 FRIDAY, MAY 5, 2017 VOLUME 90, NUMBER 18 WWW.CAPITALPRESS.COM $2.00 PORT OF PORTLAND TRUMP Massive ships threaten export prospects H IS F IRST 100 D AYS Experts paint sobering picture of challenges facing container terminal Jan. 23 — Trump withdraws U.S. from Trans-Pacific Partnership. By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press DAY 4 DAY 6 Jan. 25 — Trump signs executive order to increase enforcement of immigration laws. Feb. 17 — Senate confirms Scott Pruitt to lead Environmental Protection Agency. AP photo President scores high on regulations and Cabinet picks, but trade, labor worries remain Feb. 28 — Trump rescinds Waters of the United States rule. Pruitt March 1 — Senate confirms Ryan Zinke to head Interior Department. By DON JENKINS Capital Press A merican Farm Bureau Federation President Zippy Du- vall says he recognizes how President Donald Trump works. Trump evaluates problems, weighs solutions and makes decisions, the Georgia farmer says. “He’s already shown he can be fl exible,” Duvall said. “We do that on the farm every day.” After 100 days in offi ce — a milestone reached April 29 — Trump receives mostly high marks from producers and farm leaders interviewed for this story, partly because he’s kept campaign prom- ises, but also because he’s signaled a willingness to adapt. The favorable reviews, however, come with widely shared res- ervations, particularly about how his tough talk on immigration and trade will impact agriculture. “It’s a little scary to not know what the future will bring,” said Washington State Grain Commission member Dana Herron, whose state exports up to 90 percent of its wheat crop. Promises kept On regulations, Trump, as promised, rescinded the new Waters of the U.S. rule, widely despised by farm groups. He also signed a congressional resolution to repeal the unpopular Bureau of Land Management Planning 2.0 Rule and issued executive orders to re- view farm regulations and the designation of national monuments. On the makeup of his administration, farm groups praise Trump’s picks for agriculture secretary, interior secretary and Environmental Protection Agency administrator. The new EPA head, Scott Pruitt, spoke recently to the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association. “He received two standing ovations from a roomful of cattle pro- ducers,” NCBA Vice President of Government Affairs Colin Wood- all said. “I’ve never seen that before.” DAY 29 DAY 40 DAY 41 March 16 — Trump proposes 31 percent budget cut to EPA and 21 percent cut to USDA. Zinke March 27 — Trump signs resolution repealing Bureau of Land Management Planning 2.0 Rule. March 31 — Trump orders report within 90 days on causes of trade deficits. Xi Jinping and Donald Trump DAY 56 DAY 67 DAY 71 Turn to TRUMP, Page 12 DAY 78 April 7 — Trump hosts Chinese President Xi Jinping at Mar-a-Lago; hopes rise for U.S. beef exporters. April 24 — Senate confirms Sonny Perdue to direct USDA. April 25 — Trump sets up task force to promote agriculture and rural prosperity. Perdue April 26 — Trump orders review of national monument designations. DAY 95 DAY 96 DAY 97 DAY 98 Courtesy USDA Flanked by Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue and FFA Central Region Vice President Valerie Early of Minnesota, President Donald Trump holds up an executive order creating a task force to promote agriculture and rural prosperity April 25 at the White House. April 27 — Trump tweets that Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau asked him to renegotiate rather than terminate NAFTA. “I agreed … subject to the fact that if we do not reach a fair deal for all, we will then terminate NAFTA. Relationships are good — deal very possible.” Source: Capital Press research Don Jenkins and Alan Kenaga/Capital Press Increasingly massive con- tainer ships threaten the rele- vance of the Port of Portland’s container terminal, where cranes aren’t large enough to accommodate the behemoth vessels, experts say. “In many ways, this is where the market is headed and what we have to contend with in Portland,” said Randy Fischer, senior analyst at the port. “It’s bigger ships com- ing in and smaller ships get- ting pulled out.” Transportation offi cials painted a sobering picture of the problems facing container shipping from the port during an April 28 meeting with Northwest importers and ex- porters. Container traffi c at the port came to a halt in 2016 after several ocean carriers stopped calling at the facili- ty, claiming that slow loading and unloading rendered the market unprofi table. Productivity problems at the port were blamed on a la- bor dispute between the long- shoremen’s union and the ter- minal operator, ICTSI, which began leasing the facility in 2011. The Port of Portland re- gained control of the contain- er terminal after ending its contract with ICTSI earlier this year, but carriers must still be convinced to return. “We have a bit of a black eye in the market right now and we need to fi gure out how best to fi t into the market,” said Fischer. The International Long- shore and Warehouse Union is still involved in a legal dispute with the port, though it’s less intense than litigation between the union and ICTSI, said Keith Leavitt, the port’s chief commercial offi cer. As the port devises a plan to lure ocean carriers back to the Terminal 6 container facility, it will also seek to “reset” its relationship with ILWU, he said. “When we start making our market pitch, they need to be with us,” Leavitt said. Financial turmoil in the ship- ping industry has reduced the number of major global ocean carrier companies from 20 to 14 even as global freight capacity has surged, Fischer said. Turn to EXPORTS, Page 12 Two Oregon onion packing sheds moving to Idaho By SEAN ELLIS Capital Press CANYON COUNTY, Idaho — Two major onion packing sheds are moving from Oregon’s Malheur County to Idaho. Golden West Produce and Owyhee Produce, both located in Nyssa, Ore., have taken out build- ing permits to construct packing sheds and several storage facilities across the Snake River in north- western Canyon County, Idaho. Golden West Produce is one of the largest of the 29 packing sheds in the Idaho-Oregon onion growing region and Owyhee Produce ranks in the top third. Golden West had been planning to move its onion packing operation to Idaho in the next three to fi ve years and Owyhee Produce had been seri- ously considering moving to Idaho. Turn to MOVE, Page 12 Owyhee Produce General Manager Shay Myers stands in front of an excavator removing onions and debris damaged when one of the company’s onion storage facilities collapsed this winter under the weight of snow and ice, March 3 in Nyssa, Ore. Owyhee Produce and Golden West Produce, both hit hard by the winter damage, are moving their onion packing opera- tions from Nyssa to Idaho. Sean Ellis/Capital Press Our Rebin Program can turn your old trailer into a new trailer! We will remove all working mechanical parts, and replace the bin with a new Stainless Steel STC Bin on your existing running gear. All parts deemed reusable are reinstalled on the new bin. All of this at the fraction of the cost of a new trailer! WWW.STCTRAILERS.COM 494 W. Hwy 39 Blackfoot, ID 83321 208-785-1364 18-7/#16 EVER WONDERED WHAT TO DO WITH THAT OLD, WORN OUT COMMODITY TRAILER?