10 CapitalPress.com February 9, 2018 $30,000 stock dogs create buzz at Red Bluff Bull Sale By TIM HEARDEN For the Capital Press RED BLUFF, Calif. — While much of the buzz in the Don Smith Pavilion on Jan. 27 centered on a pair of $30,000 cattle dogs auc- tioned the day before, the record spending spree didn’t extend to this year’s bull sales. Bidders in the finale of the five-day Red Bluff Bull and Gelding Sale shelled out near- ly $1.2 million for the 305 bulls that paraded through the arena — an average of nearly $3,923 per bull. The total topped last year’s $1.1 million paid for 288 bulls — for an average of $3,819 — but fell short of the nearly $1.49 million col- lected in 2016. The 305 bulls auctioned two years ago aver- aged $4,885, down from the Tim Hearden/For the Capital Press A bull is auctioned Jan. 27 in the Tehama District Fairgrounds Don Smith Pavilion, capping off the five-day Red Bluff Bull and Gelding Sale. Bidders spent nearly $1.2 million on 305 bulls. 2015 average of $6,554 amid a record $1.56 million haul. Rancher Larry Stone of Canyonville, Ore., sat in the bleachers with his catalog in hand and was prepared to make an offer “if the right bull comes along,” he said. By late morning, he re- marked that the prices were about average, but he was impressed with this year’s choices. “Good quality,” he said. “Really good quality.” The top-selling bull was the show’s supreme champi- on, a Charolais sold by Card- ey Ranches of Turlock, Calif., to Gary Silva of Herald, Ca- lif., for $10,000. The runner-up in terms of price was an Angus bull sold by Cardey to Shufelberger Ranch of Millville, Calif., for $8,000. The 77th annual bull sale was the last of four auc- tions held at Red Bluff’s fairgrounds. The highlight of the week was the Jan. 26 stock dog sale, which took in $143,500 for 16 dogs — an average of $8,968 per dog. The Lightning 7 Cattle Co. in Preston, Idaho, and the Lazy T Ranch in Leona Val- ley, Calif., tied for a record by paying $30,000 apiece for fe- male border collies Gurdy and Rose, respectively. “They were all really, real- ly good,” sale manager Adam Owens said of the dogs. Last year’s sale of 14 cat- tle dogs fetched a total of $85,750, an average of $6,125 per dog. The top dog in 2017 sold for $20,000 to El Rancho de Casey in Jarrell, Texas. Last week’s bidding began with the 10th annual online feeder and replacement heifer sale on Jan. 25, in which near- ly 80 lots were sold. Lot prices in the Western Video Market-hosted sale topped out at $171.50 per hundredweight for weaned heifers and $199 per hun- dredweight for weaned steers, New housing option may meet needs of farmers, workers By DAN WHEAT Capital Press WENATCHEE, Wash. — A Seattle startup compa- ny that makes small shelters for disaster victims and the homeless is pitching its units for farmworker housing. Pallet, a Social Purpose Corporation, displayed its product at industry meetings this winter. As a result of those meet- ings, 70 to 75 growers in Washington, Oregon and Canada have expressed in- terest and some will place orders when the units are approved by the state Depart- ment of Health, which should be soon, said Amy King, Pal- let CEO. “It’s great for growers to grow their housing capac- ity quickly,” King said. “If they have a common area Dan Wheat/Capital Press Amy King, CEO of Pallet, displays a housing unit at a labor con- ference in Wenatchee, Wash., on Jan. 17. A slightly larger model meets requirements to house two H-2A-visa guestworkers. (of kitchen, eating area and restrooms) and want to add housing for 20 more work- ers, they can put that up in a day.” Pallet has been in business 18 months. It sold 40 of its 8-by-8-foot units to the city of Tacoma several months ago, half for the homeless and half for disaster pre- paredness, King said. A Utah tribal community bought one unit. “Our original design was for disaster survivors and first responders but since then we branched into the homeless and agricultural workers,” she said. A company employ- ee tested a unit in the Wenatchee area last summer and growers became inter- ested, King said. Four bunks per unit meet code for disaster re- lief and the homeless but 50 square feet per per- son is the requirement for H-2A-visa farm guestworker housing. Pallet has designed a Oregon Hazelnut Industries CEO quits 100-square-foot model for two workers, she said. Units are lightweight, durable and portable and come with their own struc- tural floors so they don’t re- quire foundations or concrete slabs, she said. They have a 10-year lifes- pan and come with heating, air conditioning, electrical wiring and bunks. The polypropylene hon- eycomb core and fiberglass siding are built by Plascore, in Zeeland, Mich. Pricing is competitive with manufactured and stick- built housing that many tree fruit companies have turned to for H-2A housing, King said. The 100-square-foot, two-person unit sells for $5,950 and a larger sev- en-person model is $13,000, she said. Geoff Horning says he will pursue private business By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press Oregon judge refuses to dismiss $1 billion timber class action Ruling allows case to proceed, but is likely to be appealed by state By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press A judge has refused to dismiss a class action lawsuit seeking more than $1 billion from Oregon’s gov- ernment for insufficient logging of state forestlands. Linn County filed a complaint in 2016 accusing Oregon’s forest man- agers of breaching a contract to max- imize timber harvests from forests donated to the state by county gov- ernments. According to the lawsuit, Oregon began prioritizing environmental pro- tection and recreational values over logging due to a policy change in 1998. The lawsuit was certified as a class action by Linn County Circuit Judge Daniel Murphy. The lawsuit included 14 counties and more than 100 taxing districts as plaintiffs in the case. Attorneys for Oregon raised sev- eral grounds for dismissing the law- suit that have now been rejected by Murphy. The judge has ruled against the state on a particularly controversial point that’s resurfaced several times during the litigation: Whether the doctrine of “sovereign immunity” prohibits county governments from suing the state of Oregon. Initially, Murphy allowed the case to proceed despite the state’s sovereign immunity claim, but later issued a ruling that it’s a valid de- fense. The judge withdrew that opinion and has now again rejected Oregon’s motion to dismiss, referencing his original ruling that counties can en- force their contract rights against the state government in court under these circumstances. “He’s back to where he’s histor- ically been in the case,” said John DiLorenzo, attorney for the county plaintiffs. As part of the ruling, the judge also threw out Oregon’s argument that counties can’t seek to “maxi- mize timber revenues” because that term wasn’t included in their con- tracts. Oregon’s government is required to manage the forestland for the “greatest permanent value,” but this term is ambiguous and may be in- terpreted based on the circumstances under which the contract was made, Murphy said. The judge also disagreed with Or- egon’s attorneys that future damages in this case were “too speculative” to be decided, since “forestry experts make these estimates all the time,” and dismissed other motions filed by the state. Frank Hammond, an attorney representing Oregon, said he cannot comment on pending litigation. DiLorenzo, the plaintiffs’ attor- ney, said he’s pleased with the ruling, which removed the remaining obsta- cles standing in the way of a trial. For much of the litigation, Ore- gon’s Board of Forestry — which oversees the defendant Oregon De- partment of Forestry — has treated the case with derision, DiLorenzo said. “This should be a signal to state policymakers the court is taking this case quite seriously,” DiLorenzo said. “I hope this is a wakeup call the Board of Forestry might very well lose this case.” The plaintiffs are amenable to Or- egon filing an “interlocutory appeal” to challenge Murphy’s most recent ruling before the Oregon Court of Appeals, DiLorenzo said. That way, the Court of Appeals can ensure that assumptions about sovereign immunity and other legal issues are correct before the begin- ning of trial, which may last a month, he said. “From an efficiency perspective, it makes sense to get direction from the Court of Appeals first,” he said. “Everybody is going to invest a lot of time and effort in this case.” WE SPECIALIZE IN BULK BAGS! HAY PRESS SUPPORT: • Hay Sleeves • Strap • Totes • Printed or Plain • Stretch Film (ALL GAUGES) WAREHOUSE PACKAGING: • Stretch Film • Pallet Sheets • Pallet Covers LOCATIONS: Albany, Oregon (MAIN OFFICE) Ellensburg, Washington CONTACT INFORMATION: Phone: 855-928-3856 Fax: 541-497-6262 info@westernpackaging.com ....................................................... 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After just five months on the job, Geoff Horning is stepping down as CEO of the Oregon Hazelnut Industry. Horning, who was hired Sept. 1, 2017, will instead go into pri- vate business and is in the final stages Geoff Horning of acquiring a full-service as- sociation management com- pany based in Portland. Horning declined to name the company until the deal is completed. He said it was an opportunity he simply could not turn down. “This is a game-changer for my family’s future,” said Horning, a native Oregonian and graduate of Linfield Col- lege. Before joining the hazelnut organization, Horning direct- ed Oregon Aglink, a nonprofit organization that promotes Oregon agriculture and seeks to bridge the urban-rural di- vide, for 11 years. Before that, he managed trade shows and publications for the Oregon Association of Nurseries. Horning said the hazel- nut business is entering an exciting time in Oregon, and experiencing unprecedented growth. “My only regret is that I didn’t get a chance to put my mark on an industry that I think is about to explode and be amazing over the next 20 years,” he said. The Oregon Hazelnut In- dustry offices are in Aurora, Ore., including the Hazelnut Marketing Board, the Oregon Hazelnut Commission, the Nut Growers Society of Ore- gon, Washington and British Columbia, and the Associated Oregon Hazelnut Industries. Former CEO Polly Owen intended to retire when Horn- ing arrived, though she stayed on to help with the transition. She said it is too early to know if they will hire a new replacement. In the meantime, Owen said the industry is not going to slow down in the least. “We wish (Horning) well, and we are ready to keep go- ing,” Owen said. Oregon hazelnut growers have more than doubled their acres in the last seven years, Owen said, thanks in part to research and development of new disease-resistant variet- ies. The added volume has helped Oregon hazelnuts to be more competitive in the glob- al market. The overwhelming ma- jority of all U.S. hazelnuts — 99.9 percent, according to Owen — are grown in Ore- gon.