CapitalPress.com 13 Friday, December 28, 2018 Bioengineered food rules draw criticism By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press While farm groups are pleased with USDA’s new disclosure standard for bio- engineered foods, others are not. Some public interest and environmental advocacy groups contend the standard is deceptive and doesn’t go far enough to identify genet- ically modified foods and inform consumers. They take issue with the term “bioengineered,” the permitted methods of dis- closure and the omission of foods they say should be labeled as genetically modified. “This deceptive rule will keep people in the dark about what they’re eating and feeding their families,” Wenonah Hauter, director of Food & Water Watch, said in a statement. “It is meant to con- fuse consumers, not inform them. This deception is a tool being utilized to maxi- mize corporate profits, plain and simple, she said. The use of “bioengi- neered,” rather than GMOs, is a deceptive strategy because consumers don’t know what that means. In addition, the use of digi- tal codes and other technol- ogy makes GMO disclosure more difficult for consum- ers, and the definitions of what triggers labeling are far too limited, she said. Options for disclosure include text, symbol, elec- tronic or digital link, text message and a phone num- ber or web address where consumers can access information. Lisa Rathke/Associated Press File In this 2016 photo, a disclosure statement is displayed on a package of Peanut M&M’s candy in Montpelier, Vt., saying they are “Partially produced with genetic engineering.” A lawsuit between Vermont and grocery manufacturers was dropped because the state law was pre-empted by a new federal label law that has sparked a new debate among critics. The standard does not apply to foods such as meat, milk and eggs derived from animals fed forage or grain developed through bio- technology. It also does not apply to highly refined products such as sugar or oil derived from biotech crops. The Environmental Working Group said the dis- closure rule fails to meet the intent of Congress to create a mandatory disclo- sure standard that includes all genetically engineered foods and to use terms con- sumers understand. It also fails to address the needs of consumers who don’t have expensive phones or who live in rural places with poor cell ser- vice, EWG said. “The Trump administra- tion has yet again put the interests of pesticide and biotech companies ahead of the interests of ordinary Americans,” Scott Faber, EWG senior vice president of government affairs, said in a statement. In addition to using the unfamiliar “bioengineered” term, allowing the use of barcodes that require a smartphone and a reliable broadband connection and exempting refined products, the threshold for the unin- Stennes succeeds Collins at Chelan Fruit By DAN WHEAT Capital Press CHELAN, Wash. — Mark Stennes, a fourth-gen- eration Methow Valley grower, has been appointed interim chief executive offi- cer of Chelan Fruit Cooper- ative, effective Jan. 1. Stennes, 37, succeeds Reggie Collins, who has been CEO since 2004. Col- lins will take an advisory role with the co-op and Chelan Fresh Marketing on business and strategic Mark opportunities. Stennes Stennes joined Chelan Fruit as assistant general manager on April 2017 and became a member of the Washing- ton Apple Commission in May of 2017. His identical twin brother, Kevin, joined Chelan Fresh Marketing in 2013 and is organic sales manager. Their father, Keith Stennes, operates the 400- acre family orchard in Methow that was started by his grandfather, Brita- nus Stennes, in 1903. Keith and his wife, Deb, and their sons, their wives and chil- dren all live on the family orchard. Mark Stennes holds an undergraduate degree in horticulture from Wenatchee Valley College, Dan Wheat/Capital Press File Workers sort Gala apples at Chelan Fruit Cooperative, Chelan, Wash. Mark Stennes is the co-op’s new interim CEO. a bachelor’s in business administration from Cen- tral Washington University and a master’s in business administration from Boise State University. He managed the fam- ily orchard before working for Chelan Fruit. Stennes Orchards has been a mem- ber of the co-op since the 1920s, when Britanus founded Methow Pateros Growers. Chelan Fruit is a 270-member grower-owned cooperative in Chelan. Each year, it packs about 7 million boxes of apples and pears and 1.5 million boxes of cherries. The fruit is sold by Chelan Fresh. Chelan Fruit employs about 800 people year-round and 1,100 to 1,200 during cherry harvest. Chelan Fruit was formed by the merger of Trout-Blue Chelan and the Brewster cooperative MAGI in 2004. The merger was one of the first projects Reggie Collins led as CEO. Collins also was instrumental in the cre- ation of Chelan Fresh Mar- keting as the sales desk for Chelan Fruit and Gebbers Farms. More recently, Collins oversaw the $85 million rebuild of Chelan Fruit’s main apple packing plant, which was destroyed by wildfire in 2015. “The board appreciates the tremendous progress the co-op has made under Reggie’s leadership and we look forward to building on this progress with Mark as our interim CEO,” said Marrian Peebles, Chelan Fruit board chairman. The board has a strong focus on succession plan- ning and Stennes’ selection enables a “seamless transi- tion” in leadership, Peebles said. Stennes has “demon- strated exceptional leader- ship” and has the “vision and values” to lead Chelan Fruit into the future, said Dave Robison, Chelan Fruit board vice chairman. Stennes said he looks forward to driving perfor- mance for growers, employ- ees and customers. He said he wants Chelan Fruit to be “a haven and the best option for independent growers.” “The Washington tree fruit industry is changing rapidly but there is a great future ahead for growers of all sizes who change with a changing world,” Stennes said. Efficiency, marketing could hold key to successful 2019 By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press Farmers and ranch- ers can expect higher input costs and more market and price uncertainty in 2019, but the year could offer some profit opportunities for well-prepared produc- ers, speakers said Dec. 13 at a University of Idaho agri- cultural outlook seminar in Caldwell. Ashlee Westerhold, UI extension area economist based in Twin Falls, said producers next year can expect higher interest rates, and increased costs for chemicals, fertilizer, fuel and labor. On the labor side, Westerhold expects costs to increase by about 4 percent in trucking, 3 percent in general labor Ashlee Westerhold and 2 per- cent among equipment operators in 2019. Seed, power and cus- tom-farming costs should go largely unchanged, she said. But all input costs should be determined pre- cisely and tracked because they influence the price the producer is willing to accept. “Minimize your costs to maximize your returns,” Westerhold said. Efficiency gains in many crop sectors have helped producers stay prof- itable or reduce losses amid mixed prices, speak- ers said. Onions, a major crop in southwestern Idaho and southeastern Oregon, exemplify the trend toward higher yields per acre. Gina Greenway, visiting assistant professor of busi- ness and accounting at the College of Idaho in Cald- well, cautioned onion grow- ers against “chasing onions as a cash crop.” “Prices are down this year compared to last because of a near-perfect growing season that pro- duced high yields,” she said. Improved technology and irrigation practices have boosted yields. “We are getting better and bet- ter at what we do, but it hurts us because there is too much supply on the mar- ket,” Greenway said. Lately, a 1 percent- age-point increase in supply drops the price by 2.3 to 2.8 percent, she said. Prices could rise from 2018 to 2019 on lower sup- plies, if only because this year’s growing conditions were “idyllic,” Greenway said. Demand is strong. U.S. per-capita consumption of onions more than doubled since 1970, she said. “We need to keep reminding people that great onions come from Idaho and eastern Oregon,” Gre- enway said. State-of-or- igin labels, such as those the Idaho potato industry has used successfully, could help. Onion growers can main- tain or increase profitability by knowing their breakeven price, fine-tuning their mar- keting plans, and managing pests and irrigation needs as efficiently as possible, she said. Wheat could be a 2019 profit opportunity if pro- ducers manage costs, hit protein targets and focus their marketing strategies, said Jon Hogge, UI exten- sion educator in Rexburg. After ‘very busy summer,’ WDFW says conflict likely every year By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press SPOKANE — The cattle graz- ing season was a “very difficult year for everybody,” a Washing- ton Department of Fish and Wild- life official says. “Having three consecutive years with wolf-livestock conflict in the same area of the Kettles, that’s not good for wolves, cows or people,” said Donny Martorello, who heads the agency’s wolf man- agement efforts. Ranchers, rural communi- ties, environmental groups and the department were among those impacted, Martorello said. The department is looking for ways it can reduce the likelihood of conflict, particularly in “high- risk” landscapes, he said. This year, the department con- ducted more than 70 livestock dep- redation investigations, said Can- dace Bennett, the department’s wildlife conflict specialist in north- east Washington. The investigations were for wolf, cougar, coyote, one bear and two unknown causes, Bennett said. The number of depredations caused by wolves and cougars were about equal, she estimated. She estimated there were more livestock injuries this year than deaths. The Old Profanity Terri- tory wolfpack caused more inju- ries, the Togo wolfpack had about the same number of each and the Smackout pack had the most live- stock deaths. There were three depredations by the Grouse Flats pack. That number of predator inves- tigations was higher than usual for the department, Bennett said. Cou- gar depredations began early and wolf depredations, which usually start around August, extended into November. Bennett expects some depreda- tions to continue throughout the winter. Martorello said it was a “very busy summer,” with ongoing dep- redations in several packs, depart- ment decisions to kill problem wolves in three different packs and the added requirement of an eight- hour public notice to give envi- ronmental groups time to seek a restraining order, the result of a court decision. Martorello pointed to the work- load to prepare documentation. “Unfortunately, reality is that preparation takes away from our time for wolf conservation and management ... at all levels in the agency,” he said. “We understand where we’re at, we also under- stand we want to keep our priority also on the things on the ground to move forward.” Advisory group member Samee Charriere, a rancher in Clark- ston, asked the group to consider ways to increase the efficiency of livestock depredation investiga- tions, for both ranchers and the department. tended presence of geneti- cally engineered ingredients is far too high, the Center for Food Safety contends. At 5 percent, that thresh- old is more than five times the European Union’s 0.9 percent standard. The major- ity of genetically engineered foods would not be labeled as a result of the exemption for highly refined products and the 5 percent threshold, CFS said. “The USDA has betrayed the public trust by denying Americans the right to know how their food is produced,” Andrew Kimball, CFS exec- utive director said. “Instead of providing clarity and transparency, they have created large- scale confusion and uncer- tainty for consumers, food producers and retailers,” he said. Groundwater users eye East Snake Plain settlement legislation By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press Idaho Ground Water Appropriators Inc. plans to ask the 2019 Idaho Legisla- ture for additional authority to help it comply with a set- tlement agreement covering the East Snake Plain Aqui- fer that lies beneath much of the state’s south-central and southeastern regions. Groundwater users in mid-2015 reached a settle- ment with a coalition of surface-wa- ter users over aqui- fer usage and related issues. IGWA Execu- Lynn tive Director Tominaga Lynn Tomi- naga said his group has been working with the Idaho Department of Water Resources on pro- posed legislation address- ing non-compliance among a minority of customers, or patrons, of the groundwater districts. Districts determined, based on patrons’ water- right priorities, the extent to which each patron must reduce usage to comply with the ESPA settlement agreement. Patrons also can satisfy their share of required water-usage reduc- tions by no longer irrigating some areas. “There is nothing now in code that allows a ground water district to require a reduction in usage of a patron’s water right,” Tom- inaga said. “The only tool the ground water districts have is to assess them the cost to make up for the reduction.” Although the vast major- ity of districts’ water users comply — 90 to 95 percent, he estimated — “by not complying with the mitiga- tion plan, it places a burden on other patrons in the dis- trict to pick up that slack, or amount of reduction.” Groundwater districts, after collecting the assess- ments, buy stored or nat- ural-flow water and return it to the aquifer. Tominaga said this has worked so far, and allowed districts to meet settlement terms, because southern Idaho has had mostly good water years since the agreement was reached. “There will come a time when we go into a drought period and there is no water to recharge,” he said. Tominaga said IGWA’s planned legislation would allow a groundwater dis- trict to ask patrons to reduce their water usage based on their proportion- ate share of water owed to meet the terms of the settle- ment. If a patron does not, the district could inform the state Department of Water Resources.