Friday, November 1, 2019 CapitalPress.com 3 NORPAC’s assets may be split up among any new buyers Farm entrepreneur Tiegs alleges multiple problems at processor By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Dan Wheat/Capital Press File Workers sort Red Delicious apples at McDougall & Sons Inc., in Wenatchee, Wash. Japan will reduce its tariffs on some tree fruit but phytosanitary rules remain a concern. Japan reduces tariffs on apples, almonds, cherries By DAN WHEAT Capital Press YAKIMA, Wash. — The U.S.-Japan Trade Agree- ment reduces tariffs on U.S. apples, almonds and cherries but does not address phy- tosanitary restrictions. The agreement, signed Oct. 7, cuts a 17% tariff on apples to 11.4% on Jan. 1 and to 10.2% on April 1. It then drops the rate further over the following eight years until it expires. “It’s a large amount so getting rid of it is a positive but it doesn’t mean the mar- ket is wide open,” said Mark Powers, president of North- west Horticultural Council in Yakima. Phytosanitary barriers must be addressed in the next phase to make the deal meaningful, he said. Phy- tosanitary barriers prohibit U.S. pears and a 5% tariff does not change, he said. Stemilt Growers, in Wenatchee, is the only com- pany shipping small amounts of apples to Japan. It does it at a loss because of the cost of phytosanitary protocols, including cold storage and fumigation, but is banking on it building Japanese con- sumer demand for Washing- ton apples. The agreement eliminates a 2.4% tariff on in-shell and kernel almonds, eliminates a tariff on roasted almonds and could lead to similar help for almond meal, flour and paste, according to Julie Adams, vice president of the Almond Board of California in Modesto. “Over the last few years, we’ve seen an average ship- ment growth of 5%. With our ongoing promotional efforts combined with tariff reduction, we would expect to see that or greater ship- ment increase,” Adams said. Japan is the fifth largest export market for California almonds, buying 81 million pounds in 2018-19, up 3% from the previous year and valued at $255 million. Japan’s 8.5% tariff on cherries will be reduced to 3.4% on Jan. 1 and 2.5% on April 1, 2020. On April 1 over the subsequent three years it goes to 1.7%, 0.8% and then zero. “Any decrease in the tar- iff is good. It minimizes our landed cost but doesn’t change the commercial sit- uation significantly. Unfor- tunately, China has been a declining market for cher- ries as they increase their own production,” Powers said. B.J. Thurlby, president of Northwest Cherry Grow- ers in Yakima, has said Jap- anese domestic production has quadrupled over the past decade while imports of U.S. cherries have declined. Northwest cherry exports to Japan average about 180,000, 20-pound boxes worth $7 million to $9 mil- lion annually, he said. That’s just 2.1% of North- west cherry exports, far behind exports to Canada, China, South Korea and Taiwan. Washington justice paints bleak picture of life for farmworkers By DON JENKINS Capital Press OLYMPIA — A Washington Supreme Court judge depicted farmworkers as exploited as he challenged a lawyer Oct. 24 to justify exempting farmers from pay- ing employees time-and-a-half for overtime hours. Glancing at notes, Justice Steven Gonza- lez prefaced his question with a minute-long, wide-ranging indictment of how farmworkers are treated. He said they were likely to be people of color and unlikely to “have lobbyists” or “make campaign contributions to elected officials.” “Would you still suggest it’s a coincidence labor laws have consistently excluded them from protections afforded other workers?” Gonzalez asked Timothy O’Connell, attor- ney for the Washington State Dairy Federa- tion and Washington Farm Bureau. O’Connell disputed the premise that farm- workers are neglected and politically weak. “I believe that is belied by the facts,” he said. “There has been extensive action by the state of Washington regulating safety, regulating other provisions of farmworker livelihoods.” The exchange came during a hearing on whether exempting agriculture from the state’s overtime law violates the state constitution. The case stems from a lawsuit brought by two former milkers at DeRuyter Broth- ers Dairy in Yakima County. A ruling by the Supreme Court would apply to all agriculture. Washington lawmakers in 1959 adopted the federal act that exempts agriculture from paying a premium for hours worked beyond 40 in a week. Farm groups argue the exemption reflects the sea- sonal nature of agriculture Steven and the fact that farmers Gonzalez can’t pass on higher labor costs. Farmworkers argue that state lawmakers failed to follow the state constitution. The state constitution directs legislators to pass “necessary laws” to protect miners, fac- tory workers and workers in other dangerous jobs. The constitution doesn’t specify what other jobs are dangerous, and the two sides dispute how hazardous farm work is. Attorneys also are arguing over whether the state constitution’s prohibition on grant- ing special privileges to some people but not others applies. In this case, the privilege is overtime pay. Race has become part of the case. In amicus briefs, farmworker activists argue the decades-old exemption is rooted in discrimi- nation — first against blacks in the South and now against Latinos. Washington farmers were exempted from paying overtime when most of their workers were white, O’Connell said. Gonzalez said farmworkers are exposed to toxins, vulnerable to sexual assault and finan- cial exploitation, and expected to labor in the “heat and cold” and in “geographic isolation.” “They’re less likely to be voters, less likely to speak English as a first language. Aren’t wealthy, in fact, are among the poorest work- ers in the nation,” he said. An attorney for NORPAC Foods believes the bankrupt processor’s assets may be divided among several buyers if farm entrepreneur Frank Tiegs refuses to buy most of them. Tiegs had planned to buy the farm coop- erative’s Oregon facilities in Brooks, Salem and Stayton, as well as its plant in Quincy, Wash., for $155 million as part of the com- pany’s debt restructuring in Chapter 11 bankruptcy. However, shortly before competing bids were due for the assets on Oct. 18, Tiegs said he was terminating the “asset pur- chase agreement,” citing concerns about environmental and regulatory problems at NORPAC. During an Oct. 28 bankruptcy court hear- ing in Portland, Ore., NORPAC’s attorney, Albert Kennedy, said the company’s been approached by other “potential purchasers” who’d each be willing to buy a portion of the assets that Tiegs had intended to buy. At this point, though, NORPAC Foods and a committee representing its creditors don’t believe the termination of the “asset purchase agreement” is legally effective and want U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Peter McKittrick to approve the sale, Kennedy said. If the dispute ends up in litigation, NOR- PAC doesn’t want Tiegs to present the defense that there was no contract, Ken- nedy said. The company believes the “grounds for termination are baseless” and has told Tiegs the “termination notice was given in bad faith,” Kennedy said during a previous Oct. 21 court hearing. Scott Cargill, an attorney for unsecured creditors, echoed that sentiment, character- izing those reasons as a “pretext” to “rene- gotiate the acquisition in light of there being no other bidders coming to the table.” Tiegs told the Capital Press that NOR- PAC had problems with soil and water contamination while company executives didn’t supply him with requested docu- ments and had deleted an internal email system. It was a “lack of information on due dil- igence” that prompted the deal’s termina- tion, Tiegs said. “If you got a turd in the skillet, you want to avoid anyone seeing it.” An attorney for Tiegs’ Oregon Potato Eric Mortenson/Capital Press Frozen peas head to the bagging machines at NORPAC Foods in Salem. Co., Joseph VanLeuven, opposed the approval of the asset sale, alleging that NORPAC wanted such an order to file a lawsuit arguing the contract was binding. While questioning Winston Mar, NOR- PAC’s chief restructuring officer, VanLeu- ven said the company hadn’t developed a federally mandated “project safety man- agement plan” and had instead “misappro- priated” one from National Frozen Foods, another processor owned by Tiegs. “They were literally verbatim copies,” VanLeuven said of the plans, which iden- tify ways to mitigate hazards to workers. VanLeuven also said an environmental review had detected arsenic contamination of a well at the Quincy, Wash., facility and that NORPAC had sold off corn ahead of schedule that Tiegs had expected to buy at a discount. McKittrick, the judge, ultimately said the court hearing wasn’t the appropriate time and place to determine whether Tiegs could validly terminate the agreement, say- ing that discussion was “for a different day and potentially different court.” McKittrick said he’s also prepared to authorize the sale of NORPAC’s assets without reaching a conclusion as to whether Tiegs had legitimately terminated the deal. NORPAC Foods has more than 1,125 full-time employees and 1,000 seasonal employees. The company’s most recent monthly operating report for August dis- closed nearly $2 million in labor expenses. OREGON AGRICULTURE IN THE CLASSROOM Thank You Supporters 2019 Fall Harvest Dinner & Auction Well Water Dispute? Who is on the same aquifer as your wells? Chemically Fingerprint your Groundwater Water Sample #1 Water Sample #2 Did you miss out? You can always donate online, visit oregonaitc.org A Special Thanks to our Event Sponsors Record baseline of your well water. USGS Techniques. Accredited Lab Testing. Waterlab Corp. 2603 12th St. SE Salem, OR 97302 503-363-0473 • waterlab@comcast.net 149124-1 Wilbur Ellis Capital Press Deerhaven Farms George Packing Company JTI Supply Lochmead Farms Smith Seed Services Kirk & Sons Hazelnuts Oregon Department of Agriculture S141819-1