12 CapitalPress.com February 9, 2018 Scope of (Clean Water Act) jurisdiction is an issue of ‘national importance’ High-pressure ridges persisting off the West Coast will be ‘disastrous’ for California WOTUS from Page 1 “It’s worth noting that these lawsuits are over an embat- tled legislation that’s been put on hold by the courts to prevent it from taking effect. Our delay rule will keep in place that status quo,” an EPA spokeswoman said in an email. The rule sets the reach of the Clean Water Act. The American Farm Bureau Fed- eration in earlier statements warned that the 2015 rule would expand the act’s ju- risdiction to ditches and low spots that are only occasion- ally wet and would expose WEATHER from Page 1 farmers to citizen lawsuits for activities as routine as plow- ing a field. States have been suing to overturn or uphold the 2015 rule. In an announcement Feb. 1 in the Federal Register, the EPA and Corps said the two- year suspension heads off the possibility that conflicting federal court decisions will cause the rule to vary between states. “The scope of (Clean Wa- ter Act) jurisdiction is an issue of national importance and therefore the agencies will en- deavor to provide for robust deliberations and public en- gagement as they re-evaluate the definitions of ‘waters of the United States,’” according to the notice. Ferguson has sued the Trump administration 21 times. Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, a fellow Democrat, said the latest suit seeks to protect “our economy and our quality of life.” “This (Trump) administra- tion’s continual efforts to roll back crucial protections for our nation’s beautiful spac- es and the health and safety of all Americans will not go unchecked,” Inslee said in a statement. Winter wheat conditions are near-normal in Eastern Washington. Douglas also said he’s heard winter wheat condi- tions in the Southern Plains are the worst they’ve been in 10 years. Model forecasts vary, in- dicating La Niña could last through October, continu- ing drought conditions in the southwestern U.S. and Southern Plains, or possibly end earlier. In the spring, a high pres- sure ridge will keep the West warm and dry. Northwest flow into the plains will push moisture to the east, keeping winter wheat conditions there poor, Douglas said. In the summer, warm and dry conditions will continue to impact the West, Douglas said. Expanding drought is ev- ident in California and the Southwest, Douglas said, adding that spring high-pres- sure ridges persisting off the West Coast will be “disas- trous” for California. “They had some good moisture there in November,” he said. “It started turning dry in December, they had a very dry January. ... It looks like they’re going to have virtual- ly no precipitation in Febru- ary, and now you look at this forecast, complete blocking of all storms getting into Cal- ifornia.” Douglas said 2018 is most likely to resemble 2001, 1956, 1951, 1994 and 2014. Oregon will be a little dri- er than Washington, Douglas said. “The last good wet month is really March, and from then on out you’re flirting with dryness,” Douglas told growers. U.S. Wheat Associates Bakery consultant Roy Chung demonstrates baking techniques in 1982 at a U.S. Wheat Associates baking seminar in Indonesia. Chung has worked for U.S. Wheat for more than 40 years WHEAT from Page 1 Industry leaders light up when they talk about Chung. “It’s in his soul,” said Mike Miller, the U.S. Wheat chair- man, a member of the Wash- ington Grain Commission board and a Ritzville, Wash., farmer. “This is who he is. He doesn’t do it for any other country. He’s trying to do it so we can sell more wheat at a better price.” Chung’s “unparalleled” knowledge of wheat starch properties and how they per- form in a food product leads people to seek out his exper- tise. He helps companies de- sign production lines and new products, said Dana Herron, a Connell, Wash., seed dealer and grain commission board member. “We would be 20 years be- hind in marketing and sales if there’s no Roy Chung,” Her- ron said. Getting his start Kah Hee “Roy” Chung, 63, has worked for U.S. Wheat for more than 40 years. Before that, he assisted in his father’s bakery in Malay- sia. Chung was home during college vacation and helping his father, who immigrat- ed from China to Malaysia during World War II, when a consultant from Western Wheat Associates asked to use the bakery for a prod- uct demonstration. Western Wheat later merged with Great Plains Wheat to form U.S. Wheat Associates. “My father was generous in allowing his competitors into the bakery to observe the demonstration as well,” Chung said. Chung’s father did not speak English and the con- sultant was working alone, so Chung served as his assistant and interpreter for the event. Months later, he received an “We would be 20 years behind in marketing and sales if there’s no Roy Chung.” Dana Herron, Connell, Wash., seed dealer and grain commission board member. offer to join Western Wheat, but declined, as he was not yet finished with school. He was studying production en- gineering at the Ungku Omar Polytechnic in Malaysia. Western Wheat waited two years for Chung to complete his education, and he was in- terviewed by Tom Mick, who would later become CEO of the Washington Grain Com- mission. Mick hired him to join WWA. “He has a unique ability to teach people how to make a superior end-product and at the same time reduce costs that would make it profit- able,” said Mick, who is now retired. Mick said Chung could “pull miracles,” convincing reluctant bakers to change wheat or flour sources. “I think (Chung is) one of the greatest hires I’ve ever been involved with,” Mick said. “To the wheat producer, he is a godsend.” Selling U.S. wheat If a buyer is new to U.S. wheat, Chung goes back to basics. He explains the dif- ference in U.S. wheat classes, their uses and the suitability of different classes for the products they make in each country. He likens this to teaching them the ABCs before turning the letters into words, then the words into sentences. “For the more experienced buyers, it gets even more ex- citing if you can string sen- tences to make paragraphs,” Chung said. “And then para- graphs to make a chapter and eventually chapters into an entire book.” U.S. Wheat employees, he said, show a company the possibilities they can get from the wheat American farmers produce. “We will provide exam- ples of how others are making money from the wheat that they buy from the U.S.,” he said. Chung says he is always sincere in his approach and communication. “Don’t bring the buffalo to the river to make it drink if the buffalo is not thirsty,” he said. If a buyer is similarly sin- cere, U.S. Wheat will hold his or her hand all the way and show them how to extract val- ue in any market, Chung said. “He’s made those compa- nies so much money using Pacific Northwest soft white wheat, he is highly respect- ed,” Herron said. “People lis- ten to his every word, because he has their best interest at heart.” Teaching bakers U.S. Wheat cooperates with United Flour Mills in Thailand to offer specialized baking courses at the mill’s baking and cooking school in Bangkok. Chung was in- strumental in offering the first course. The program has con- tinued for 38 years. “U.S. Wheat finds value in educating young bakers to see and feel the differ- ences in quality when com- pared to wheats of other origins,” Chung said. “The lasting impression we im- part to these bakers (stays) for their entire lives.” Many bakers trained at the school move on to the upper ranks of their organizations, helping their company expand and securing a stable supply of U.S. wheat. “I like to say that I im- part knowledge that will en- able my students to make good judgment,” Chung said. “More importantly, I leave them to pursue their careers in a more passionate way know- ing that I, as a representative of U.S. Wheat, will always be there for them. I am sincere when I make this offer.” As a result of working with Chung, when mills go to grain purchasers with their specifi- cations for U.S. wheat, they know what they want and how to ask for it, Miller said. “He’s actually helped raise them in the wheat world,” Miller said. “He can go into their mill, they know exactly what he’s talking about.” And they listen. “When they hear Roy’s in the house, it’s like Paul McCa- rtney just showed up,” Miller said. “They flock to him. He engages them, he remembers their names, asks them how they’re doing, ‘Have you ad- dressed this problem?’ or they ask him, ‘Hey, we have this.’ They trust him. He’s no-non- sense. He stands behind his work.” An ‘encyclopedia’ Chung worked close- ly with Vietnamese flour millers and bakeries to help them understand the uses of U.S. wheat, said Dinh Xuan Quang, technical manager of Vietnam Flour Mills. It took a long time because U.S. pric- es were higher than those of competing countries. “Now, in Vietnam, the cookies and cake industry can’t live without soft white wheat,” Quang said. Wilma Bocaya, vice presi- dent of Jollibee Foods Corp., a fast food bun manufacturing company in the Philippines, attended Chung’s course in 1994, after a colleague at- tended the year before. Her company sends students ev- ery year. “When we met Roy in 1993, we only had 105 Jol- libee stores,” Bocaya said. “This number has now grown into more than a thousand in the Philippines.” The company is expanding its baking operation this year to support further growth. “Suffice it to say that the technical support we got from U.S. Wheat through Roy as consultant or as course in- structor enabled us to provide products that meet our cus- tomers’ expectations,” Bo- caya said. Wantana Thongthai, president of United Flour Mills Food Center Co. Ltd., and operator of the baking school, has known Chung since 1988. The compa- ny feels strongly that U.S. wheat quality best matches its needs, she said. “Through my tenure at UFM, I have not met a con- sultant more knowledgeable in his trade than Mr. Chung,” she said. “He is known among us as ‘the walking baking en- cyclopedia.’” Changing times With the internet, many customers are more knowl- edgeable and demanding, Chung said. Few countries produce generic flour for breads, cakes and cookies, and most bakeries use specialized flour for specific products. “We must justify these sales with scientific facts and examples of how this basic information has been used to produce more specialized flours for specialized prod- ucts,” Chung said. U.S. Wheat must keep re-educating itself technically to sell wheat at an advantage, Chung said. “If we fail to do that, we will be just another generic seller, and worse still, a resid- ual seller,” he said. Chung said it’s not cur- rently possible to retire, since there are few people with his technical expertise in the in- dustry. He’d like to leave his customers in good hands, he said. He hopes to leave the U.S. Wheat office with a younger team of technical staffers who would work “as passionately and sincerely with our cus- tomers as I have.” If U.S. Wheat hired some- one he could begin to train this year, he said, he could see retiring in five years. Miller, the U.S. Wheat chairman, knows at some point Chung will want to slow down. “I don’t know if you can replace that type of historical knowledge and energy with one person,” he said. “I bet you’d have to do it with two.” That could be a good thing for wheat farmers, Herron be- lieves. “If we had a couple more Roy Chungs, we wouldn’t have to worry about compe- tition overseas,” he said. “He makes that big of a differ- ence.”