4 CapitalPress.com April 27, 2018 Rural brewery aims for Oregon land use fix Proposal could be similar to exemption for wineries, cideries Washington farm groups seek say in environmental lawsuit By DON JENKINS Capital Press By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press A rural Oregon brewery remains operational despite a major zoning problem but hopes that altering land use rules will offer a long-term fix. Earlier this year, the tast- ing room at Agrarian Ales near Eugene, Ore., was tem- porarily shut down by Lane County officials, partly be- cause its activities aren’t al- lowed in an “exclusive farm use” zone. County officials also said the building wasn’t up to code for public occupan- cy, which Agrarian Ales has provisionally rectified by barring visitors from sitting beneath a roof overhang and instead steering them toward picnic tables on the property. The zoning predicament also has a makeshift solu- tion — while the brewery applies for a special use per- mit to run the tasting room, the county isn’t penalizing it for land use violations in the meantime. “Lane County, on the face of it, says it’s interest- ed in seeing this business continue,” said Stephen Harrell, the company’s farm manager. To comply with building codes, the company is rais- ing money through an on- line “Kickstarter” campaign to build a new tasting room equipped with fire suppres- sion sprinklers, lighted exit signs and other elements. On the land use front, Agrarian Ales wants to carve out an exemption for small breweries in Oregon’s statewide land use law, pro- viding them with similar flexibility as wineries and cideries on farmland. Under a proposed re- vision to Oregon statutes, Mateusz Perkowski/Capital Press Stephen Harrell, farm manager at Agrarian Ales, enjoys some of the company’s beer at its facility north of Eugene, Ore. The company hopes that changes to Oregon’s land use laws will provide a long-term fix for its zoning problem. brewpubs could be sited in “exclusive farm use” zones if they annually generate fewer than 50,000 gallons of beer, with at least half the hops or grains grown within 10 miles of the property. That proposal was float- ed late during the 2018 leg- islative session and didn’t gain traction, but Harrell is hopeful a similar idea will prove more successful next year. Limiting the size of brewpubs on farmland could alleviate concerns about large commercial op- erations, he said. “You couldn’t run the Sierra Nevada Brewery on EFU land,” Harrell said, referring to a well-known craft brewery with wide- spread distribution. Agrarian Ales already grows all the hops used in its beer and is well under the annual production cap proposed earlier this year. However, even wineries and cideries still face some ambiguities in land use law, such as the ability to serve food, Harrell said. “It’s subjective,” he said. “It’s not an objective set of standards,” he said. Most wineries cannot house full restaurants under land use rules, but the Or- egon Liquor Control Com- mission requires food to be served at drinking establish- ments, he said. “You’re looking at two regulatory bodies that os- tensibly are conflicting,” Harrell said. State Sen. Lee Beyer, D-Springfield, said he has commitments from agri- cultural and conservation groups to discuss the issue and believes it’s “realistic” a change can be made in 2019. “I would assume the big- gest objects would be that we keep the size of these relatively small and tied to farm uses onsite,” he said. Similar agritourism ac- tivities on farmland have spurred the growth of Ore- gon’s wine industry, Beyer said. “You can’t develop a wine industry if you don’t have tasting rooms.” 1,000 Friends of Oregon, a farmland conservation group, is “definitely open to conversations” about an exemption for brewery agri- tourism “with the appropri- ate sideboards,” said Meriel Darzen, its staff attorney. The details will be crit- ical, since a brewpub oper- ating until midnight every night of the week, for exam- ple, may create traffic or oth- er problems for neighboring farmers, she said. “Depending on the scale, you’re talking about some- thing that can have signifi- cant impacts on surrounding farm uses,” Darzen said. California starts picking light cherry crop By DAN WHEAT Capital Press California is starting its harvest of sweet cherries, which are expected to yield 58 percent less than last year’s record crop. Lack of sufficient win- ter chill, freeze damage a month ago and poor pol- lination weather have ad- versely affected all growing regions except for Patterson area southwest of Stockton, said Mike Jameson, director of sales and marketing at Morada Produce in Linden. The crop will likely be 4 million, 18-pound boxes, down from last year’s 9.6 million boxes, he said. In 2017, good weather helped produce the high- est volume, quality, prices and sales in recent memory, Chris Zanobini, executive director of the California Cherry Advisory Board in Sacramento, has said. Last year’s crop aver- aged around $55 per box wholesale because of high quality and limited compe- tition worldwide, Jameson said. “We have a window when we’re first out the gate, ahead of Washington, and have no real competi- tion,” he said. Picking began April 20 with a few Brooks variety ROP-13-5-3/HOU cherries in Arvin near Ba- kersfield, Jameson said. Early fruit sells at more than $100 per box, he said. Harvest will pick up speed April 30 but with no real volume until May 8 or 10, he said. Brooks, Tulare and Cor- al varieties will peak May 10-20. Bing will start May 22 in Stockton, Lodi and Linden and peak May 27 to June 8, Jameson said. “The whole crop is later this year by a few days,” he said. Washington cherry growers are always inter- ested in California’s sales and hope for little overlap with Washington’s crop, which normally starts about June 8. California lost 3 million boxes of cherries to rain to finish at 5.11 million box- es in 2016 and hit a low of 2.67 million boxes in 2014 due to the lack of winter chill and poor fruit set. Harvest starts in the southern district, which in- cludes Arvin, Bakersfield and Maricopa. Harvest spreads north to the middle district of Fresno, Reedley and Madera. Next is the north with Stockton, Morada, Linden and Lodi. It finishes in the coastal district of Hollister and Gilroy. Rebuffed once, two Wash- ington farm groups are again pleading to have a voice in an environmental organiza- tion’s lawsuit that alleges federal and state regulators aren’t protecting waterways from agriculture. In what would be an un- usual alliance, the Wash- ington Farm Bureau and Washington Cattlemen’s As- sociation want to jump in on the side of the Environmen- tal Protection Agency and state Department of Ecology. They’re asking the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- peals to overrule Western Washington District Judge John Coughenour, who de- cided last month that the farm groups could not help the government defend it- self. Coughenour said that Ecology has the same inter- ests as farmers and that it’s expertise on agricultural runoff was “likely superior.” “We obviously think the court erred on this,” Farm Bureau associate director of government relations Evan Sheffels said Tuesday. “We think our producers know their best interests, and we think they are often different than those of state and feder- al agencies.” The suit, filed by North- west Environmental Ad- vocates in 2016, claims the EPA has been wrong to approve pollution-control plans submitted by Ecology. The plans apply to logging and urban stormwater, as well as farming. The Portland-based or- ganization argues that the plans are ineffective and that the federal government should withhold funds for clean-water projects. Wash- ington received a total of $5.6 million in the current fiscal year. As a condition to restoring the money, Ecology should implement “best-manage- ment practices” for agricul- ture, the lawsuit suit argues. The suit also alleges riparian buffers on farms are inade- quate to protect water. Ecology recently con- vened a workgroup to devel- op voluntary water-protection guidelines for agriculture. Northwest Environmental Advocates Executive Direc- tor Nina Bell said Tuesday that the lawsuit seeks to have Ecology implement measures on the ground, not on paper. “Ecology developing purely voluntary BMPs does not resolve anything we’ve raised in the litigation,” she said. “Our goal in this law- suit is to not just take money away from the Department of Ecology. Our goal is to have a real rather than a fic- titious program.” Ecology and EPA have defended the pollution-con- trol plans, though Ecology said in a recent court filing that it “admits that riparian buffers on some agricultural lands are inadequate to fully protect water quality.” Sheffels said that illus- trates the Farm Bureau’s concern that the lawsuit could lead to a settlement unsuitable for farming. The farms groups say they dis- agree with agencies on the extent of buffers needed to protect water quality. “We want to make sure we don’t have a solution that hurts our interests when we should have had a seat at the table,” Sheffels said. LEGAL LEGAL NOTICE OF TALL FESCUE COMISSION BUDGET HEARING Notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be held pursuant to ORS 576.416 (5), on Thursday, May 24, 2018, at 6:00 p.m., at the Cascade Grill Restaurant, 110 Opal St. NE, Albany, Oregon, upon a proposed budget for operation of the Oregon Tall Fescue Commission during the fiscal year July 1, 2018 through June 30, 2019. At this hearing any producer of Oregon-grown Tall Fescue seed has a right to be heard with respect to the proposed budget, a copy of which is available for public inspection, under reasonable circumstances, in the office of each County Extension Agent in Oregon. For further information, contact the Tall Fescue Commission business office, P.O. Box 3366, Salem, Oregon 97302, telephone 503-364-2944. The meeting location is accessible to persons with disabilities. Please make any requests for an interpreter for the hearing impaired or for other accommodations for persons with disabilities at least 48 hours before the meeting by contacting the Commission office at 503- 364-2944. 17-1/999 CHERRY AVENUE STORAGE 2680 Cherry Ave. NE Salem, OR 97301 (503) 399-7454 AUCTION SAT., MAY 5 TH • 10 A.M. Unit AS-26: Cheyenne Franklin Unit 109: Lonnie & Michelle Thomas Unit 186-193: Juanita Thompson Cherry Avenue Storage reserves the right to refuse any and all bids legal-16-2-3/999