4 CapitalPress.com February 16, 2018 Washington apple crop size, prices dip Capital Press YAKIMA, Wash. — Washington’s apple crop size and prices appeared stable a month ago but since then have fallen and, some say, likely will fall more. The 2017 fresh crop was estimated at 138 million, 40-pound boxes on Feb. 1, down 3 percent from 142.3 million a month earlier, said Jon DeVaney, president of the Washington State Tree Fruit Association in Yakima. Packouts are down as more fruit is diverted to processing for juice, sauce and baked ingredients or culled, he and others said. “I expected it to come sooner. Diversion is helpful. Right now, this is just an ap- ple market (OK but not great). It’s just a lot of small fruit,” said Chuck Zeutenhorst, gen- eral manager of First Fruits Marketing of Washington, in Yakima. Dan Wheat/Capital Press Josephine Ivarra and Miriam Valdovinos weigh and pack bagged Ambrosia apples at McDougall & Sons Fruit Inc. in Wenatchee, Wash., on Jan. 5. The crop size and prices are dropping. en Delicious while increasing $1 to $2 on Gala. “I think they’re still sliding a little bit,” Zeutenhorst said. Tom Riggan, general man- ager of Chelan Fresh Market- ing, in Chelan, said he thinks the crop will continue to shrink due to splits and water core in some varieties and too much small fruit. “This is our second-largest crop. We can afford to have it go down and still have ad- equate supply and focus on bringing our best quality to market,” DeVaney said. Asking prices reported by USDA fell $2 to $4 per box on medium-size (80 and 88 ap- ples per box) Granny Smith, Fuji, Red Delicious and Gold- “Sometimes there’s only so much room in the world- wide marketplace for real small apples, so not all will make it into a box,” Riggan said. Large and medium fruit sell heaviest first, and as their supplies dwindle, their prices will increase, but overall pric- es are less than last season, he said. As of Feb. 9, USDA tracking of average asking prices among Yakima and Wenatchee shippers for extra fancy (standard grade) me- dium size 80 and 88 apples per packed box: $13 to $15 for Red Delicious, down $1 on the low end and $2 on the high end since Jan. 5. Gala 80s were $20 to $24, up $2 on the low end and un- changed on the high. Gala 88s were $17 to $22, up $1 on the low end and also unchanged on the high. Honeycrisp premium 80s were $58 to $64, up from $46 to $54 a month ago. Honey- Capital Press Warm weather and mea- ger mountain snow could spell a difficult water year ahead for Oregon farms. The USDA Natural Re- sources Conservation Ser- vice released its monthly wa- ter supply outlook report for February, and overall condi- tions are not looking good in most basins across the state. Of 137 monitoring sta- tions, every single one re- corded below-average snow- pack as of Feb. 1. Most were less than 50 percent of nor- mal, according to the NRCS. Julie Koeberle, snow survey hydrologist, said the chances for a full snowpack recovery are low, but stressed there is still time for condi- tions to improve. The Nation- al Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Climate Prediction Center is calling for cooler and wetter weather over the next three months, offering a glimmer of hope. However, if Oregon ex- pects to fully catch up on snowpack by April 1, the next two months would have to deliver 125-225 percent of normal precipitation, with all of that falling as snow. Basin-wide percent of February 2018 snowpack compared to the aggregate average (1971-2010). 112 119 84 125 97 73 86 77 87 47 106 117 102 138 102 120 129 154 100 113 159 149 139 49 128 33 57 38 40 131 138 163 97 56 116 76 24 35 101 89 113161 111 166 63 105 28 39 34 70 80 138 131 119 29 115 69 64 114 29 47 114 124 56 5574 75 118 29 37 81 76 49 74 73 73 36 87 107 27 49 82 72 40 37 94 4148 73 52 75 31 23 77 89 38 31 95 39 85 31 49 48 45 57 36 40 63 45 43 Percentage key (As of Feb. 14) Unavailable Less than 50% 50-69% 70-89% 90-109% 110-129% 130-149% More than 149% 37 24 16 2 10 3 12 11 0 4 Miles 0 Source: USDA, Natural Resources Conservation Service “Water managers will need to carefully evaluate water supplies this summer if snow and spring rains fail to bring relief,” Koeberle said. Northeast Oregon con- tinues to boast the highest snowpack in the state, at 64 percent of normal in the 30 2310 15 7 150 300 Capital Press graphic Grande Ronde, Powder, Burnt and Imnaha basins, and 55 percent of normal in the Umatilla, Walla Walla and Willow basins. Those averages drop as low as 38 percent in the Wil- lamette Basin, 35 percent in the Owyhee Basin and 33 By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press percent in the Klamath Basin in southern Oregon, where streamflow forecasts be- tween April and September are all project to be less than 60 percent of normal. John Wolf, manager of the Klamath Irrigation District, said his board met for more than four hours Feb. 8 to dis- cuss drought planning. “It’s pretty bleak down here right now,” Wolf said. “We’re all praying for a Feb- ruary or March miracle.” Already, Wolf said the district is planning to move back water availability by about two weeks, from April 15 to April 23 or 24. He add- ed it is still not clear whether the state will allow drought permits for wells this season. “Nothing is really cast in stone yet,” he said. The U.S. Drought Moni- tor, operated by the Univer- sity of Nebraska-Lincoln, has painted most of eastern, central and southern Oregon in either “abnormally dry” or moderate drought conditions. Despite low predict- ed streamflows, reservoirs continue to store average or above-average amounts of water, providing a much-needed buffer for farmers heading into summer. The lowest reservoir levels for any basin as a whole is 98 percent of average in the Rogue and Umpqua basins of southwest Oregon. The high- est are in the Owyhee and Malheur basins in south- east Oregon, at 139 percent of average. LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87 Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be sold, for cash to the highest bidder, on 3/2/2018. The sale will be held at 10:00am by COPART OF WASHINGTON 2885 NATIONAL WAY, WOODBURN, OR 1994 WINNABAGO BRAVE MH VIN = 1GBJP37N5P3316543 Amount due on lien $1,515.00 Reputed owner(s) MEREDITH W CHABINO WORLD OMNI FINANCIAL COR 1 legal-7-2-1/999 By GEORGE PLAVEN Western U.S. snow water equivalent LEGAL Request for Proposals Fiscal Year After announcing a delay last week in establishing a federal milk marketing or- der for California, USDA on Tuesday told stakeholders it is moving forward with an op- tion that would only delay the process one to four months. Stephen Vaden, a lawyer with USDA’s office of the general counsel, explained in a conference call why USDA put the process on hold and the options the agency consid- ered for getting things back on track. USDA paused the FMMO proceedings awaiting a Su- preme Court decision in two court cases, which could call into question the appointment of administrative law judges in federal agencies — includ- ing the one presiding over the FMMO proceedings. The two cases, Lucia v. Securities and Exchange Commission and Bandimere v. Securities and Exchange Commission, are questioning whether the appointments of administrative law judges comply with the appointments clause in the Constitution. The petitioners allege the appointments violate the clause because they are not properly appointed and may not be easily removed, he said. The Department of Justice has reached the conclusion the petitioners are correct. The Supreme Court will ren- der its opinion no later than June 30, he said. Even though the litiga- tion doesn’t directly involve USDA, the issue that will be decided does impact USDA and the California FMMO, he said. LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87 Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be sold, for cash to the highest bidder, on 2/23/2018. The sale will be held at 10:00am by COPART OF WASHINGTON 2885 NATIONAL WAY, WOODBURN, OR 2017 DODGE CHALLENGER 2DR VIN = 2C3CDZBT6HH589161 Amount due on lien $1,475.00 Reputed owner(s) PHILIP C. ALLMER CAPITAL ONE AUTO FINANCE July 1, 2018 - June 30, 2019 The Oregon Beef Council is soliciting proposals for projects in the following areas: 1) Positive Producer Image 2) Studying Legislation 3) Education related to beef 4) Generic promotion of beef Any individual or organization may propose projects in any of the categories listed above. Projects must meet the Beef Council’s mission of enhancing the beef industry’s image of profitability of Oregon’s beef industry. Approved projects must comply with the Beef Promotion and Research Act and O.R.S. 577 To present a proposal you must complete and submit an Authorization Request Form by March 16, 2018 at 4:00 p.m. Download an Authorization Request Form from orbeef.org or by contacting the Oregon Beef Council office (503) 274- 2333 or via e-mail at julie@orbeef.org. 6-1/106 1.8 million boxes while China is down almost 30 percent at less than 800,000 boxes, he said. Sales to the Middle East and Latin America are strong, he said. “As long as quality stays stable, we will be able to move apples into Mexico and India. Southern Hemisphere Gala starts packing this week and that will impact world markets,” Peebles said. U.S. Apple Association re- ported national fresh holdings of 95.6 million boxes on Feb. 1, up 12 percent from a year earlier. Processing holdings totaled 38.6 million boxes, up 10 percent. The industry has a lot of apples remaining to sell, and one concern is having a large late crop followed by an ear- ly one brought on by a mild winter and possibly early spring. “You don’t want to have to sell a year’s worth of fruit in 11 months,” DeVaney said. California federal milk marketing order delayed but on track Low snowfall creates bleak water supply outlook for Oregon Snowpack below normal at all monitoring sites crisp premium 88s were $56 to $62, up from $44 to $52 a month ago. Of the 4.3-millon-box crop shrinkage, 1 million were Fuji, 984,000 were Red De- licious, 953,000 were Granny Smith, 840,000 were Gala, 361,000 were Ambrosia and 245,000 were Honeycrisp, Riggan said. As of Feb. 1, 54.7 million boxes had been sold com- pared to 58.9 million a year ago. “It’s a bit behind but we are making headway,” Riggan said. Exports have improved in the past month to 17 million boxes, season-to-date, up 5 percent from a year ago, said Bryan Peebles, Chelan Fresh Marketing export sales man- ager. Mexico is up 5 percent over last year while Canada is down more than 10 percent, partly because of smaller fruit size, Peebles said. India likes small Reds and is up more than 30 percent at legal-6-2-3/999 By DAN WHEAT Legal-7-2-3/999 WHO SHOULD ATTEND? “Because an administra- tive law judge presided over the California milk marketing order, the decision in the cases currently before the Supreme Court could implicate the federal milk marketing order here,” he said. If the court were to decide DOJ is correct, the order if fi- nalized would be vulnerable to legal challenge and highly likely to be vacated by the court, he said. “All the many years of work put into promulgating this milk marketing order would be lost. Those are quite high stakes,” he said. Vaden said he doesn’t blame producers for wanting to move ahead on the chance the court would decide differ- ently, but that’s a 50-50 shot. If that bet were lost, the pro- cess would be back to square one, he said. If the process had to start from scratch, that would set potential implementation of the order back three years, he said. A better option is to ap- point a new hearing officer — a judicial officer who is not subject to challenge under the appointments clause — to fully review the record of the 40 days of hearings that have taken place. That officer could ratify the record as is and USDA would put out a final decision for a producer vote. If the of- ficer has question or wants to change something, additional time would be needed for in- dustry feedback. If USDA does nothing, finalizes the order and the bet on the court’s ruling is correct, the soonest the order could be implemented would be October. If it takes the safer route and appoints a new officer who ratifies the record, the or- der could be implemented by November. If the officer needs feedback, the order could be implemented by February 2019. The ratification option, which USDA is taking, would only delay implementation one to four months and would make the order more likely to survive a legal challenge, he said. Upcoming Produce Safety Alliance Grower Training Fruit and vegetable growers and others interested in learning about produce safety, the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) Produce Safety Rule, Good Agricultural Practices (GAPs), and co-management of natural resources and food safety. The PSA Grower Training Course is one way to satisfy the FSMA Produce Safety Rule training requirement. Ontario, Oregon • February 23, 2018 Cost to attend: $25 To register, visit: producesafetyalliance.cornell.edu or contact Sue Davis at sdavis@oda.state.or.us 503-807-5864 Funding for these trainings was made possible by Grant Number 1U18FD005889-01 from the FDA. Presented in partnership with Oregon State University Extension Services and the National Young Farmers Coalition ROP-5-3-2/110