June 9, 2017 CapitalPress.com 9 Idaho Subscribe to our weekly Idaho email newsletter at CapitalPress.com/newsletters Farm tour set for Idaho elected officials, media By SEAN ELLIS Capital Press NAMPA, Idaho — State lawmakers, local elected offi- cials and leaders and members of the media will take a day- long tour of farm country in southwestern Idaho Sept. 6. The event is designed to provide decision-makers and the media a greater under- standing of agriculture and its importance to the state’s econ- omy, said agriculture consul- tant Roger Batt, who is helping organize the event. “We have a good legisla- ture that understands agricul- ture but there are a lot of new folks, too, and we’re hoping to get them and some of the other new folks in the community ... to learn more about what we do,” he said. The Nampa-Caldwell Agri- Sean Ellis/Capital Press A hay field near Kuna, Idaho, is cut on May 26. Members of the media and state elected officials will take a day-long tour of farm country in southwestern Idaho on Sept. 6. business Committee, a sub- committee of the Nampa and Caldwell chambers of com- merce, is organizing the tour. The committee has held farm tours in the past but this will be the first event where elected officials and media members are together. Sen. Jim Rice, R-Caldwell, chairman of the Senate Agri- cultural Affairs Committee, joined one of the committee’s farm tours several years ago. “I personally found the last tour very valuable,” he said. “It gave us a lot better picture of some of the things agricul- ture does and how it operates.” Rice said the tour is a great way to provide people a ground-level view of agricul- ture. He said lawmakers get a lot of raw numbers regarding the farming industry’s impor- tance to the state during com- mittee meetings. “Raw numbers don’t mean a lot to people,” he said. “There’s a reality to the amount of work that needs to be done to (produce those crops) that you can’t get in a hearing room. You need to see it.” Many elected officials and media members didn’t grow up around agriculture and sim- ply don’t understand it, Rice said. “They don’t know what they don’t know,” he said. “This kind of tour helps give them some of the knowledge they need to make sound pol- icy or report accurately on ag- riculture.” The bus tour will take par- ticipants to hop production and distribution facilities, a vine- yard and winery, fruit ranch and seed company. A stop will also be made at J.R. Simplot Co.’s potato processing facility in Cald- well, as well as Lake Lowell, a man-made reservoir, where participants will learn about irrigation delivery and some of the major water issues fac- ing the valley. Between stops, partici- pants will watch short vid- eo presentations about the mint, seed and dairy sectors, and farm experts will be on hand to point out some of the more than 100 different crops grown in the region. It will be a chance to edu- cate them about Idaho’s farm- ing industry for some partic- ipants, while for others who have a decent understanding of agriculture, “it will be more of a refresher,” said Brett Tol- mie, the agribusiness commit- tee chairman. Former legislator Darrell Bolz, a committee member, said the tours are informative even for people who under- stand and work in agriculture. “You always learn some- thing,” said Bolz, who worked as a University of Idaho county extension agent for 30 years. Cattle industry OK with proposed Craters grazing plan By JOHN O’CONNELL Capital Press Courtesy of Intrinsic Organics SunSpuds, a sunflower and Jerusalem artichoke hybrid, will be used to make inulin at a new $60 million facility in Weiser, Idaho. The uses for inulin include texture maintenance, mouth feel, bulking, low-cal- orie sweetening, fat replacement and dietary fiber enhancement, according to Intrinsic Organics, which is building the plant. Weiser facility will bring a new organic crop to Idaho WEISER, Idaho — A new processing facility near Weis- er will introduce a hybrid or- ganic crop to Idaho. Intrinsic Organics an- nounced its $60 million fa- cility will use a hybrid tuber called a SunSpud to produce inulin, which is used as a healthy food ingredient, in- cluding as a fat or sugar re- placement. “This is a great opportuni- ty for our organic farmers to have another crop they can fit into their rotations,” said Kit Kamo, executive director of the Snake River Econom- ic Development Alliance, which recruited the company to Washington County. Field trials show that Sun- Spuds, a Jerusalem artichoke and sun flower hybrid, will fit well into organic rotations common in this region, said Devin Limb, Intrinsic Organ- ics’ vice president of market- ing. “The (crop) is very well suited to be grown organical- ly in Idaho,” he said. “It fits fantastically with the crops grown organically in the re- gion.” Intrinsic officials expect to have the facility built this fall and it will initially pro- duce 1.2 million pounds of inulin. If that demonstration plant is successful, the facil- ity will expand and ramp up to 5 million pounds in a few years, Limb said. The number of farmers who grow SunSpuds will increase significantly as the facility increases production, he said. According to the com- pany’s website — www.in- trinsicorganics.com — total acres grown for the facility are expected to reach 433 by 2020 and 867 by 2021. The facility is a scaled- down version of a previous project announced last year that would have used barley as well as SunSpuds to pro- duce a variety of food ingre- dients, organic fertilizer and alcohol. Limb said the U.S. im- ports about 50 million pounds of inulin annually, mostly from Europe and Chi- na. Intrinsic Organics will be the first company to domes- tically produce organic inu- lin from crops grown in the U.S., he said. According to the compa- ny’s website, the food indus- try currently purchases inulin made from chicory root that is not grown organically. “Intrinsic Organics now strives to become the best supplier of custom, high-qual- ity organic inulin to satisfy the demands of the U.S. and world market for healthier food ingredients,” the website states. A groundbreaking ceremo- ny for the facility will be held June 6. Intrinsic CEO Sot Chimonas said the company anticipates hiring 20 people during the facility’s first year of operation. The facility was approved to receive an Idaho Tax Re- imbursement Incentive Credit on May 25. The tax credit of 18 percent for six years will benefit Intrinsic to the tune of $1.25 million if the company meets all the incentive mea- surements it agreed to. According to an Idaho De- partment of Commerce sum- mary of the incentive agree- ment, the company will make a $60 million capital invest- ment in the facility. Limb said any farmers in- terested in growing SunSpuds can contact the company by email at info@intrinsicorgan- ics.com monument. AUMs refer to the amount of forage needed to support a cow-calf pair for a month. The plan would also require “monument values” be met when allotments are re- newed — addressing cultural and geological resources, sage grouse habitat and the preser- vation of islands of vegetation within lava flows called kapu- kas. For example, salt licks, troughs and other range devel- opments wouldn’t be allowed near edges of lava flows, for the protection of cultural resourc- es, explained Holly Crawford, BLM monument manager. BLM also analyzed alter- natives that would eliminate grazing, reduce grazing densi- ty by three-quarters and cut it in half. Crawford said grazing isn’t allowed within the original 53,000 acres of the monument proclaimed in 1924. The mon- ument was expanded under President Bill Clinton in 2000, adding the BLM portion and a 400,000-acre preserve, where grazing is also restricted. Crawford said BLM initial- ly sought to make no changes to grazing in the management plan, signed in 2006, governing the new monument additions, but Winmill agreed with West- ern Watersheds in 2011 that the failure to conduct a grazing analysis violated federal poli- cy. In addition to ordering the grazing amendment, Winmill also required BLM to update its management plans to address threats to sage grouse. A sage grouse plan has already been completed at Craters, imposing limitations on off-road travel, direction on habitat rehabilita- tion and other requirements. NEW ITEMS! 1 1 ⁄ 2 QT. BASKETS and (3) PINT TRAYS 503-588-8313 2561 Pringle Rd. SE Salem, OR Call for Pricing. Subject to stock on hand. Delivery Available 23-1/#7 Capital Press Tetona Dunlap/The Times-News via AP, File In this 2012 photo, people hike the North Crater Flow Trail at Craters of the Moon National Monument near Arco, Idaho. Federal officials have released a cattle grazing plan for central Idaho’s Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve. ROP-40-42-4/#17 By SEAN ELLIS Idaho Cattle Association President Jerald Raymond believes the Bureau of Land Management did a reasonable job in drafting its preferred plan to govern grazing of roughly 275,000 acres within Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve. Grazing opponents such as the Hailey, Idaho-based con- servation group Western Water- sheds Project, however, vow to formally challenge the plan, ar- guing it doesn’t adequately pro- tect the environment and native sage grouse within the federal- ly protected ancient lava flows. As directed by Chief U.S. District Judge Lynn Winmill in response to a Western Wa- tersheds lawsuit, BLM recent- ly issued proposals to amend its management plan to cover grazing, slightly reducing the overall grazing density and adding new restrictions on al- lotment permits in its preferred alternative. The BLM hopes to address Western Watersheds’ concerns and issue a final deci- sion by the end of July. “We actually think it’s a pretty good plan they put forth as far as the preferred alterna- tive,” Raymond said, adding that his organization hasn’t formally discussed the plan in a meeting. Raymond said his associa- tion would have preferred an expansion of grazing, believ- ing preventing wildfires by turning cattle loose on over- growth is the best way to pro- tect sage grouse. “We feel like there needs to be some flexibility and mea- suring of the resource to see what it will handle,” Raymond said. The agency’s preferred al- ternative would cut 350 of the 37,000 animal unit months permitted for grazing in the BLM-managed portion of the 23-4/#18