INSIDE: ALL-NEW INNOVATIONS SPECIAL SECTION Cap ital A g Press The Wes t’s Wee kly Innov ations Capital Press A g Febr uary Insid e • CR The la ISPR: test w ord in • Futu Strong re wo er th • N INSID E UNIQ CHOBA N U FIRS E ‘FOOD I’S T DEVE ’ PRODUC PROG LOPMENT T RAM od: an ev 16, 20 18 gene tics Pa ge 2 er at Page Seek ional L 4 ag pr ing ways aborato oduc tion to boost ry: Page 6 PAGE 3 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2018 The West’s  VOLUME 91, NUMBER 7 Weekly WWW.CAPITALPRESS.COM $2.00 CULTIVATING SMALL FARMS George Plaven/Capital Press Nate and Janis Newsom, of Bear Branch Farms near Stayton, Ore., will soon be hard at work planting roughly 900 tomato plants in the farm’s greenhouse. Northwest farms by value of sales, 2012 The majority of Northwest farms are small with sales less than $10,000 annually, according to the U.S. Census of Agriculture. Percent of total farms by value of sales per state: <$9,999 $10,000- 49,999 $50,000- 99,999 Oregon 8 5.1 $100,000- 499,999 Washington 7.3 64.4% 9 4.9 > $500,000 Idaho 8.1 65.8% 55.7% 12.5 3.7 Total farms: 35,439 17.6 Total farms: 37,249 14.1 Total farms: 24,816 6.1 17.6 Land-grant universities reach out to bolster small farms By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press n a frosty Saturday morning in February, Nate and Janis Newsom fin- ished building two new hoop houses that will soon be used to grow fresh, certified organic produce at their Bear Branch Farms near Stayton, Ore. “Thankfully it wasn’t windy,” said Janis Newsom, wearing a wool hat and Carhartt overalls. But the weekend work is not done. The couple must also plant 900 tomato plants in the nearby greenhouse, which they hope to har- vest by mid-May. Farming brought the Newsoms and their nine kids to Oregon from Southern Cal- ifornia three years ago. They fell in love with the 17-acre property along Bear Branch Creek in the Mid-Willamette Valley, and spent their life savings to start a small family farm. Turn to FARMS, Page 12 O Northwest farms by market value of land and buildings, 2012 Farms in all three states combined were valued at more than $90.7 billion, according to the U.S. Census of Ag. Capital Press ONTARIO, Ore. — Scotts Miracle-Gro Co. is reporting a large decline in the num- ber of genetically modified creeping bentgrass plants in Malheur County. The plant, used on golf courses, was genetically engineered by Scotts and Monsanto Co. to withstand applications of glyphosate, the active ingredient in Mon- santo’s Roundup weed killer. It took root in Oregon’s Malheur and Jefferson coun- ties after escaping field tri- als in 2003. A small number of the plants have also been detected in Canyon County, Idaho. Some farmers and irriga- tion districts worry the plants could clog irrigation ditches and affect shipments of crops to nations that don’t accept traces of genetically modified organisms, or GMOs. Danielle Posch, a senior research specialist with Scotts, told members of the Idaho-Or- Oregon Washington Idaho $1-199,999 $200,000-499,999 $500,000-999,999 $1 million-1.99 million $2 million or more 7,486 14,775 7,462 2,872 2,844 9,700 15,162 6,299 2,851 3,237 8,680 7,787 3,406 2,148 2,795 Sources: USDA ERS; 2012 Census of Agriculture Alan Kenaga/Capital Press “It becomes a relationship with the community. They’re able to trust we’re doing the right thing with their produce.” — Nate Newsom, Stayton, Ore., farmer GE creeping bentgrass in Malheur County drops 42 percent By SEAN ELLIS Number of farms Value Sean Ellis/Capital Press File A GMO creeping bentgrass plant grows in an onion field south of Ontario, Ore., last year. egon onion industry during their annual meeting last week that the number of GMO bent- grass plants found in Malheur County last fall dropped by 42 percent compared to the same time in 2016. “In 2017, we saw a sig- nificant reduction in the total number of glyphosate-tol- erant creeping bentgrass plants,” she said. Similar data for Jefferson County isn’t yet available. Posch said the reduction in Malheur County was like- ly due to the Environmental Protection Agency’s approv- al last year of a special local need label for the use of glu- fosinate to control the plant. Glufosinate is the most effective herbicide for con- trolling the GMO bentgrass but before the special need label, it couldn’t be used over waterways. The plants require nearly constant moisture and can be found mostly near canals and irrigation ditches. Turn to BENTGRASS, Page 12 Oregon uplists marbled murrelet to ‘endangered’ life, which is overseen by the commission, must complete “survival guidelines” for the PORTLAND — Oregon’s marbled murrelet by June. wildlife regulators have “uplist- Those guidelines are ex- ed” the marbled murrelet from pected to further restrict log- a threatened to an endangered ging in the bird’s suitable habitat, if existing protocols species, which will likely re- sult in stricter logging for state forestland are found to be insuffi- limits on state forest- land. cient. The Oregon Though Ore- gon’s version of the Fish and Wildlife Endangered Species Commission voted Act only applies to 4-2 to upgrade pro- tections for the coast- property owned by A marbled al bird at its Feb. 9 the state government, murrelet some private forest- meeting in Portland. land owners worry The change to endangered status means that the uplisting will effectively scientists at the Oregon De- Turn to BIRD, Page 12 partment of Fish and Wild- By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press