September 22, 2017 CapitalPress.com 7 USDA organic chief McEvoy steps down By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press Miles McEvoy, USDA deputy administrator of the National Organic Program, is stepping down after eight years at the helm to return to his home in Olympia, Wash. In a Sept. 10 letter to the organic community, McEvoy said he will be leaving the job at the end of September and the program will be in “excel- lent hands” under the leader- ship of AMS Acting Admin- istrator Bruce Summers and Acting Deputy Administrator Jenny Tucker. David Glasgow, USDA Agricultural Marketing Ser- vice director of public affairs, said the agency had no fur- USDA Miles McEvoy, deputy admin- istrator of the National Organic Program, is stepping down at the end of September after eight years at the helm. ther details beyond McEvoy’s personal letter to the organic community. “It’s been an incredible eight years and I’m honored to have served. I’m taking some time off and then will look for other opportunities to contribute to building the or- ganic sector,” McEvoy said in an email to Capital Press. In his letter, he said it’s been an incredible honor to serve the organic community and an extremely gratifying experience but he’s been con- sidering leaving for the last few years. “I’m 60 now, my grand- children are growing, and I want to spend more time with them. I’m ready to have a less intense work life and to spend more time biking and bird- ing,” he said. He added he will miss the people at AMS and NOP, who use their talents every day to “protect organic integrity and support the organic commu- nity.” He also thanked organic producers, processors, han- dlers, traders and consumers for building “an incredibly di- verse, prosperous and life-en- riching organic agriculture sector.” The Organic Trade Associ- ation did not have a comment when contacted, but present- ed McEvoy with an honorary lifetime membership at its award ceremony Wednesday, Maggie McNeil, OTA direc- tor of media relations, said. In his letter, McEvoy said at his request the organic sec- tor supplied him with a long list of priorities in his first few months on the job and most were accomplished. “We transformed the NOP into a respected and func- tional program that is highly regarded within USDA and around the world,” he said. He highlighted advance- ments in quality management, communication, certification, accreditation, appeals, en- forcement, standards, interna- tional activities and an organ- ic database. But his tenure has not been without controversy, particu- larly scrutiny from advocacy groups and the media over the agency’s handling of the National List of Allowed and Prohibited Substances in or- ganic production and process- ing. In his letter, he said the organic community will face challenges and opportuni- ty in the years ahead and he encouraged the sector to em- brace diversity in organic farming and processing, sup- port each other in confronting the challenges of water avail- ability and climate change and to not become too reduc- tionist when reviewing mate- rials to be allowed in organic production and processing. McEvoy, who took the helm at NOP in October 2009, has been working in the organic industry for 25 years. In 1988, he was the first organic inspector for the Washington State Depart- ment of Agriculture. Before that, he spent 10 years work- ing on farms, in wild-capture fisheries and in reforestation. He holds a master’s degree in entomology from Cornell University. Walnut growers set to harvest smaller crop By TIM HEARDEN Capital Press U.S. Wheat Associates Members of a group representing Taiwanese millers sign a letter of intent to purchase U.S. wheat for two more years on Sept. 13 in Washington, D.C. They were also scheduled to travel to Idaho to sign an agreement. Taiwan millers renew pledge on U.S. wheat By JOHN O’CONNELL Capital Press BOISE — Representatives of the fourth largest importer of Idaho wheat were sched- uled to sign a pledge Sept. 20 at the Idaho Capitol to contin- ue their grain purchases for two more years. During the 11 a.m. cere- mony, which Gov. Butch Ot- ter said he planned to attend, officials of the Taiwan Flour Millers Association were to sign a letter agreeing to buy 1.8 million metric tons of U.S. wheat in 2018 and 2019 com- bined. The Idaho Wheat Commis- sion’s vice chairman, Bill Flo- ry, was to sign the letter. The Taiwanese group, which arrived in the U.S. Sept. 12 for an eight-day vis- it, signed the same pledge in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 13 and visited Montana and North Dakota. The letter of intent is symbolic and is re- newed by the Taiwanese mill- ers every two years, based on their projected grain demand. This marks the 11th time leaders with the association, which represents all 20 of Tai- wan’s millers, have signed a pledge to buy U.S. wheat. “This is an opportunity for our groups to come together to thank each other for being a customer and a supplier of wheat and to continue to grow our relationship,” said Tereasa Waterman, the Idaho Wheat Commission’s information and education manager. During their time in the Gem State, the Taiwanese representatives planned to tour an artisan bakery in Boi- se and meet with Idaho wheat growers at a dinner hosted on Kuna grower Richard Du- rant’s farm. Waterman said 47 percent of Idaho’s wheat is export- ed, and the Taiwanese buy roughly $470 million in Ida- ho wheat annually. She said Taiwan buys a lot of hard red wheat from Idaho, but they’re most interested in the state’s soft white wheat, which they use in products such as cook- ies, crackers, cakes and noo- dles. “The Pacific Northwest soft white is world famous for its high quality and end-use performance,” she said. Mark Fowler, vice presi- dent of overseas operations with U.S. Wheat Associates, said Taiwan buys most of its wheat from the Pacific North- west, which has a freight ad- vantage over other U.S. re- gions. Fowler said Taiwan is the eighth largest importer of U.S. wheat, averaging about 38 million bushels per year. SACRAMENTO — Wal- nut growers in California are expecting a slightly smaller crop this fall, but bigger nut sizes could be a hit in the global marketplace. Farms in the southern San Joaquin Valley have begun harvesting the earliest variet- ies in what the National Ag- ricultural Statistics Service expects to be a 650,000-ton statewide crop. That’s a 5 percent drop from last year’s record pro- duction of 686,000 tons, and survey data shows a record low average nut set of 1,141 per tree, down 19 percent from 2016’s average of 1,406, NASS reported. But the lower nut sets were not a surprise, said Michelle Connelly, the California Wal- nut Board’s executive direc- tor. “It’s a good thing because sizes were bigger” in this year’s survey, Connelly said. The in-shell weight per nut and length and width mea- surements all came in above last year’s sizes, according to NASS. Overall, 98.1 per- cent of in-shell kernels were sound, the agency reported. Larger, meatier walnuts could be a benefit as the in- dustry is still rebounding from a price slide in 2014 and 2015 that made it difficult for some growers with young orchards to turn a profit. The price per ton for the 2016-17 shipping year aver- aged $1,810, up from $1,670 in the previous year but still down from the peak of $3,710 in 2013, according to NASS. The total value of the crop harvested in 2016 came in at $1.24 billion, up from just over $1 billion for the 2015 crop. Growers have worked in recent years to maximize quality to get the most out of softening prices amid three straight record crops. Farm advisers have offered tips on producing high-quality, light- er kernels, such as not wa- tering too much or too little, Tim Hearden/Capital Press File Walnuts pour into a bin to be trucked to a processing plant. Growers are expecting a slightly smaller crop this year with larger nut sizes, according to a government report. guarding against insects and trying to harvest near the be- ginning of hull split. The larger sizes could be attractive in export markets where in-shell nuts are popu- lar, Connelly said. “It’s certainly good news for export markets,” she said. Walnut harvests typical- ly ramp up in late Septem- ber and continue through October. This year’s har- vest is about a week late be- cause of weather, Connelly said. Walnut orchards received adequate chilling hours while sopping up record amounts of rain last winter and spring, NASS noted. Some orchards were saturated for several weeks. In the summer, a series of heat waves pushed tempera- tures in some parts of the Cen- tral Valley near or above 110 degrees, prompting growers to manage sunburn with ka- olin particle films. WE SPECIALIZE IN BULK BAGS! 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