6 CapitalPress.com Editorials are written by or approved by members of the Capital Press Editorial Board. June 2, 2017 All other commentary pieces are the opinions of the authors but not necessarily this newspaper. Opinion Editorial Board Editor & Publisher Managing Editor Joe Beach Carl Sampson opinions@capitalpress.com Online: www.capitalpress.com/opinion O UR V IEW Agriculture copes with a growing labor shortage “L abor is the No. 1 issue in agriculture.” Ask a farmer, orchardist, nursery or dairy operator, packer or processor — anyone who hires full-time or seasonal farmworkers, and most will tell you they are worried about labor. For them, labor is the make-or- break factor of this year — and every other year, for that matter. The supply of labor is one of the many factors they do not control. Even in areas where the labor pool has remained steady the need for farmworkers has Dan Wheat/Capital Press continued to grow as production Workers in Spanish Castle Vineyard south of Rock Island, Wash., on May 17. increases. Members of Congress seem about as eager to reform immigration laws as they are to lick an electric fence. For decades the farm labor supply has depended on an array of factors, including to do that, but members of that not be valid. federal immigration policy and august body seem about as eager That puts farmers between enforcement. Over the years, to fi x the system as they are to the proverbial rock and a hard many farmworkers have arrived lick an electric fence. Doing that place. They need to get their in the U.S. illegally. Whether that crops harvested and packed, will take political courage, which happened 20 years ago or last appears to be an oxymoron these but they are on the hook if an week, it means that getting a job employee does not have adequate days in the U.S. Capitol. legally in the U.S. is problematic. documentation. But the unemployment rate Many farmers are forced to appears to be the primary driver Without legal status, those accept workers’ documentation that farmers don’t control. When workers are in limbo. It is up to with the realization that it may the unemployment rate is low, Congress to come up with a way as it is now across the West, the pool of farmworkers is smaller because other jobs are available that pay better, offer benefi ts and are more stable. This is not a matter of immigration policy so much as economics. The saving grace for agriculture has been the H-2A guestworker program. It provides a temporary visa to foreign workers. Farmers pay for round- trip transportation between the workers’ home country and the farm, housing and good pay. When the job is over they return to their homes. This year Washington farmers will bring in 15,000 guestworkers from Mexico and other countries, and California will bring in 11,000. Farmers in other states also depend on H-2A workers. The downside of the H-2A program: It is limited to temporary workers. Some sectors of agriculture, such as dairy farms and processing plants, need full- time, year-round employees. Under the Trump administration, the H-2A program seems to be working Washington’s double standard on rail Colin Murphey Photo Part of a plan to bring water from the Columbia River to irrigation districts in northeast Oregon is at risk after a lawsuit prompted one district to pull out. By JOHN STUHLMILLER For the Capital Press P Keep eye on the goal in NE Oregon water effort N o one is pleased that the Westland Irrigation District pulled out of the Central Project plan, one of three proposals to bring Columbia River water to the region. The district’s board unanimously voted to pull out while it defends itself against a $2.9 million lawsuit brought by farmers who say they are protecting their senior water rights. While it is a setback, it should not be the end of the decades- long effort to bring Columbia River water to one of the driest regions of Oregon. J.R. Cook, director of the Northeast Oregon Water Association, which would administer the projects, said something to our colleagues on the East Oregonian editorial board that he never thought he’d say: The organization has water and nowhere to go with it. For years, farmers, developers and political representatives throughout the basin have pleaded: Just let us access some water out of the Columbia River, and we’ll create a fantastic return on that investment. better than under the previous administration, which seemed bent on slowing down the paperwork and causing as much consternation as possible. Mechanization and automation represent another bright spot for some farmers. They are buying picking platforms to increase the speed and effi ciency of tree fruit harvests, many dairies have installed robotic milkers that reduce the need for labor, berry and grape growers use mechanical harvesters and researchers continue to work on robotic harvesters for nearly every other crop. The labor predicament leaves farmers and others with three options: Wait for the economy to slow down so unemployment increases, wait for Congress to get cracking on immigration reform, or the administration and Congress can further streamline the H-2A program so farmers can obtain more guestworkers in a timely and affordable manner. None of the three developments seems particularly likely any time soon. We’ll grow more and hire more, pay more in property and business taxes, create growth in supportive industries. We’ll benefi t ourselves and the entire region. But here they are, water all but in hand, and the window is closing. They have until April 2019 to spend $11 million in state funding to provide Columbia River water to the region. For farmers, the stakes are enormous. The value of farmland in the Columbia Basin — and the crops grown on it — increases with irrigation. Dryland wheat may yield around $100 per acre. Add 1 acre-foot of water and the value increases to $500 per acre; add 3 acre- feet, and the value increases to $5,000 per acre. Environmentalists are satisfi ed with the plan, and over a long period of winning over one vote at a time, a majority in the Legislature gave the basin money to help fund the projects. The future is in the hands of the region’s farmers. A single lawsuit, disputing the application of water rights in the district, cannot be allowed to be the project’s undoing. There is risk, of course, in any enterprise. Nothing in water or entrepreneurship is guaranteed. It will take a spirit of cooperation, of optimism and the desire to see improvement and change. It will take a lot more work and a recognition that relying on the Umatilla River and McKay Reservoir for irrigation will only get worse, and that drawing down underground water reserves — a fi nite resource — puts future sustainability at risk. We hope for the sake of the region that the spirit of cooperation can be resurrected to salvage some or all of the effort. Patience, and a steady hand, are needed while the lawsuit is addressed. The judge in the case has even suggested the parties enter mediation as an alternative to litigating the issue. In the meantime, NOWA and its supporters need to keep their eye on the goal of bringing Columbia River water to the region. erceptions of railroads appear to be relative to where you live these days. If you live in the big city, trains that whisk you from one urban center to the next are “state-of-the-art,” but if you live in rural areas, where trains are used to move commodi- ties, they pose a cancer threat. At least that’s what the state of Washington is telling us. On May 21, the Wash- ington State Department of Transportation rolled out its new Charger locomotives for passenger rail service along the I-5 corridor. As WSDOT notes on its website for the of- fi cial unveiling event, the new 4,400-horsepower Cummins QSK95 engines are “next generation rail equipment” that will “feature improved fuel effi ciency and safety up- grades” and, most important- ly, will “meet new, stringent emission standards.” The WSDOT hosted a PR event to mark the launch of its new train, complete with “com- memorative giveaways,” for- mal remarks by dignitaries and a toast to christen the new train. This is pretty remarkable, given that just a month ear- lier, the state Department of Ecology sent a very different message about trains when it issued its fi nal environmen- tal impact statement (FEIS) on the Millennium Bulk Ter- minals project. In its fi nd- ings, the agency claimed that trains serving Millennium would increase the potential cancer risk for members of a Longview neighborhood. Same locomotives So what kind of engines will be used for the Millenni- um project? The same 4,400 horsepow- er locomotive engines with the same emissions profi le as those used in Seattle. Clearly double standards abound on this. Let’s start with the cancer allegations. Why would the same trains used in Seattle increase cancer risks when used in Longview? The answer likely has to do with what’s being hauled. Because the Longview trains will haul coal, they apparent- ly came under sharper scruti- ny than, say, a train carrying people around Seattle. This is a political battle, pure and simple. It’s worth noting that after fi ve years in the review Guest comment John Stuhlmiller process, this issue was nev- er raised until April’s FEIS document was released. No public reviews, no public hearings. In fact the agency failed to account for the use of idle control technology used by the railroads, or that the carrier, BNSF, is using the cleanest, most effi cient fl eet in North America. This begs the question: Would Ecology have ad- vanced a similar fi nding for Sound Transit permitting, a grain terminal or other com- modities? What about all of the other trains that run through the Puget Sound re- gion on a daily basis — in- cluding the new Charger, launched with a state-funded celebration? Playing favorites In the case of Millennium, we’re seeing an agency that has chosen to play favorites with commodities. This sets a dangerous precedent for any industry, but especially agriculture, which just hap- pens to be our state’s second largest sector, right behind aerospace. Will our products be subject to such scrutiny for new projects? What about GMOs? Or fertilizers? Or air- planes? The fact is, trains are the safest, most effi cient means of moving anything on land, pe- riod. Freight trains effective- ly take the equivalent of 280 trucks off the highway, which saves four times the fuel and reduces emissions and high- way traffi c congestion. Trains are also the saf- est means of moving people from one place to another on land. The WSDOT says so on its website: “Passenger rail service is an effi cient and environmentally sound travel mode and these locomotives will pull Washington state- sponsored Amtrak Cascades trains.” Vilifying rail because the commodity it carries — un- der requirement of federal law — has no place in the permitting process and sets a dangerous precedent for our state. We can and must do better, or risk jeopardiz- ing our entire trade-based economy. John Stuhlmiller is the CEO of the Washington Farm Bureau.