 January 6, 2017 CapitalPress.com 3 Lobbying firm Grain reps, state officials meet with USDA on falling number now downplays • Possible adjustments in Industry gatherings protocol to the current test role in What’s planned to discuss and equipment. • Genomic research in wheat cultivar development. Upstream controversial test • Potential other test By DON JENKINS Capital Press By MATTHEW WEAVER A $655,000 campaign funded by the Environmen- tal Protection Agency to im- pose mandatory buffers be- tween farms and waterways generated 51 form letters to Washington state lawmakers, according to a lobbying firm executive. Strategies 360 Vice Presi- dent of Communications Jeff Reading told the state Public Disclosure Commission that even if more letters had been sent, they would not amount to lobbying because they didn’t advocate for a specific bill. The letters sent through the What’s Upstream website were merely meant to make legislators “more aware of the issue.” “Therefore there was noth- ing to report to the PDC,” he wrote. The email sent Dec. 29 to the PDC responded to a com- plaint by Save Family Farm- ing that What’s Upstream failed to register as a political organization. The Swinomish Indian tribe used an EPA grant for Puget Sound restoration to hire Strategies 360. Over five years, the firm, tribe and envi- ronmental groups developed a media campaign accusing farmers of being unregulated water polluters. The EPA’s Office of Inspector General is looking into whether the cam- paign violated federal laws against using public funds to lobby. In earlier responses to the PDC, the tribe and EPA assert- ed the state agency has no ju- risdiction over them. Reading called the com- plaint “frivolous and retalia- tory.” The What’s Upstream web- site included a “take action” link urging lawmakers to con- sider mandatory 100-foot buf- fers. Environmental groups told supporters the letter was timed to influence the 2016 Legislature. “They were very specif- ic about the legislation they wanted to pass requiring man- datory buffers,” Save Family Farming director Gerald Bar- on said Wednesday. “Is that not a specific change in state law?” The PDC can issue fines of up to $10,000. It also can refer cases to the state Attor- ney General’s Office to seek stiffer penalties. The PDC has not announced whether it will take enforcement action. Save Family Farming was formed to push back against What’s Upstream. Strategies 360 describes it- self on its website as a “leader in grass-roots advocacy in the West and beyond.” The firm once held up What’s Upstream as a “case study” to attract other clients. According to Strategies 360, it created advertising that drove more than 13,000 visitors to the What’s Upstream website in three months. In his response to the PDC, Reading downplayed Strat- egies 360’s role, comparing it to a newspaper that runs a guest editorial urging readers to contact legislators. “S360 merely provided a platform — in this case, a website — for the public to learn about an environmental issue, …” he wrote. Reading told the PDC that the firm polled voters in 2012 and 2014 to gauge public sup- port for a statewide initiative to mandate buffers. He said the polls did not lead to an im- itative. Previously released EPA records show that the polls found that voters held farm- ers in high regard. To in- crease support for more restrictions on agriculture, the public would have to be persuaded water quality is ac- tually a “growing and danger- ous problem,” according to a post-survey report by Strate- gies 3 60. The tribe subsequently re- ported to the EPA that Strat- egies 360 was developing a “more refined outreach pro- gram.” Representatives from the Pacific Northwest wheat in- dustry and Washington State Department of Agriculture recently met with USDA officials to discuss ways to deal with falling number quality problems. “We felt the discussions went very well and that it was extremely helpful to have the wheat industry join our agency in those meet- ings,” said Hector Castro, communications director for WSDA. WSDA Director Der- ek Sandison and represen- tatives of the Washington Grain Commission, Oregon Wheat Commission, Idaho Grain Producers Association and Washington Association of Wheat Growers met in Washington, D.C., with sev- eral “high-level” represen- tatives from USDA Agricul- tural Research Service and Grain Inspection, Packers and Stockyards Administra- tion. “We explained the chal- lenges of falling number this Capital Press Matthew Weaver/Capital Press File Washington Grain Commission CEO Glen Squires talks about falling number test problems with U.S. Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., Sept. 2 in Colfax. Squires and other Pacific Northwest wheat industry representatives recently met with federal officials in Washington, D.C., to discuss ways to address the problems. year, and the need to move forward on several fronts,” Washington Grain Commis- sion CEO Glen Squires said. “It was a good meeting and well-received.” Those fronts include: • A quicker test at the grain elevator level to assist with segregating wheat with low falling number from the rest of the crop. equipment from other com- panies. Discussions included the need for increased funding at the federal level, Squires said. WSDA expects further meetings with some of the same federal agencies in Feb- ruary, Castro said. The USDA ARS unit in Pullman, Wash., is organizing a regional meeting in Febru- ary to discuss current and po- tential research and existing expertise in each state. The falling number committee from the three commissions will meet in early January, Squires said. The PNW states, WSDA and ARS will stay in touch, Squires said. Grain elevators use the Hagberg-Perten falling num- ber test to measure starch damage due to sprouting. A low falling number indi- cates a high level of alpha amylase, an enzyme that de- grades starch and diminishes the quality of wheat products. Discounts for low falling numbers vary depending on the elevator, according to the Washington Grain Commis- sion. 1-2/#4N