6 CapitalPress.com Editorials are written by or approved by members of the Capital Press Editorial Board. November 25, 2016 All other commentary pieces are the opinions of the authors but not necessarily this newspaper. Opinion Editorial Board Publisher Editor Managing Editor Mike O’Brien Joe Beach Carl Sampson opinions@capitalpress.com Online: www.capitalpress.com/opinion What’s Upstream-style attacks require new kind of response from farmers O UR V IEW By GERALD BARON For the Capital Press A letter to President-elect Trump Paul Sancya/Associated Press D ear Mr. President-elect: Congratulations on your victory. Those of us involved in Western agriculture look forward to working with you and your administration in the coming years. Before you take offi ce, though, we thought it would be a good idea to discuss some of the many issues facing you that impact agriculture. We know we can’t expect you to solve all of them immediately — most are holdovers from previous administrations — but we hope that in due time you will be able to work with Congress to make progress on them. Here they are: Environmental Protection Agency abomination. We urge you to work with Congress to avert a repeat of that crisis. Immigration Immigration reform has long been a concern for agriculture, especially those farmers, orchardists and nursery operators who depend on foreign- born workers for harvests and fi eld work. During the campaign you scared the heck out of both farmers and immigrants when you said you’d round up all 11 million illegal immigrants and deport them. Since the election you have tempered your remarks to say that illegal immigrants who have been convicted of felonies will be a priority for deportation. The H-2A visa guestworker program is also in dire need of He, or she, must also be familiar with large-scale agriculture and niche farming such as organics to set priorities that benefi t all producers. The fact that the U.S. Forest Service is part of the USDA also must be remembered. National forests were set aside to supply lumber and raw materials to a growing nation, not as parks. The secretary of the Department of the Interior is an important position for agriculture, too. Because the department and the Forest Service oversee most of the West, how that land is managed impacts ranchers and others who depend on public lands for grazing. The new secretary needs to understand the term “multiple use.” We would like to see national parks fully funded and operating well before the federal government even considers taking any more land as national monuments or parks. Such land grabs are a slap in the face of rural Americans who live and work on the land. If there’s a runaway freight train in the federal government, the EPA is it. The Waters of the U.S. regulations, which EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers co-wrote, is an example of rule- making gone wild. A simple concept — Food Safety don’t pollute water that goes directly into lakes, Modernization rivers and streams — Act has been transformed This law is turning into a nightmarish into another example regulation that has of federal overreach. farmers, ranchers and Evan Vucci/Associated Press The regulations others wondering Donald Trump has said he will move to resolve many problems impacting agri- promulgated by whether even mud culture during his term in offi ce. the Food and Drug puddles are now under Administration made simplifi cation and revision. the purview of the EPA. any grower of a crop that can be eaten We suggest those be the fi rst steps Added to the EPA-funded attack raw treat the irrigation water. This is of an overhaul of the immigration on Washington state farmers called in spite of decades of experience that system that would take a close What’s Upstream, in which federal shows such “problems” don’t exist. look at the impact immigrants have tax money went toward smearing Endangered Species Act farmers and pushing a bill in the state on agriculture and the rest of the When Richard Nixon signed the economy. legislature, the EPA has clearly lost ESA into law, the idea was to pull We continue to believe that those sight of its mission, which is to keep emblematic species such as bald eagles illegal immigrants who have not air and water clean. back from the edge of extinction. violated any other laws should be Trade issues That idea has long since given allowed to pay a fi ne, learn English Trade is the bread and butter way to the use of the ESA by the and receive some type of permanent of agriculture, particularly in the environmental industry as a blunt legal residence status. West. While you correctly identifi ed instrument to stop or curb farming, Securing the border is part of weaknesses in the North American ranching, oil development and mining developing a policy that works, Free Trade Agreement and the Trans- across the West. Instead of bald eagles, but making sure farmers — and Pacifi c Partnership, that doesn’t the ESA is used for more than a the nation’s food supply — aren’t diminish the importance of trade. thousand endangered and threatened sacrifi ced in the process is more Upwards of 90 percent of the wheat plants, birds, frogs and fi sh that are important. grown in the region, one-third of plentiful in some areas but not in others. Department of Labor the apples, most of the almonds The ESA is now used to manage The department’s use of the “hot and hazelnuts and much of the ranchers and farmers instead of the goods” order has been especially dairy products, beef, pork, chicken, critters and plants. shocking. When DOL inspectors slap cherries, grass seed and many other The result has been an industry a “hot goods” order on blueberries crops are sold overseas. Whatever consisting of environmental lawyers and demand a confession to wage- fl aws that exist in treaties have to be who sue the government over missed and-hour law violations and payment weighed against those benefi ts. deadlines and impact studies with the of hundreds of thousands of dollars, At the same time, we understand intent of getting a pay day courtesy they are taking away farmers’ rights to the objections of those who say of taxpayers and stopping economic due process. “Hot goods” orders were jobs have been exported, but our activity. formulated with manufactured goods hope is that they can be addressed The ESA is long overdue for an without damaging the export trade so in mind. Using them for fresh crops overhaul that takes into account should be illegal. important to the region’s producers. today’s situation, not what was going Another concern for agricultural Appointments on a half-century ago. exporters is the West Coast container Your new agriculture secretary will Those are a few of our concerns port slowdown last year that crippled signal what the next four years will and suggestions. Again, Mr. Trump, trade for nearly six months and cost be like for U.S. farmers and ranchers. we wish you the best during your the U.S. economy billions of dollars. Whoever it is must be familiar with tenure in offi ce. That a single union was allowed to the USDA and what its 105,000 And if you need any more trash importers and exporters is an employees do, and why. information, just ask a farmer. hen the EPA-funded What’s Upstream campaign came to public attention in early 2016, a group of farmers and farm leaders had already been pre- paring to meet this new threat head-on. That effort became Save Family Farming, a new nonprofi t organization aimed at countering the What’s Up- stream attack, holding indi- viduals involved accountable, and setting a path for a new kind of pro-farm public strat- egy. Farmers and their farm associations have long been strong advocates for farming. The success of farm support legislation and the strong sup- port of the public in general demonstrate that. But in the past few years, something new has emerged which calls for a new ap- proach to farm advocacy. En- vironmental nonprofi ts need new targets to energize their followers and raise funds. “In- dustrial agriculture” seems to them to fi t the bill. The rapidly growing band of environmen- tal lawyers need to cast about for new targets to stay ahead of the competition. A few tribes, with strong federal support, push treaty rights claims at the expense of farming. Today’s media, rocked by continuing audi- ence losses, need the harsh ac- cusations of activists to stoke the outrage they depend on for ratings. Elected represen- tatives, knowing the strong support of younger voters for anything labeled “environ- mental” are quick to assume accusations in the media are accurate and refl ect voter opinion. Food safety, anti-GMO, farm labor and climate change activists similarly see a juicy target in industrial agriculture. The result is growing public doubt about farmers, conven- tional farming methods and environmental stewardship. In this new environment, what has worked in the past is less effective. Backroom re- lationship building with reg- ulators and elected leaders is necessary, but not suffi cient. “Just tell a positive story” doesn’t work when opponents effectively place the black hat on farmers. Social media plays powerfully into the mix enabling lies, distortions and accusations to quickly gain momentum. As President Obama said recently, “People, if they just repeat attacks enough, and outright lies over and over again, as long as it’s on Face- book and people can see it, as long as it’s on social media, people start believing it. And it creates this dust cloud of nonsense.” In responding to What’s Upstream, Save Family Farm- ing has set a new path based on these convictions: • Be pro-active: The best defense is a good offense. • Be aggressive: The black hat has to be on somebody — if not farmers, someone else. • Protect the truth: Lies have to be strongly countered because if repeated often enough they become the truth. • Secure clout: Politicians operate on “pain avoidance” and therefore must see you W Guest comment Gerald Baron can cause them pain. • Be the broadcaster: So- cial media and digital com- munications used correctly provide unprecedented oppor- tunities to reach audiences directly. • Reach out: The most im- portant audience is the young- er urban voter who under- stands the least about farming but ultimately has the most to say. • Unify: Without farm- ers putting aside differences and working together toward a common goal of preserv- ing farming, our effective- ness will be severely limited. Farmers who don’t see them- selves threatened and don’t help protect other farmers may fi nd themselves alone when the attacks come their way. The foundation of this strategy is environmental stewardship by farmers. If we do not care for the environ- ment and meet the broader community’s expectations, our future is in doubt. Fortunately, most accu- sations against farmers on environmental topics are massive exaggerations, inten- tional distortions or outright lies. That’s fortunate because the overreach of What’s Up- stream sponsors such as the Western Environmental Law Center will ultimately harm their credibility with the en- vironmental crowd once their dishonesty is understood. The vast majority of farmers do care and our big- gest challenge is informing a poorly informed electorate and urban voter about the re- markable progress farmers are making in caring for wa- ter, habitat, wildlife, land, air and all things environmental. Telling this story effectively is the key to our future survival. Early on in the process of putting together groups of farmers to lead this kind of effort one farmer said, “We don’t know how to do this kind of thing.” I replied, “Yes, we do. We just need to do what the activists do.” We need to become pro-farm ac- tivists. We need a whole army of pro-agtivists if the future of our farms is to be secured. For this to happen, farm- ers, farm supporters and farm association leaders need to clearly understand that we are in a new era and new strate- gies are required. The support of Save Family Farmers by farm leaders in Washington demonstrates that many are understanding. Strong, pro-active, unifi ed public outreach is the key to the future of farming. Without meaning to do so, the spon- sors of What’s Upstream have made that lesson very clear. Gerald Baron is the founder and executive direc- tor of Save Family Farming, a Washington farm advocacy group focused on responding to attacks on farming such as What’s Upstream. Baron is a crisis communication expert with global experience in the energy industry and the author of “Now Is Too Late: Survival in the Era of Instant News.” Letters policy Write to us: Capital Press welcomes letters to the editor on issues of interest to farmers, ranchers and the agribusiness community. Letters policy: Please limit letters to 300 words and include your home address and a daytime telephone number with your submission. Longer pieces, 500-750 words, may be considered as guest commentary pieces for use on the opinion pages. Guest commentary submissions should also include a photograph of the author. Send letters via email to opinions@capitalpress.com. Emailed letters are preferred and require less time to process, which could result in quicker publication. Letters also may be sent to P.O. 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