ELECTION 2016  FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2016 VOLUME 89, NUMBER 46 WWW.CAPITALPRESS.COM $2.00 Key measures that could impact farmers TRUMP ON AG Oregon Market value of ag products: $5.4 billion Number of farms: 34,600 Measure 97 — The Oregon Business Tax Increase Initiative What it is: A tax increase on C-corporations earning more than $25 million in the state of Oregon. “C-corporation” is an IRS designation for businesses that pay their own taxes. Status: Failed † “For an industry built by and reliant on foreign labor, the big question that looms is labor and immigration.” Craig Regelbrugge, national co-chairman of Ag Coalition for Immigration Reform Yes 40% No 59% Measure 98 — Oregon State Funding for Dropout Prevention and College Readiness Initiative What it is: Requires the state to fund dropout- prevention, career and technical education, and college readiness programs in high schools. Status: Passed † Yes 65% No 34% Washington Market value of ag products: $10.1 billion Number of farms: 36,000 Initiative 732 — Washington Carbon Emission Tax and Sales Tax Reduction What it is: Establishes a phased tax on carbon emissions from the sale or use of certain fossil fuels. Status: Failed † President-elect Donald Trump gives his victory speech during his election night rally Wednesday in New York. Yes 41.5% John Locher/AP Photo Groups assess president-elect’s impact on range of policy questions Capital Press W ith the surprise elec- tion of Donald Trump to the U.S. presidency, agriculture groups ex- pect the reversal of environmental policies enacted under the Obama administration. “He’s very much in line with us on reg- ulatory reform,” said Cody Lyon, director of advocacy and political affairs for the American Farm Bureau Federation. The Republican president-elect is ex- pected to nullify the controversial “wa- ters of the U.S.” rule, or WOTUS, which groups such as AFBF and the National Milk Producers Federation considered a drastic expansion of federal jurisdiction over private property. “That’s basically sunk, so to speak,” said Chris Galen, senior vice president of communications for NMPF. Apart from overturning WOTUS, Trump is likely to take a less “confronta- tional” approach to enforcing the Clean Water Act, Clean Air Act and Endangered Species Act, said Lyon. Turn to TRUMP, Page 12 Northwest, California presidential results by county (Results as of Nov. 9) While Hillary Clinton carried more populous counties in the four-state region represented, most rural counties voted for Donald Trump for president. For Trump (R) For Clinton (D) Idaho turnout: N/A Trump (R) Clinton (D) Other 407,219 189,677 91,359 Seattle Spokane Washington turnout: 48.2% California turnout: 51.2% Clinton (D) 1,118,772 Trump (R) 750,719 Other 117,723 Clinton (D) 5,481,885 Trump (R) 2,965,704 Other 471,928 No 58.5% Initiative 1433 — Washington Minimum Wage Increase What it is: Supports raising the state’s minimum wage incrementally from $9.47 to $13.50 by 2020. Status: Passed † Yes 59.5% No 40.5% Idaho Market value of ag products: $8.8 billion Number of farms: 24,400 H.J.R. 5 — Idaho Veto-Proof State Legislative Oversight of Administrative Rules and Regulations Amendment What it is: Includes the legislative power to review, approve and reject administrative rules in the state constitution. Legislative oversight of administrative rules would no longer be subject to veto by the governor. Status: Passed † Yes 55.5% No 44.5% California Market value of ag products: $53.5 billion Number of farms: 77,500 San Francisco Oregon turnout: 72.3% Boise Clinton (D) 911,359 Trump (R) 722,920 Other 189,732 Proposition 64 — California Marijuana Legalization Initiative Portland Salem Eugene Los Angeles What it is: Supports legalizing recreational marijuana under state law and establishes certain taxes for its cultivation and sale. Status: Passed † Yes 56% San Diego No 44% NOTE: Market value as of 2014; number of farms as of 2015. Sources: Washington, Oregon, Idaho and California secretaries of state; realclearpolitics.com Alan Kenaga/Capital Press † Results are preliminary In Harney County, residents ready to move on By ERIC MORTENSON Capital Press Harney County Judge Steven Grasty watched as a news crew from a Portland TV station cornered people in Burns a couple weeks back, asking for reaction to the confounding news that the Malheur Wildlife Refuge occupi- ers had been acquitted. He half expected his constituents to complain about the jury because the case had seemed so obvious to many county residents, who endured a 41- day occupation by armed men who came from elsewhere and disrupted their lives. But he said county residents told the TV news crew, “Look, we’re sick of this stuff. We’re moving on.” Grasty liked that response. The verdict, he said, was not worth more argument. “It is what it is,” he said. “It’s a system that works whether you like it or dislike it. Were they the right charges? There’s lots of Monday morning quarterbacking about that.” But in the criminal justice system, he said, “You don’t get a re-do.” Grasty is moving on, too. He’d said earlier this year that this would be his last go-round as county judge, and he didn’t stand for re-election after three six-year terms. He leaves offi ce at the end of the year, and Commissioner Pete Runnels, who won enough votes in the May primary to avoid a Novem- ber runoff, will take over as judge. Turn to HARNEY, Page 12