December 1, 2017 CapitalPress.com 7 Oregon Housing projects on farmland hinge on ‘vested rights’ By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press The fate of two housing subdivisions planned for farm zones in Oregon’s Yamhill County depends on the land- owners’ “vested rights” in the unfinished projects. The Oregon Court of Ap- peals was recently asked to overturn the county’s approv- al of the two projects, which involve building 50 homes on nearly 80 acres. More than a decade after Oregonians voted on signifi- cant changes to state land use laws, the legal repercussions continue to be sorted out on the ground. In 2004, voters approved Measure 37, which required governments to compensate landowners for zoning re- strictions imposed after they bought their properties, or to waive those regulations. Due to the tremendous cost of providing compensation, counties predominantly grant- ed waivers to landowners, raising concerns about major conversions of farmland to housing. The controversy led vot- ers to approve Measure 49 in 2007, which allowed land- owners with valid Measure 37 waivers to have three to 10 homes on their property, de- pending on a variety of con- ditions. Those who wanted to de- velop larger housing subdi- visions could only proceed if they were far enough along with the projects to have “vested rights” to complete them. In the two Yamhill County cases, a state judge ruled that Ralph and Norma Johnson had vested rights to develop homes sites on about 40 acres and that Gordon Cook had vested rights to develop home sites on about 39 acres. A central question in both cases is whether these land- Farmers hope to alter transmission line’s route Project wins approval to cross federal land By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press energy corridor, though that would likely add to its length, he said. Aside from the transmis- sion line, its presence is as- sociated with road-building, weeds and other disturbances to agriculture, he said. Irrigation wheel lines and center pivots would be dis- rupted by the transmission line, as would aerial pesticide applications, said Bennett. “It affects people’s proper- ty values by putting up a pow- er line in their viewshed,” he added. Farther to the West, in Morrow County, farmers have at least partly resolved con- cerns about the transmission line’s effects on agriculture. Growers were hoping for 12 miles of the transmission line to be located on the edge of the U.S. Navy’s bombing Yakima oped parcels, so the “vested rights” findings should be overturned by the Oregon Court of Appeals. Despite legal uncertainties about Measure 37’s implica- tions at the time, the landown- ers decided against building the homes themselves, said Ralph Bloemers, attorney for Friends of Yamhill County and other critics. “They only pursued sub- division. That’s the bed they made for themselves and that has legal consequences,” Bloemers said. WASH. Area in detail Lewiston 12 Kennewick range near Boardman, Ore., 82 97 Walla Walla rather than on farmland. WASH. IDAHO ORE. Due to the presence of a R. Boardman C o l u mbi tribal cultural resources with- Pendleton 84 in the bombing range, how- ORE. ever, the southernmost five La Grande 395 miles must cross the road onto 95 private property, said Carla McLane, Morrow County’s Baker City planning director. “They have to balance all IDAHO those impacts to have a viable 26 project,” McLane said. Ontario As the transmission line The Bureau of Land 84 travels farther south of the Management has granted a 20 Boise Caldwell bombing range, it would first right-of-way to Idaho Power’s Nampa cross land used for irrigat- 300-mile high-voltage power line ed farming and then dryland project, which would run from the ak farming, she said. e Riv Project Irrigated agriculture of- Boardman, Ore., area to its er Hemingway substation approxi- substation ten involves growing several Selected crops per year, so the trans- mately 50 miles southwest of N transmission mission line would be more Boise. The project must still gain Klamath Falls approval from state regulators. line route 20 miles prone to interfere with those operations than dryland agri- Source: Bureau of Land Management Alan Kenaga/Capital Press culture, McLane said. Power line project wins federal approval Sn The route of a 300-mile high-voltage power line has won the federal government’s approval, but some Eastern Oregon farmers hope state regulators can still alter its course. The U.S. Bureau of Land Management has granted a right-of-way allowing Idaho Power’s transmission line to cross roughly 100 miles of federal land, but Oregon’s En- ergy Facility Siting Council must still sign off on its over- all path. “They picked a route but the state doesn’t have to go along with that,” said Mark Bennett, a rancher and com- missioner for Oregon’s Baker County. The line between Board- man, Ore., and the Nampa, Idaho, area is expected to cost up to $1.2 billion, with con- struction projected to start in 2021. About 70 miles of the transmission line would run through Baker County, with more than 80 percent of those miles on “exclusive farm use” property, said Bennett. “It not only affects that farming ground, it’s affecting the visual corridor as well,” Bennett said. Farmers and ranchers in the area would prefer the transmission line to bypass Baker County by traversing an existing Central Oregon owners could sell the subdi- vided lots and have other peo- ple build the houses, rather than constructing the dwell- ings themselves. Friends of Yamhill Coun- ty, a conservation group, and other critics of the housing de- velopments argue that under the language of Measure 37, waivers of zoning restrictions were not transferable. During oral arguments on Nov. 21 in Salem, Ore., op- ponents of the two projects argued that landowners are barred from selling undevel- S na ke Riv er Appeals court asked to overturn subdivisions in Yamhill County Declining workforce hits businesses hard at time of peak demand By GEORGE PLAVEN EO Media Group E.J. Harris/EO Media Group Like many agricultural businesses, Smith Frozen Foods is dealing with a current labor shortage. WESTON, Ore. — Finding enough workers is getting to be more of a chal- lenge for Michael Lesko at Smith Frozen Foods. The company, which processes and packages frozen vegetables near Weston, is capable of storing more than 130 mil- lion pounds of product on site, including corn, lima beans, onions and carrots. Har- vest season typically begins around June 1 and runs through the end of November, when the demand for seasonal labor is at its strongest. Lesko, director of human resourc- es for the company, said the plant has roughly 100 regular employees and typi- cally hires 200 seasonal workers through harvest. Those positions, however, are becoming more difficult to fill, he said, adding that it has left the plant short up to 10 workers on any given shift over the past year. “It’s been difficult keeping people, by all means,” Lesko said. “We were look- ing for people to start in June and work through November, but that’s becoming more and more rare.” Labor woes are not unique to Smith Frozen Foods. It is an issue that has af- fected all corners of the agricultural in- dustry, from the farm to the processing plant. Earlier this year, the Capital Press documented workforce worries around the West. In Eastern Oregon, AgriNorthwest and Threemile Canyon Farms declined to speak specifically about experiences at their operations, though Matthew Vick- ery, land and government affairs director for AgriNorthwest, did acknowledge the labor shortage “is a growing problem for everyone in agriculture.” Dallas Fridley, regional state econo- mist for the Columbia River Gorge and Columbia Basin, provided information from the U.S. Department of Labor’s National Agricultural Workers Survey, which was last updated in 2013-14. According to that report, approxi- mately two-thirds of hired farmworkers were born in Mexico, and 80 percent of all farmworkers were Hispanic. Some 53 percent, had work authorization, and the vast majority, or 84 percent, were settled in the country. Nursery association honors government, agency backers Capital Press Five people, including former state Agriculture Di- rector Katy Coba, have re- ceived the 2017 Friends of Nurseries awards from the Oregon Association of Nurs- eries. The association gives the annual awards to elected of- ficials or to key government agency personnel who are “solution-oriented, who con- sider the nursery and green- house point of view and who act as a partner, regardless of party affiliation,” executive director Jeff Stone said. The association represents more than 800 nursery grow- ers, retailers, suppliers and landscapers. Ornamental hor- ticulture is one of the state’s biggest agricultural sectors, with more than $900 million in annual sales. Almost 75 percent of the industry’s pro- duction is shipped out of state. Friends of Nurseries awards this year went to: • Coba, the first woman and the longest-serving direc- tor of the Oregon Department of Agriculture. She headed ODA from 2003 to 2016, and Stone called Coba a “key ally” of the nursery indus- try who worked to maintain domestic and international market access. • State Sens. Tim Knopp, R-Bend, and Kathleen Tay- lor, D-Portland. They served on the Senate Committee on Workforce as it considered labor rules that would affect nursery and greenhouse busi- nesses. Because they listened carefully, the final version of legislation was not harm- ful to the in- dustry, Stone said. Katy Coba • U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., who secured fund- ing in Congress for a “smart sprayer” research project that could prove to be “game changing technology” for the industry, Stone said. • State Rep. Ken Helm, D-Beaverton, who Stone de- scribed as a “quick study” on issues important to the industry. • The nursery association also announced a “New Leg- islator of the Year” award, presented to state Rep. Karin Power, D-Milwaukie. Stone said Power demonstrated a “keen mind” and deserved recognition as a freshman legislator with a balanced perspective. He added Power had shown herself to be “solu- tion oriented and open to the nursery perspective.” Military Vehicles, Halftracks, Tanks & Dodge Power Wagons 48-3/102 By ERIC MORTENSON & pick up at your location 707-486-2882 Email: rattlecanjohnny@gmail.com 48-1/HOU