August 3, 2018 CapitalPress.com 3 W. Oregon, Lost Valley dairy owner defends against contempt charge to alleviate the storage prob- violations have continued, the SW. Wash. lems, but it didn’t first notify agency said. ODA to ensure the construc- “We’ve done everything blanketed tion complied with waste man- a regulatory agency can do,” PORTLAND — The own- agement plans, as required, he said Nicole DeFever, attorney a controversial Oregon by ‘severe er dairy of claims said. for the state government. the state govern- ment wants to shut down the Skye, the judge, said she “That is a general theme — facility just as it’s about to showing up to find things we will deliberate on the meaning drought’ comply with wastewater reg- should have known about,” of “willful” in this context. By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press By DON JENKINS Capital Press Western Oregon and southwest Washington have deteriorated from moderate to “severe drought” in the past week, the U.S. Drought Monitor reported Thursday. A severe drought that already had covered much of Eastern Oregon crossed over the Cascades into the Willamette Valley and as far south as Douglas County. The percentage of the state in severe drought more than doubled to 55 percent from 25 percent. The southwest corner of Washington, mak- ing up 6 percent of the state, moved from moderate to severe drought. It’s the first time any part of Washington has been in a severe drought since late 2015. “What we really need is to see some recovery in soil moisture and streams flows, and the long-term forecast is hot and dry,” said Kathie Dello, associate director of the Oregon Climate Change Research Institute. The weekly drought report, a snapshot of cur- rent conditions, continues a summer-long trend toward drought developing in the Northwest. The USDA re- ported this week that while some crops were thriving in the heat, others were show- ing signs of stress. The USDA, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and the Uni- versity of Nebraska collabo- rate on the Drought Monitor. The four stages of drought range from moderate to ex- ceptional. Some 83 percent of Ore- gon and 29 percent of Wash- ington are at least in moder- ate drought. Most areas not in drought are “abnormally dry,” according to the mon- itor. Two months ago, Wash- ington was on the wet side, as was Western Oregon. The National Weather Ser- vice’s Climate Prediction Center says the odds favor above-average temperatures and below-normal precipita- tion to continue for the rest of the summer. Washington State As- sistant Climatologist Karin Bumbaco said periodic sum- mer rains have been absent, while temperatures have been high. “It’s looking like it’ll get worse before it gets better,” she said. In Idaho and California, conditions have been steady. Some 6 percent of Idaho is in a moderate drought, while drought conditions range from moderate to extreme over 44 percent of Califor- nia. Washington State Clima- tologist Nick Bond said he expects August to be warmer than average, but for tem- peratures to be more moder- ate than in July. “I don’t think there will be the sustained heat as it has been in July,” he said. Sea-surface tempera- tures along the equator in the Pacific Ocean have been warming up. There is a 70 percent an El Nino will form next winter, according to the Climate Prediction Center. Northwest winters are gener- ally warm during an El Nino. ulations. Oregon farm regulators are seeking a court order to stop Lost Valley Farm of Board- man from producing wastewa- ter — which would effectively halt operations — because it’s disregarding a previous legal settlement. Greg te Velde, the owner, said there have been “some spills and splashes” at the fa- cility but maintains they’ve been “nothing catastrophic.” Though he acknowledged defaulting on the legal agree- ment, te Velde said he’d always intended to honor the deal de- spite facing “a steep learning curve.” Upgrades to the dairy will soon mitigate wastewater problems, te Velde said during a July 27 court hearing in Port- land. “I think we’re on the cusp of having it all done,” he said. In March, Lost Valley Farm of Boardman, Ore., settled a lawsuit with the Oregon De- partment of Agriculture by agreeing to limit its wastewa- ter output to 65,000 gallons a day. Since then, however, the dairy has violated the deal by exceeding that threshold almost daily and failing to maintain adequate capacity in manure lagoons, for which te Velde should be held in con- tempt of court, according to ODA. “On most of these days, it’s a pretty significant excess use,” testified Wym Matthews, man- ager of ODA’s confined animal feeding operation program. According to ODA’s esti- mates, the excess ranged from 19,000 to 375,000 gallons per Mateusz Perkowski/Capital Press Greg te Velde, owner of Lost Valley Farm near Boardman, Ore., testifies July 27 during a hearing on a contempt motion brought by the Oregon Department of Agriculture. The department says the dairy isn’t living up to the terms of a settlement it reached with te Velde on handling wastewater. Multnomah County Circuit Judge Kelly Skye, left, did not immediately rule on the motion. day, he said. The agency also estimates the amount of manure applied to six of seven nearby fields surpassed the agronomic re- quirements of crops, which is prohibited due to the possibility of nitrogen pollution. “It consumes those nutrients so they don’t become pollut- ants, so that balance is critical,” Matthews said. Although ODA is in the process of revoking the dairy’s “confined animal feeding oper- ation” permit, it will take two months for that action to be- come final, or even longer if the order is contested by te Velde. Because wastewater vi- olations at the dairy haven’t ceased, there’s a “serious risk” of groundwater contamination unless the situation is brought under control this summer, the agency claims. It’s “particularly import- ant” for Lost Valley Farm to comply with CAFO permit conditions because it’s in the “environmentally sensitive” Lower Umatilla Groundwa- ter Management Area, which already has elevated levels of nitrate contaminants, the agen- cy said. ODA is worried that pol- lutants from the dairy will eventually reach groundwater, even if they haven’t yet, said Matthews. “Our concern is the opera- tor is loading the soil,” he said. If the soil continues to be loaded with nitrogen, pollut- ants would be expected to reach the groundwater within two years under water-saturat- ed conditions, said Kirk Cook, a geologist and program man- ager of ODA’s pesticide stew- ardship program. However, the nitrogen re- mains immobile when the soil isn’t saturated and the dairy is in an arid part of the state, he said. The ODA has requested that Multnomah County Cir- cuit Judge Kelly Skye issue remedial sanctions requiring Lost Valley Farm to cease wastewater production with- in 60 days and remove waste from lagoons to free up 75 acre-feet of storage capacity. Of the all dairies inspected by ODA this year, the facili- ty was the only one to have a lagoon overflow and the only one that didn’t turn over agro- nomic data, said Matthews. The dairy began construc- tion of a fourth manure lagoon said Matthews. An attorney for te Velde argued the government’s con- tempt case should be dismissed because it’s duplicative of the permit revocation process. The judge denied that mo- tion because the dairy cannot violate the earlier judgment re- gardless of those proceedings. To reduce water usage, the dairy has installed water-sav- ing nozzles and cut down on “flush times,” te Velde said. A neighboring farmer has agreed to have wastewater ap- plied to his fields and the dairy is installing piping that will deliver wastewater directly to crops, he said. Improvements have been delayed by the company’s bankruptcy proceedings, since investments must be cleared by a judge and creditor com- mittee, te Velde said. Shutting down the dairy would be “a really extreme remedy” since te Velde has spent roughly $700,000 trying to comply with the legal settle- ment, said Elizabeth Howard, his attorney. The state hasn’t shown “clear and convincing” evi- dence that he violated the deal “willfully,” which is necessary to prove contempt, Howard said. Since starting operations last year, the dairy has re- peatedly been cited by ODA for breaching the terms of its CAFO permit with unautho- rized waste discharges and other problems. Despite the ODA’s “ex- haustive efforts” to bring Lost Valley Farm into regulatory compliance — including a fine of more than $10,000 — the The idea that unsuccessful- ly trying to comply with the deal shields te Velde from be- ing held in contempt “doesn’t sit right with me,” she said. “I don’t think merely mak- ing efforts for lengthy periods of time will keep you out of willful conduct,” Skye said. While te Velde has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protec- tion, which shields his dairies from creditors foreclosing on property, that “automatic stay” doesn’t apply to regulatory ac- tions aimed at remediating en- vironmental hazards, accord- ing to ODA. The bankruptcy petition was filed in April to stop Rabo- bank, the dairy’s major lender, from holding an auction to sell Lost Valley Farm’s cattle to re- coup some of the roughly $60 million it loaned te Velde. As part of bankruptcy pro- ceedings, a subsidiary of the Tillamook County Creamery Association has filed a law- suit to terminate its milk-buy- ing contract with Lost Valley Farm, citing high bacteria lev- els in milk, reputational dam- age and unpaid debts. More recently, the federal government filed a motion for a “Chapter 11 trustee” to take over management of te Vel- de’s company, which includes two other dairies in Califor- nia, because he’s allegedly ad- mitted to regularly gambling and using methamphetamine since filing for bankruptcy. Appointing a trustee is also warranted because te Velde has withdrawn more money than allowed from his compa- ny and obtained a loan with- out authorization, according to the motion. Wolves kill another calf Judge denies preliminary occurred injunction in Klamath Tribes suit Predation in Harl Butte area By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press By GEORGE PLAVEN Klamath Project irrigators are breathing a sigh of relief after a federal judge in San Francisco denied a preliminary injunction to hold more water in Upper Klamath Lake for en- dangered sucker fish. The injunction was request- ed by the Klamath Tribes as part of a lawsuit against the Bu- reau of Reclamation, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Na- tional Marine Fisheries Service to protect declining populations of Lost River and shortnose suckers in the lake. Judge William Orrick also granted a motion to transfer the case to the U.S. District Court in Oregon. Though he presid- ed over a separate lawsuit filed by the Hoopa Valley and Yurok tribes of northern California seeking to protect salmon in the lower Klamath River, Orrick noted that Upper Klamath Lake, the endangered suckers and the Klamath Tribes are all in Oregon. “Whether venue is proper in the Northern District of Califor- nia is not obvious, but the Dis- trict of Oregon is clearly more appropriate to hear this case,” Orrick wrote in the order, filed Wednesday. As for the preliminary in- junction, Orrick described it as an “extraordinary remedy” giv- en the situation, while adding the scientific evidence is “very much in dispute.” “I cannot conclude that the Oregon wildlife officials have confirmed wolves killed another calf July 22 in the Harl Butte area of Wal- lowa County, where repeat- ed attacks on cattle in 2016 and 2017 to several “lethal take” permits for the offend- ing pack. The latest incident hap- pened on a public grazing allotment within the area of known wolf activity for the Harl Butte pack. A rancher reportedly saw two wolves in the vicinity before finding a dead, partially eaten calf. Ranchers’ struggles with the Harl Butte pack date back several years. Wolves preyed on cattle six times between July 15, 2016 and July 22, 2017, prompting the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife to kill two wolves in August 2017 to prevent future attacks. Just one week later, the pack notched another dep- redation, leading to a sec- ond kill order by ODFW for another two wolves. The Oregon Cattlemen’s Associ- Capital Press Associated Press File Klamath Falls, Ore., on the far side of Upper Klamath Lake. A fed- eral judge has denied a request for a preliminary injunction to keep more water in the lake to protect two species of sucker fish. Klamath Tribes are likely to prevail on the merits nor that the sucker fish are suffering irreparable injury as a result of the lake elevation levels,” Or- rick wrote. Both the Lost River and shortnose suckers were listed as endangered in 1988. The fish are a culturally significant food for the tribes, though harvest diminished from more than 10,000 suckers in 1968 to just 687 in 1985. According to the tribes’ lawsuit, the cause stems from increased agricultural activity since the inception of the Klam- ath Project, which provides surface water irrigation for 230,000 acres in Southern Or- egon and Northern California. Today, the tribes harvest just two suckers every year for cer- emonial purposes. Don Gentry, chairman of the Klamath Tribes, said they were disappointed in Orrick’s deci- sion, but they will be ready to present their arguments before a new judge and do what is nec- essary to protect the fish. “We’re really concerned about the fish this year and into the future,” Gentry said. “Hopefully we won’t have a significant die-off this season, but we’ll see.” Weekly fieldwork report Ore. Item/description (Source: USDA, NASS; NOAA) • Days suitable for fieldwork (As of July 29) 6.8 • Topsoil moisture, surplus 0 • Topsoil moisture, percent short 84% • Subsoil moisture, surplus 0 • Subsoil moisture, percent short 82% • Precipitation probability 33-80% Above/ (6-10 day outlook as of July 31) Normal ELLIS EQUIPMENT 800-949-2336 31-5-3/102 .COM MFG OF BRUSH MULCHERS | STUMP GRINDERS | DRAINAGE PLOWS BOOM MOWERS | PTO GENERATORS | AUGER BITS & DRIVES TRENCHERS | TREE SPADES | TREE SAWS | LIMB SHEARS AND MORE ation had argued for killing the entire pack, while envi- ronmental groups decried killing any wolves, favoring stronger requirements for non-lethal deterrents. By the end of 2017, the Harl Butte pack had four animals left and was not counted as a breeding pair, according to the state’s pop- ulation estimate. There are a minimum of 124 wolves across the state, and the spe- cies remains federally endan- gered in Western Oregon. Derek Broman, state car- nivore biologist for ODFW, said it is not clear whether those wolves disbanded and joined with other neighbor- ing packs, such as the Pine Creek, which also had three wolves culled by ODFW earlier this year after a string of livestock attacks. Broman said the depart- ment has not received any new requests for lethal con- trol. Shooting wolves remains a contentious point in the state’s wolf conservation and management plan, which is now undergoing an update. ODFW recently hired a pro- fessional mediator, Debra Nudelman of Portland, to try to help resolve lingering dis- agreements. Wash. Idaho Calif. 7 0 63% 0 58% 6.9 8% 56% 8% 52% 7 0 75% 0 75% 33% Above/ 33% Below 40% Above/ Normal 33-80% Above