National Weather Service. The heavy rain sent farm- ers scrambling to inish fall work, said Michael Bondi, director of Oregon State Uni- versity’s North Willamette Research and Extension Cen- ter in Aurora. “It caught us all by surprise,” he said. The USDA’s National Ag- ricultural Statistics Service in Portland said heavy rain limited ield work and creat- ed poor harvest conditions for some producers. In other cas- es, such as wine grapes, most growers were able to inish harvesting before the heavy rains hit. Grower Ray Drescher, in the Gervais area, said his sweet corn harvesting equip- ment isn’t geared for work- ing in such wet weather and he’ll be hard-pressed to in- ish picking by the end of the week. The co-op he delivers to, NORPAC, has said corn might be too ripe if it wasn’t picked by Thursday or Friday. Drescher said he was able to harvest caulilower, however. Farmer Brenda Frketich, of St. Paul, Ore., used her blog, www.NuttyGrass.com, to talk about harvesting hazel- nuts in the rain. “It was a good remind- er that not all harvests go as smoothly as they have the past three years with only the dust to complain about,” she wrote. “Mud is much worse!” The precipitation igures compiled by NRCS are mis- leading to a certain extent be- cause they measure precipita- tion only since the beginning of the “water year,” which be- gan Oct. 1, and compare it to the average amount reached at the same point in other years. Heavy rain or snow in a short period, such as happened this fall, can make the early results seem extremely dramatic, said Scott Oviatt, the NRCS snow survey supervisor. CapitalPress.com 3 Oregon barn ire leads to wetland dispute Hay exporter accused of violating law by rebuilding By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press JUNCTION CITY, Ore. — Hay exporter Jesse Bounds knew it’d be a rough summer when two of his barns burned down in mid-July. A ire ignited spontaneous- ly in his ield and soon con- sumed the structures, which contained roughly $500,000 of straw. “It was so windy that day that it blew through the build- ings in like ive minutes,” said Bounds, who also bales straw and compresses it at his facil- ity here. Problems with the insur- ance company left Bounds short of money to rebuild both barns at a time when his in- come was drastically reduced from the loss of straw, he said. “I’m just bleeding to death.” Then came a blow from an unexpected direction: Or- egon’s Department of State Lands notiied Bounds he’d violated Oregon’s remov- al-ill law by attempting to rebuild in a wetland. The letter came as a shock. “I was literally sick to my stomach,” Bounds said. His surprise sprang from the fact the property isn’t identiied as a wetland on county maps and he’d re- ceived the necessary county permits to begin construction. “The problem is the coun- ty and state don’t work on this issue,” he said. “If they’re really trying to protect wet- lands, why would they allow the county to give me building permits again?” Bounds suspects that DSL’s interest in the property was sparked by a complaint from a neighbor with whom he’s had disagreements, since the agency did not protest when he irst built the storage facilities in 2014. He’s already rebuilt one Mateusz Perkowski/Capital Press Hay exporter Jesse Bounds examines a hole dug on his property to study whether it’s a wetland. Oregon’s Department of State Lands accuses him of rebuilding a burned barn in a wetland contrary to state ill/removal law. Mateusz Perkowski/Capital Press Hay exporter Jesse Bounds on his land near Junction City. Oregon’s Department of State Lands accuses him of rebuilding a burned barn in a wetland contrary to the state’s removal-ill law. barn but worries he’ll still be required to spend roughly $57,000 on wetland mitiga- tion on each of the 12 acres that DSL claims are wetlands because they contain hydric soils. Generally, such mitiga- tion involves buying credits from a wetland bank that’s been developed elsewhere. Bounds said the agency effectively declared the area a wetland and then forced him to prove it’s not. “They come at you like they’re the police. They auto- matically think you’re in vio- lation,” he said. Julie Curtis, public infor- mation manager for DSL, acknowledged “the timing of our enforcement action was unfortunate due to Mr. Bounds’s recent ire.” “However, as a regulato- ry agency, the Department of State Lands is bound by its statutory and rule responsibil- ities with regard to protecting Oregon’s wetlands and water- ways,” Curtis said in an email. “We always strive to resolve violations in a way that ideally will facilitate accomplishing the applicant’s goals, while meeting the state’s require- ments to protect Oregon’s wetlands and waterways.” DSL acknowledged that a “forensic wetland delinea- tion” on the property would be dificult and therefore the agency was willing to discuss alternative methods for dein- ing the area where mitigation would be required, according to an agency email sent to a wetland consultant hired by Bounds. The agency has agreed to postpone taking any action in Bounds’ case until the end of the 2017 legislative ses- sion next July, when it will be “re-engaging with Mr. Bounds to determine how to resolve the matter,” Curtis said. Oregonians In Action, a nonproit property rights group, believes it may have a legislative solution that would solve such problems for Bounds and other farmers in similar situations. The underlying problem is that state and county maps may show that a property isn’t a wetland, but that doesn’t necessarily mean DSL can’t later determine it’s actually a wetland, said Dave Hunnicutt, the group’s executive director. “DSL isn’t limited to the places listed on their state and local wetland inventory,” he said. “The maps are mislead- ing to the public and can’t be relied upon.” It’s unfair to expect land- owners to pre-emptively check whether every portion of their property is a wetland, particularly since such deter- minations are often based on soil tests rather than stereo- typical wetland characteris- tics, Hunnicutt said. “It’s not a pond, it’s not a marsh, there are no cattails. It’s just a ield,” he said. “If you can’t rely on the maps, then why do they have them in the irst place?” It’s also unrealistic for DSL to examine every prop- erty that’s permitted for de- velopment, which is why the process is largely com- plaint-driven, Hunnicutt said. Hunnicutt plans to ask a legislator to introduce a bill clarifying that properties not classiied as wetlands on lo- cal and state inventories are exempt from the removal-ill law. In the alternative, the ex- emption would be narrowed to the rebuilding of agricul- tural buildings, which would be more speciically tailored to Bounds. “The Legislature needs to step in and make sure what’s happening to Jesse doesn’t happen to anyone else,” Hun- nicutt said. John Deere Dealers See one of these dealers for a demonstration Interior secretary supports Klamath dam removal KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. (AP) — The U.S. Secretary of Interior supports the removal of four hydroelectric dams on the Klamath River. The Herald & News re- ports that Secretary Sally Jewell endorsed the plan Monday in a letter sent to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission asking it to ap- prove an application for dam demolition. The dam would also be transferred from its current owner, PaciiCorp, to Klam- ath River Renewal Corp., a consortium of federal, state and local oficials. That would relieve PaciiCorp of all lia- bility once the dams are de- commissioned and removed. The Klamath County bal- lot will still contain an up or down vote on whether the dams should be removed, but it is mostly symbolic. It could be used as an argument against the project if the vote is overwhelmingly against dam removal. 43-7/#4N